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In this sectionDeck the Doors Read this article about hand-made natural door decorations.Apples, Putlog Holes and Provost Marshals Read about the Christmas apples at the Palmer House. How to Make a Wreath Learn how to make your own Colonial Williamsburg decorations The Pineapple Discover the history of the pineapple in Williamsburg "Christmas Williamsburg Style" Read an article about the story of Christmas decorations in the colonial capitol. Slideshow Enjoy Christmas door decorations in Williamsburg. Christmas Decorations from Williamsburg Buy this video that shows how to create holiday decorations (opens in a new window).Williamsburg Christmas Style With Cindy Cragg In this exciting DVD, WILLIAMSBURG homes stylist Cindy Cragg shows you how to bring the same look into your home-in a lot less time.(opens in a new window).![]() Purchase pineapple products from our online store ![]() Deck the Doors...with boughs of holly, fans of apple, ornaments of dried okra, pomegranate, oystershell, and all things natural They didn't originate in Williamsburg--those fruit bedecked wreaths and swags that decorate America's front doors--nor did they begin during colonial times. No matter. Everyone from Augusta to Albuquerque calls them "Colonial Williamsburg door decorations" anyway and millions of people have visited the Historic Area during the Christmas season for the sole purpose of admiring them. The custom of affixing
fruits, vegetables, dried flowers, herbs, and other plant life to
basic Christmas forms like wreaths, swags, and roping traces its roots
to the early years of the twentieth century, a time when Christmas
was growing in significance and the Colonial Revival was pulling decorative
impulses back toward the eighteenth century. A 1926 issue of House
Beautiful illustrates several fruit-laden wreaths and explains,
"Of late years, besides the staple wreaths of plain greens to which
we have long been accustomed, the holiday's emblems have blossomed
forth,--or perhaps we should say fruited forth,--with richness of
color produced by the use of either natural or artificial fruit as
an embellishment. This idea was undoubtedly suggested by the gorgeous
Italian carvings and terra cottas of the Renaissance. . ." The magazine was referring to fifteenth-century Italian sculptor Luca della Robbia and his progeny, the family whose name has become synonymous with fruit and foliage swags. There is, however, another influence, one closer at hand: a sculptor with the improbable name of Grinling Gibbons who produced popular architectural wood carvings with festoons of fruit, flowers, and other bits of nature in borders and decorative motifs for English cathedrals and English royalty until his death in 1720.
This article was originally published in the Winter 1996-97 edition of the Colonial Williamsburg Journal. Libbey Oliver and Mary Theobald have teamed to write Williamsburg Christmas, available online from Williamsburg Marketplace. Read more articles from the Foundation's journal, "Colonial Williamsburg" (will open in new window). |
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