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Nobody loves Christmas more than Lillian Vernon! Find all your Christmas Décor, Ornaments, Stockings and Gifts you'll need to brighten your home this holiday. Deck the halls with fun Christmas dècor and find decorative Christmas ornaments to add flair to your tree. Lillian Vernon not only has the best Christmas decorations, it also has unique Christmas gifts to help you spread holiday cheer to family and friends! Don't forget to browse Lillian Vernon's festive holiday entertaining accessories for all of your party hosting needCarondolet ChristmasKatie ChristmasTrash ChristmasChristmas ThingsChristmas Ornament IdeasChristmas HandmadeChristmas CraftsWalnut Decoration ChristmasWalnut Christmas OrnamentsForwardWee Little Walnut Tutorial - YouTube. NOT to scale for dollhouses, but, as long as you're playing with walnut shells.....Christmas DecorThis Christmas, deck the halls with festive decor from Walmart, where you'll find a wide variety of Christmas indoor decorations and Christmas outdoor decorations, all at Every Day Low Prices.Decorating for Christmas starts with picking the best Christmas tree for your home.

Walmart's selection of artificial Christmas trees includes trees in a range of sizes and styles, so you can choose the best one for your space. You'll also find a wide variety of Christmas tree decorations, including Christmas tree ornaments, tree toppers and tree stands and skirts.Outdoor Christmas decorations are a great way to share your holiday cheer with the neighborhood. You'll find a great selection of outdoor Christmas inflatables, sculptures, molds and other outdoor Christmas decor. And for inside your home, you'll find Christmas stockings, nativity sets, wall decals and other decorations.At Walmart, you'll find great values on everything you need to decorate your home for Christmas. FurnitureBeddingStorageRugsLightingDecorWall ArtCurtains & HardwarePlates & UtensilsWall DecorDecorative AccentsBathParty DecorationsHoliday DecorationsEasterBabyToys & GiftsNewSaleRoom GalleryOur Stories Deck your halls, walls and more, with our huge collection of Christmas decorations featuring everything from stockings to tree skirts to garlands and more.

Shop our collection of adorable christmas ornaments perfect for any kiddy christmas tree. Choose from a range of artistically created animal ornaments to more traditional round patterned ornaments. Don't forget a stocking to leave over the fireplace for St. Nicholas! With all the choice at Land of Nod, you're sure to have a holly, jolly Christmas full of delightful holiday decorations and decor. For more ideas, read about decorating your kid's room for the holidays.more Winter Woodland Stocking Collection Winter Woodland Bunny Stocking Winter Woodland Fox Stocking Winter Woodland Raccoon Stocking Yuletide Spirit Stocking Collection Yuletide Spirit Mouse Stocking Yuletide Spirit Penguin Stocking Yuletide Spirit Bear Stocking Festive Folklore Squirrel Stocking Festive Folklore Bunny Stocking Good Cheer Stocking Collection Good Cheer Red Stocking Good Cheer Green Stocking Holiday Helper Santa Stocking Holiday Helper Bear Stocking

Merry Mascot Tree Skirt Picture Perfect Construction Stocking Picture Perfect Space Stocking Boughs of Holly Garland Wee Christmas Tree Set Baby Elephant 2016 Ornament Besties Ornaments (Rainbow & Cloud) Tri-Color Baby's First Christmas Ornament Polar Bear 2016 Ornament Chilly Penguin 2016 Ornament Festive Folklore 2016 Ornaments Besties Ornaments (Burger & Fries) Jolly Geo 2016 Ornament Festive Folklore Advent Calendar Color Dipped Letter Ornament Read Between the Lines Holiday Print High Point Reindeer Tree Topper High Point Snoman Tree Topper Nutcracker Party Cups (Set of 8)As the 1951 Christmas season approached, Faith Bradford, a retired librarian, came to the Smithsonian Institution to carry out what would become a holiday ritual. Bradford, a passionate dollhouse enthusiast who had amassed miniature furnishings and household items since childhood, had recently donated her collection—a 23-room dwelling furnished with 1,354 items of early 20th-century vintage—to the Institution.

The house's inhabitants included a father, called Peter Doll by Bradford; his wife, Rose Washington Doll; a household staff of five; and 20 pets, ranging from dogs to goldfish and including several presumably tame white rats. On that December day, Bradford had come to decorate the five-story house for the holidays. Down from the attic came tiny wreaths, as well as a fir tree fashioned of brush bristles and festooned with ornaments; elegantly wrapped miniature presents; and a scaled-down electric train set. Ever since, Bradford's house has been a crowd pleaser, particularly at holiday time. Her great-nephew Phillips V. Bradford, who lives in Colorado, visits the installation, now at the National Museum of American History, whenever he is in Washington, though not without difficulty. "I can never get very close," he says. "There's always a crowd three or four deep." NMAH curator William L. Bird, whose book on the Bradford collection, America's Dollhouse, was published in October by Princeton Architectural Press, describes the miniature mansion as "an iconic object, one of the Smithsonian's most popular attractions."

Before she retired, Bird notes, Faith Bradford "was the first woman to head a division of the Library of Congress, the Card Catalogue Division." In her meticulous scrapbook filled with neatly typed entries, she described Peter Doll as "about thirty-five years old. He is successful financially, with perhaps an inheritance as a solid background. He is a man of integrity, well regarded in his community, much loved by his family." She further reported him to be "well-educated; witness his well-stocked library" and fond of sports—"by token of the trophy on his desk and his bicycle." His wife, Rose, "retains her charm at thirty-one. She has lost none of her social ease while acquiring the skills needed to direct her large household." Even the goldfish had names—Goldie, Wiggle and Dart—though "no one knows which is which," says Bird. The children, we learn from Bradford's notes, include two sets of twins: Jimmy and Timmy are identical; Carol and Lucy are fraternal. The nanny, Bradford wrote, "is a Scot."

The butler is named Gadsby. One of the dogs answers to Spot. The attention to detail that Bradford lavished on the project is apparent in each room, where her eye for color, texture and minutiae is evident at every turn. The kitchen icebox holds tiny milk bottles; a miniature smoked ham hangs on the wall. The library contains titles including Washington's Farewell Address; a silver canister on a shelf represents a souvenir of the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition held in Chicago. But for all its wealth of objects, the house—as Bradford admitted in the early 1950s—remained a work in progress. "My passion for detail is such," she wrote, "that I shall never be completely satisfied with its creation." Until her final days, Bradford, who died in 1970 at age 90, returned a couple of times each year to conduct what she described as "house cleanings" (by which she meant thorough dustings). Without fail, the winter tidyings-up coincided with holiday decorating. Nearly six decades after the house first went on view, it still does.