A Do-It-Yourself Christmas: 34 Great Gifts You Can Make Yourself Print
Thursday, 13th November 2008 (by J.D.)This article is about DIY, Frugality, Hints and Tips, Shopping
Last month, I asked readers to share their favorite frugal Christmas ideas. You responded with over a hundred fantastic tips. One common theme for saving money and adding meaning during the holiday season was to make gifts yourself.
My wife and I are lucky to have many crafty friends. Every year, I’m delighted to see what they create for the holiday season. I drew on our own experience, pulled some of your best tips from the past, and scoured the web for new ideas, in order to produce the following mammoth list of do-it-yourself Christmas gifts. But remember: in order to complete many of these, you need to get started soon. Enjoy!
- Almost everyone loves homemade truffles, says Mo. “My husband and I made them last year, and they were a big hit. I had no idea how easy to make they were, and we covered them with different kinds of crushed nuts and such. It was really fun! We then went and bought blank little white boxes and I decorated them with just some wrapping paper (glued) and ribbon. I think all together, we made about 15 boxes of truffles (9 truffles each box) for under $30. And we used good chocolate to boot!” Upside? Yum! Downside? They should be made only a short time before giving, and eaten soon after. If you’ve never made truffles before, try this recipe from Alton Brown.
- JM has a great suggestion, one that many of you may have already seen: “[My mom] gives some people unbaked, made-from-scratch cookie kits. Basically she gets most of the dry ingredients to her favorite cookie recipes together, along with a mason jar, a note card, and some ‘country’ style ribbons. She then layers all the dry ingredients in the mason jar, screws on the lid and prints the recipe on the notecard in an old-fashiony looking font, and then ties it to the jar with the ribbon. The result is cool looking, because the ingredients are layered in the jar.”
Create a secret hollow book. Find a cheap musty old classic at your nearby Goodwill or used bookstore. Glue the pages together, use an X-Acto knife to hollow out the center of the book. Now the recipient can store his treasures!- Martha Stewart has a great idea: create a recipe booklet containing a collection of your favorite holiday recipes, and then include it with a small assortment of samples. “Pass your culinary traditions on to your friends.”
- Live in a cold climate? Give your friends the gift of warmth with a homemade hand warmer. If you know how to make a beanbag, you know how to make a hand warmer. Use wool or cashmere or felt material, but instead of filling the bags with beans, fill them with ceramic pie weights. To use these toasty treasures, simply microwave them for a couple of minutes and then slip them in your pockets.
- It’s difficult to go wrong with themed gift baskets. Did you can your own pasta sauce over the summer? Use a colander for a basket, add some garlic bulbs, gourmet noodles, and a wooden spoon — a little taste of Italy. Or consider a breakfast basket. Or a breakfast basket (syrup and pancake mix), a movie basket (popcorn, candy, and a movie rental coupon), or a gardening basket (a trowel, a gardening hat, and some packets of seeds).
- If you’re artistic, GRS-reader Beck suggests giving memory drawings: “Draw a very simple black-and-white picture of a memory that you have of you and the person (e.g. me and my dad playing NES back in the day). This could be a very simple (think Shel Silverstein) drawing. Frame it and gift. The great thing about this (besides being cheap) is that you can give it multiple times to the same person. They will have a growing collection of ‘memory drawings’ from you.” Beck reports this gift is very well received by family members.
- Elizabeth has another artistic idea, one that was very popular with readers when she suggested it: “I’m a graphic designer, so this year I’m creating a booklet that Photoshops my 6-year-old nephew onto cheap stock photos of world landmarks, such as the Great Wall, so it looks like he’s traveled the world.” This home-made travel brochure is perfect for adventurous young minds. (Come to think of it, I think one of those would be fun for me — and I’m no longer young…)
- Give the gift of experience. The Gift Weblog suggests, “There’s nothing like giving someone the gift of experience, it is something they will always remember.” Sample gifts of experience: sky diving, scuba lessons, hot-air balloon rides, cooking school, lunch with a hero, etc.
What could be cuter than a stuffed pig? This project from Martha Stewart allows those who are handy with needlework to assemble an adorable, docile pet from felted wool, a pipe cleaner, and some cotton or polyester fill. (Crafty Daisies has instructions for making a felt penguin, and Expert Village has a video series demonstrating how to make stuffed animals.)- Build a gingerbread house. Or ten. Give them to the little kids (and the big kids) in your life. Lifehacker diva Gina Trapani has a photoset demonstrating how she put together a gingerbread house from a kit. If you bake, you can certainly build a better house from scratch. Your nieces and nephews will thank you. (And so will your brother-in-law!)
- In the GRS discussion forums, Brad suggested giving the gift of time or skill. Brad has given music lessons. He has colleagues who have given bike tune-ups and wine advice. What skills do you have? Can you help somebody set up a blog? Plant a garden? Learn to change the oil in their car?
- Every year, Kris looks forward to the gift from my cousin Nick. He makes her a batch of home-made almond roca. I can’t stand the stuff, but Kris eats it up. She’s in heaven for days afterward! Here’s one recipe.
- One Christmas when I was a poor college student, I leafed through children’s books at the library, looking for pages and pictures that reminded me of various friends. I photocopied these pages, colored them by hand, and then framed them with construction paper. I added a little note to each friend on the back of her piece. I spent maybe $10 total for all my gifts, though it took hours of my time. That was perfect: In college, I had plenty of time, but very little money, and making these things felt like an act of love. But giving somebody a CD I bought from Amazon? Not so much.
- At AskMetafilter, LadyBonita suggests making personalized calendars: “You can buy calendar blanks or use a template from a program; add pictures of things or people meaningful to the recipient; add in important dates (birthdays and anniversaries of family & friends); and maybe a special note or quote every once in a while. For parents/students you can add in the school schedule; for homeowners you can add in a home maintenance schedule; etc. for sports fans, astrology followers, on & on. To make them extra special I sometimes add little treats - a couple dollars taped to a summer date for an ice-cream treat; a coupon for free babysitting on a weekend; video & popcorn night, etc.”
- Here’s another great idea from Martha Stewart: create one of several dime-store games. My grandparents had several of these modest toys when I was a boy, and they could keep me entertained for hours. The Martha Stewart site has instructions for creating six different games, toys, and puzzles.
Sick of all my Martha Stewart links? Me too. Head on over to Not Martha to learn how to make stuff, including these marble magnets. You can pick up all of the supplies at your local craft store, and are reportedly fun to make. They look fun to make — I’m tempted to do these myself. (And though I couldn’t give them as Christmas gifts, I ♥ these cups made out of bacon.)- Stephanie is an artist, and to those who appreciate hand-made gifts (not everyone does), she likes to give small paintings or or personalized gifts of art. Here’s an idea from another reader: “All the adults in my family are great cooks. Last year I made functional pottery serving bowls & utensil holders. I placed them in a basket with colorful, but inexpensive kitchen cloths, a nice set of teak utensils (purchased a set at Walmart for the cost of one at Pampered Chef), & a grocery gift card.” Do you dabble in photography? A framed print of your nephew might be the perfect gift for your sister-in-law.
- One Christmas, our friend “Santa” Craig handed out a gourmet salt assortment. It wasn’t because we’d been bad, but because we love great food. Buy large containers of a variety of unique salts (you may have to visit a gourmet food store), and then divide the salts into small ziploc bags. Be sure to label the bags to to include a bit of info about each variety. (You can create similar gifts with other items, of course, tea leaves or…)
- Similarly, you might create a spice sampler. Bulk spices can make an affordable and appreciated gift for anyone who loves to cook, or who is moving into a new kitchen. Don’t know which ones to choose? Find some tempting recipes that call for exotic spices, then include the recipes with the spices. Or, get creative and make a custom spice blend for a meat rub, marinade mix, salad dressing kit, dip, or seasoning (search the web for ideas).
- My favorite past GRS reader suggestion comes from Amberlynn, who wrote: “We are now writing a chapter of our family history each year. We’ll pick a topic, and each family member will write about it. One person plays ‘editor’, collecting the stories, and presents them all together for Christmas. We’ve written about our favorite Christmas (seven differing perspectives on the same year), the house we grew up in, and this year we’re writing about how we met our spouse. Last year, my Mom sent out her first draft of her entire life history. This gift costs nothing, unless you choose to make fancy copies or books. It does take a little time if you want to contribute quality. It will, however, carry a lasting value unmatched by any tangible gifts we’ve exchanged, or even experiential gifts!”
- One winter, my wife made felt-backed tile trivets. You can find lots of beautiful tile designs at the home-improvement store. Sometimes the end of a lot can be had at a deep discount. Using a hot-glue gun, add a layer of felt to the back of a 6×6″ (or larger) tile, and you have a useful trivet for bringing a hot dish to the table. If you drink a lot of wine, you might consider creating cork trivets.
- Here’s an idea from Tanya: “This year [my sister and I] are making personalized mirrors with one word affirmations, like ‘fabulous’ and ‘gorgeous’. We started by picking up a bunch of the smallish (8×8) mirrors from Ikea, I think they are $5-6 for a four pack. My sister is obsessed with fonts, so we had some fun searching for fonts that fit the word we are going to use and the receiver of the mirror. We printed out the words to make stencils that we could cut out on contact paper. We used some glass etching glaze, left over from a candle holder project a few years ago, to etch the words on the mirrors. We added some cheap rhinestones to glitz up the mirrors for the girls and added a masculine etched pattern for the boys. We finished them off by attaching ribbon and twine so that they could be hung easily. I really like that we are giving them a reason to smile at themselves everyday when they leave for work or school.”
- For several years, my wife and I gave each other love coupons. Sounds sappy, I know. But it was nice to be able to come home at the end of the day and redeem a coupon for a dinner out, or for a back rub, or for an evening watching a favorite movie.
- In last month’s discussion about frugal Christmas traditions, Cobblestone offered a great idea: “For my cash hungry nephews and niece I make sure to do something creative to get the money. This year is going to be a family trivia game with questions that make them talk to other family members. It is much more interesting than a $20 bill.” Of course, it’s also possible to do this without the monetary reward.
- Genevieve makes her own stationery sets to give to friends. She writes: “I make envelopes out of pretty magazine ads and then pair them with nice stationary paper that you can get cheaply by the pound from any stationary or craft store. It is a great way to recycle magazines and the resulting stationary sets have been a real hit with my friends. If the gift calls for a little extra just pair a set with an address book or a nice pen.”
- Kris likes to make homemade granola year-round, but it would make a perfect Christmas gift, too. Low-cost basic ingredients turn into toasted goodness and don’t require a fancy kitchen. Granola blends can be easily customized to your tastes with add-ins like raisins, nuts, cinnamon, dried cranberries or cherries, sunflowers seeds, coconut, wheat germ, etc. Begin with a couple of mini-batches to fiddle with it to your taste. (Start with this almond maple granola. Stretch your budget even more by omitting the coconut and adding three more cups of old-fashioned rolled oats.)
Here’s another gift my wife has made in the past: teacup candles! You’ll need craft-store wicks, wax (or old candles) that can be melted down, old teacups, and maybe a fragrance or two. Pretty single teacups (with or without saucers) can often be found at thrift stores for less than a dollar. Melt the wax in a double boiler, add fragrance if desired, then support the wick standing in the teacup while carefully filling the cup with wax. As the wax cools, it will contract and form a well. You can add more melted wax of the same color or add a second shade. These are fairly easy to make, but beware cups with obvious cracking; the hot wax may cause them to shatter.- Knip has a fantastic idea for a grandparent or other older relative: a memory jar. “The most wonderful gift I’ve ever given (it’s still talked about years later) cost me almost nothing. I spent a few months contacting friends and family members and asked them to send me memories and old pictures of my grandfather. Then I wrote one memory (or printed one picture)on each of 365 business card sized pieces of cardstock. I folded each in half and secured it with a bit of tape, then placed them all in a big jar I decorated. Every morning for the next year, my grandfather would take out a paper, open it, and see what other people cherished in him. He loved it.”
- Ayelet has a gift idea that’s after my own heart: “I’m really excited about my holiday gift to my fiance (will be married by the holidays)this year. We love to cook together so I’m going to sit down with him and create our first family cookbook. It’ll be something we can update as we add more recipes. This would be a good one for a big family…get everyone together for a recipe day (could be some cooking involved) and then print and bind the recipes somehow for all to have. Good for a HS senior or college student, too.”
- Personal gift certificates also make great gifts. In essence, these are gifts of time. Give new parents a gift certificate for a night of baby-sitting so that they can enjoy a night on the town. Are you good with computers? Give your brother-in-law a gift certificate for free computer repairs.
- Leanne has an idea that might be useful for college students looking for gifts on a budget. “I have a friend…who compiles a mixed CD every year and mails them out to all his friends. It serves as a holiday card, gift, and moment of reconnection (we get a sense of how his year has been/things he’s been dealing with or excited about based on the music he chooses) plus we get introduced to new music we might not have picked up ourselves.”
- Fred Bloggs has a unique idea. He gives his friends joke boxes. These are “mostly gleanings from charity/thrift shops, picked up through the year when I see something particularly ugly or particularly good for a silly theme, and wrapped, because they don’t have to pretend to be expensive, in last year’s paper. Or sometimes one can make the jokes almost from scratch: things like knitty’s knitted womb, or my friend’s idea of a ‘rock concert’ — painted stones glued onto a ground with musical notes and dyed cotton bud mikes, that kind of thing. Someone else I know comes up with comic verses, and a token gift to illustrate the verse. Laughter’s a cheap gift, and a good one.”
You can make more than gifts. Kayla says she makes her own greeting cards: “Making your own cards is a great money-saver. I’ve been doing this for the past year. I’m a scrapbooker already (which I know can be a huge money-waster, but I try to be frugal about it). I buy boxes of 50 assorted bright-color cards at Michael’s for around $7. Then I use my leftover paper scraps and stickers to decorate them. I enjoy doing it, and everyone gets a very personalized card. I’d estimate my cards cost about 50 cents each (or less), so I’m saving at least $2 per card, usually more.” (Copperivy suggests you can make your own Christmas ornaments, too.)
And as a bonus idea - for something that can mean a lot for a child in the long run, there’s always the idea of opening an online savings account, with a little bit of cash, so that they can learn the lesson of saving early. Hopefully it’s a lesson that will last for a lifetime.
Now obviously, not all of these ideas will work for every person. Some of you won’t like the idea of giving experience, or of giving food, or of giving a mixed CD. But I’ll bet there are at least three or four ideas on this list (if not more) that you can use to create your own personalized hand-made Christmas gifts for people in your life. Note: Also see the comments that others have left in the 100+ comments below; there are some fun and imaginative homemade gift ideas that others are mentioning. And, of course, I encourage you to share your own ideas for crafty Christmas gifts in the comments. I can’t get enough of this stuff!
If you need more ideas, there are thousands of other great Christmas crafts to be found on web on sites like these:
- Organized Christmas, a site designed “to help you simplify your holidays and get ready for the Christmas season.”
- Make Blog, a fantastic resource for the do-it-yourself geek. Want to make a Space Invader coffee table? This is the place to look.
- Buy Nothing Christmas, a site devoted to reducing the commercialism of the holiday in favor of meaning. The site features gift alternatives and a list of resources.
- The Craftster holiday projects board, where you’ll find a mind-boggling range of ideas. (You could get lost in here and never find your way out!) Here’s the What are you making for Christmas 2008? thread. Puts my list to shame.
I’ll leave you with a parting thought from Money and Values:
The golden rule of frugal gift-giving is to be thoughtful and personal. If your recipient knows that you put time and effort into your gift for them, and were thinking about them and what they’d like, your gift is likely to be appreciated.
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Thanks for visiting!
Photo credits: Happy Christmas card by Lauren Manning. Homemade Christmas cards by Patterson Williams. Christmas Kisses by Joe M500.

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November 13th, 2008 at 5:43 am
Wow, what a great list.
You know, in thinking about it, some of my favorite christmas memories are the ones that had no cost involved.
To date my favorite christmas activity is setting up and decorating the tree. Since we use an artificial tree and have decorations already, there is no recurring cost.
I love putting christmas music on and getting into the spirit decorating the tree.
It means SANTA is soon to be here ! ! !
madsow
http://www.engineeradebtfreelife.com
November 13th, 2008 at 6:17 am
Another great idea for someone who likes to cook -
Buy a cookbook they might like. (I get them from the bargain section at the bookstore.) Select one of the recipes and bookmark it for them. Buy all of the ingredients for the recipe and include a grocery gift card for the perishables. Put it all together in a gift basket. I get the baskets at the dollar store.
Very personal and fun.
November 13th, 2008 at 6:21 am
Here’s another idea I ran into a couple of weeks ago, for our adult friends and family members. Homemade liquors and cocktails. There are a ton of different taste that you can make, and it really isn’t as hard as you may think. Plus you may spark a new hobby.
Caleb
http://www.mefinanciallyfree.blogspot.com
November 13th, 2008 at 6:28 am
If you’re a crafty type, you have to check out the Sew Mama Sew blog (http://sewmamasew.com/blog2/) where they compile tons of gift ideas and tutorials. Be forewarned, you’ll find a ton of great craft blogs through them…
November 13th, 2008 at 6:35 am
What a great post, tons of wonderful ideas.
November 13th, 2008 at 6:38 am
I’ve started giving people used paperbacks rather than greeting cards. Most of the time I can find a book that I liked, or think they’ll like at the used bookstore for about $2 rather than buying a $4 card. You can write a note in it just as easily and it’s a little more interesting than a card.
November 13th, 2008 at 6:52 am
For my brother and sister this year I’m doing homemade reusable grocery bags. 2 yards of fabric is enough for 4 bags; I’ve found that a poly/cotton blend holds up better than all cotton. Around here you get 5 cents off your grocery order for each bag used. A gift that keeps on giving!
November 13th, 2008 at 6:53 am
I usually make my homemade chocolate covered cherries (I soak them in brandy for a month - yum ). I bought a big bar of chocolate from belgium. So many friends come out of the woodwork from Thanksgiving-Christmas when they know I’m making them.
My favorite holidays are ones sans gift. Seems like things are just so much more laid back when you’re not worried about buying gifts or if someone will like the gift you bougt. In my family we just buy a few gifts for the kids, and our gift is watching them enjoy them and a delicious meal and fellowship.
November 13th, 2008 at 6:54 am
I’ve been making a whole bunch of gifts for people.
I’m sneaky - I’ve been making scarves, and I make sure to make them in the presence of someone who I think might want a scarf, so they comment on it and I can get an idea of what they might want as a scarf, without directly saying, “I’m making you a scarf”. I think my mom figured it out anyways, but that’s okay.
For my father, I know he loves to work in his garden, but for the past few years he has had more aches and pains, and hasn’t been able to do everything he wants. So this year, I’m making a coupon book. I know, its the sort of thing I made as a kid, and its a little silly. In fact, I’m making it in the style of one I might have made as a child. But this year, what I’m giving him is coupons for work in the garden.. for example, one is for 30 minutes of “brute force”, another is for 30 minutes of “back breaking labor”, and one, since we have a truck, is for “one truck load hauled”. I’m giving him a whole bunch, from both myself and my husband - I think he will love it!
Not all of my ideas for homemade gifts have panned out - a few I made, didn’t turn out as nice as I wanted. But they were still fun to make, and I found another use for the pieces I’d already created, and made some artwork for my mom’s fridge. I may be almost 30, but my mom still loves to post things I’ve made on her fridge.
November 13th, 2008 at 7:09 am
what a great list! We always choose a “theme” for our gifts, as you mentioned in the self-made baskets, but it isn’t always a money saver to put those together…
A great source for little jars etc to use for things like the salt, spice, or tea collection is american science and surplus:
http://www.sciplus.com/
November 13th, 2008 at 7:09 am
Homemade gifts are great as long as there is an understanding that homemade gifts/cheap gifts are to be expected. If someone believes that you are exchanging $25-50 gifts and you whip out homemade stationery, I seriously doubt that the recipient will feel special.
Of course, I am not talking about students or others who are really financially strapped.
The real problem is with our American gifting customs. In the US we have become accustomed to gifting everybody in sight, racking up debt, because its the holidays, or a birthday. It is ridiculous. And then on top of gifting everyone, it has become a keeping up with the Jones’s thing.
I have come to hate receiving gifts. The things that I want are too expensive for people to give. I get all kinds of things that I don’t want or don’t need.
WHAT A WASTE!
November 13th, 2008 at 7:24 am
Hey, I’m LadyBonita from askmetafilter. Nice to see my calendar idea posted on one of my favorite pf blogs! I’m going to use the specialty gourmet salts and spices ideas from your list for a few of my in-laws. I also like the homemade travel brochure idea - think I’ll use that one for the kiddo’s birthdays. Thanks for compiling a great list J.D.!
November 13th, 2008 at 7:53 am
Last year I gave my mother-in-law several bags of my mother’s bread mix (homemade bread for the bread machine). I combined all of the dry ingredients in ziploc bags, printed out the recipe (one for each bag), included some packets of yeast and a bottle of honey, and wrapped everything together in a big box. She enjoyed it a lot.
November 13th, 2008 at 8:01 am
well this year, I ‘ve offered my friends an idea for a cheap but nice gift. we’re all trying to save money, and I miss them since I moved to London, so…
We will exchange (digital) photos from Paris and London, taken at a moment or place we’ve been thinking to the other one. cost zero and very personalized. they are quite happy.
and we’ll email them on the 25th.
November 13th, 2008 at 8:13 am
Great entry!
November 13th, 2008 at 8:23 am
Alton Brown Rocks!!
On another note - I’ve been kicking around the idea of constructing a family cookbook. None of us are particularily gourmet, but my Mum used to make a good banana bread and we also had a fudge recipe we used to make every Christmas. There were a few weird concoctions my dad made on a regular basis. My sis makes a killer spag sauce. My brother… well, I’ll put in a recipe about how to mix kool-aid or something.
I believe allrecipes.com has a thing where you can “publish” your cookbook. It’s a fun way to preserve a few family recipes and I think my Mum will like it. She’s getting up there in her years and getting sappier everyday. If nothing else, it’s an affirmation that our childhood wasn’t as traumatic as we ocassionally like to make it out:-)
Cheers!
Brigid
November 13th, 2008 at 8:32 am
Those are FANTASTIC ideas and I’m going to do several this year.
But dude. Stationery. With an e, for envelope.
November 13th, 2008 at 8:34 am
Wow, what an amazing list. You know, this got me thinking about Christmas, and some of my favorite Christmas memories are the ones that had no cost involved. Definitely going to try some if these tips.
November 13th, 2008 at 8:35 am
This is an awesome list. I’m sharing it with all my fellow single, frugal, and crafty moms! Thanks!
November 13th, 2008 at 8:40 am
@Anastasia
But don’t you see? These pieces of paper never move!
Sigh. How embarrassing. Thanks for the correction. I’ve fixed the
typospell-o.November 13th, 2008 at 8:45 am
I’ve done handmade jewelry in the past, beading is quite simple and you can get the supplies at many craft stores. But, it’s not always inexpensive! You can go crazy buying beads and pendants and findings, I know I did.
November 13th, 2008 at 8:56 am
One great idea if you have had a special event over the year or kiddos that the grandparents want to keep up on is making a DVD at home. I have a Macbook and was married this summer, one whole side of grandparents were unable to attend so I’ve been touching up my favorite photos in photoshop and putting them into a slideshow/movie in iMovie (with background music). Then I can edit together the movies in iDVD (different chapters like “Rehearsal”, “Getting Ready”, “The Ceremony”, etc). This allows them to see everything that happened without getting all kinds of confused with a computer (not all my grandparents are techsavvy). It’s also something that only costs the postage to send it. We’ll be giving copies to all the grandparents and to the parents as well.
When all is said and done it’s a somewhat time consuming gift, but it also is something that I think/hope will be treasured.
November 13th, 2008 at 9:03 am
This one only works if you’re crafty, but: I will be crocheting snowflake ornaments for many friends this year. They take about an hour and $1 of cotton thread apiece, and really look charming in a window or on a tree.
I also recently re-discovered the wonders of my local library’s ongoing used booksale. I dropped off a bag of books to donate and picked out five children’s books at $1 apiece for a friend’s little girl. They were all in like-new condition, and she loved them!
November 13th, 2008 at 9:15 am
A favorite tip for frugal gift giving: give “symbolic” gifts!: http://thebestpresentevah.blogspot.com/2008/10/non-materialistic-gifting-3-strategies.html
November 13th, 2008 at 9:32 am
Do-it-yourself vinaigrettes and salad dressings are awesome…you can give someone a bottle or two and then supply the recipe, as well. Once you start making your own dressings you can’t believe you ever use the sugary, bottled goop from the grocery store. Recipes abound online, this is a good one.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5320207
November 13th, 2008 at 9:53 am
When putting together a family cookbook, don’t just ask for recipes from everyone, get pictures too! It makes for a great cookbook that everyone in the family enjoys - my mom has done it three times now in the last 20 years, and everyone looks foward to getting them.
November 13th, 2008 at 10:00 am
Those are great ideas - I’d do the cookbook if I could cook.
This year, I’m doing digital scrapbooks for several family members and photo cd calendars. Not only will I save money but I’ll save time and effort. Now they’re not free but they cost less than printing the photos, buying the paper and buying the books and they look great.
November 13th, 2008 at 10:15 am
Re: Taking V. Higgins slideshow idea one step further, you can find all the resources to make a free slideshow online, including software, royalty-free music and graphics, and even background video clips. Or if you have a PC, try Photo Story 3 or Windows Movie Maker for your slideshow, which are both free and probably already on your computer. Then you only need to buy the DVDs to burn your show, but buy the best DVD-Rs you can find.
November 13th, 2008 at 10:17 am
Fantastic list, thanks!
Also, for people who are super talented at making things, you can pick up some extra cash on the side by selling on etsy.com– it’s like the ebay of homemade goods.
November 13th, 2008 at 12:01 pm
I love numbers 2 and 6 but the rest are also faboulous!
Very often the best presents are not the most expensive ones
November 13th, 2008 at 12:34 pm
Fantastic list.
I’m glad to see that the world will finally be catching up with us in giving consumable, homemade, and experiential gifts instead of “stuff”. I’m so tired of just being weird and cheap.
I hate giving and getting useless stuff, and usually ask for art supplies or museum memberships for the kids instead of toys. We buy magazine subscriptions for a few family members. My parents give us state parks annual entry stickers and MIL buys us a state historical society membership, which we use for inexpensive family adventures. I’ve been gifting my parents with short daughter-parent “road trips” (usually summer ones) for the past few years, which are more or less extravagant (camping vs. NYC, for example), depending on our finances. Frankly, the best present I could get right now would be a few evenings of free babysitting services!
These changes have reduced shopping stress, the gifts keep us in each others’ thoughts throughout the year, and we share experiences and interests as well as present-opening.
November 13th, 2008 at 1:23 pm
So many people don’t realize it’s not the cost but the thought that really counts. I would almost always rather receive one of the gifts above than a $50 gift card somewhere. Shows you care about the person and took time. Anybody can buy a gift card.
November 13th, 2008 at 1:35 pm
I give homemade bread very frequently…it makes a perfect gift because it’s tasty, cheap, and very few people actually know how to make bread anymore.
November 13th, 2008 at 1:37 pm
Thanks for the great ideas!
I will definitely be doing some of these, particularly the hand warmer and the hollowed-out book.
November 13th, 2008 at 1:42 pm
Not a gift but an idea for Christmas Cards.
This will be the 2nd Christmas we are creating a collage of pictures in Photoshop (or you can use any similar software) taken throughout the year. We then save it as a jpg file and have it printed anywhere as one picture. This year we are actually ordering them as “real” postcards so we can write on the back. Not cheaper but nicer. This is where we get them printed http://www.mpix.com
It is more personal than using a template or ready-made cards.
Here is a sample collage:
http://www.cosmicadventure.com
Cheers!
November 13th, 2008 at 1:44 pm
Several months back I learned about something called art cards. They’re 2.5×3.5 inches, and they can be made of anything. The ones you just trade are called ATCs, and the ones you can buy and sell are called ACEOs. They seem to have become fairly popular.
If you’ve taken a really nice photo that a friend or family member has admired, even if it is not of a person (i.e., I take pictures every year at the Rose Festival, and some people like rose photos), you can get it printed out as a wallet print and give that to them in a holiday card.
I found that getting wallet photos through Flickr is really cheap, and they don’t have borders. I have a photo cutter already, sort of like a really small paper cutter, so voila… straight-line cutting.
(Wallet photos come in sheets of four.)
If you happen to have archival-quality paper and you draw, you can draw ATCs as well, obviously, or paint something. There are all kinds of possibilities. I actually thought of doing a small work with ink and colored pencil and then uploading it to Flickr and getting it back as wallet prints–no reason they wouldn’t do it.
November 13th, 2008 at 1:44 pm
Amen to what Calvin said. Virtually all of the best presents I’ve received have been those which required a lot of thought on the giver’s part, but not very much money.In fact, what I want most this year (being a busy mom) is a weekend alone, chore-free, to do things like reading and watching child-inappropriate DVDs.
November 13th, 2008 at 1:46 pm
Our family is doing a Vintage Christmas. The rule is, everything we give has to be pre-owned/used. We are tired of over-packaged items and the Christmas Carnage! Now, we’re shopping at Garage Sales, The Salvation Army, and cool Antique stores. It’s so fun, and frugal. I’m even buying my kids’ toys used — and what a savings!
November 13th, 2008 at 1:51 pm
Yeay! I made it on the list. I think I’ll “present” my gift through your blog…but I’m not very patient so I might just point him to #30.
p.s. We were married two weeks ago btw!
November 13th, 2008 at 2:22 pm
Last year, I made my own Christmas cards and I really enjoyed it. I saw a card I really liked at the MOMA store and I basically copied it.
This year, I am going the cheaper route. I had postcards made on Vistaprint (www.vistaprint.com) and I put one of my favorite holiday recipes on the front and I’m going to write on the back. My recipients can put the postcard in their recipe boxes and save them for years (if they want) and they are cheaper to send! SCORE!
November 13th, 2008 at 2:30 pm
another cheap/ free idea is to give the gift of plants - take a cutting and root it now (a few weeks before the holidays) and then transplant it to a pot you get for free or cheap (i got a bunch for free and cheap at consignment shops, goodwill, and garage sales over the past 3 months; i just got 2 for 25 cents each at salvation army last week too!) and its a great present. almost everyone loves plants, as long as they’re not allergic and have a bit of space.
i bought a snake plant a few weeks ago and it had 3 “babies” that i detached and potted on their own so they’d be ready for the holidays. i also have a gorgeous “wandering jew” plant that i got as a gift at the end of the summer and its so lush already. i made 3 cuttings that are now rooting and will be planted for more gifts.
November 13th, 2008 at 2:37 pm
*Awesome* list. I totally dig the Love Coupons idea!
November 13th, 2008 at 3:09 pm
The calendar is a really fun idea. Does anyone know where one would find calendar templates that you can add dates to?
I suppose you could use Outlook, but that’s kind of boring. Or build from scratch on Excel but that sounds like a lot of work.
November 13th, 2008 at 3:54 pm
Lindsey: brilliant idea about the recipe on the holiday card! i was gonna do this anyway at vistaprint for personalized holiday cards and i love the idea of including a recipe!
November 13th, 2008 at 4:23 pm
I hate hate HATE giving and also getting non-functional stuff that will take up space and needs to be dusted, and I can only enthusiasically second number 9 on your list–experience! Yes! That’s what we did for our wedding instead of a lavish dinner or brunch or favors: We took our small wedding party with us up in a hot air balloon and were married by the pilot. Nobody will ever forget the day when they were looking down on Santa Rosa, California, from many feet up in the air and then got to have a small brunch and ensuing (free, with coupons) winetasting at Kendall Jackson. The entire shindig cost us only about $3000 for 10 guests (including paying for their hotel rooms the night before because balloons take off in the early morning hours), and it was the best time we’ve ever had.
So: Give experiences. Whale watching. Balloon flying. A cooking class. Avoid anything that’ll end up at Goodwill a couple of years down the road.
November 13th, 2008 at 5:03 pm
all these gifts are horribly crappy. how ’bout we give NOTHING and finally do away with this silly holiday all together? it’s nothing but a manmade creation!
only things i can understand are gifts of labor or gifts of doing something for the less fortunate.
i cosign #45, but even then make sure it’s something the person will really use, otherwise it’s a waste of money.
i don’t want to poo-poo all the suggestions, they may float some peoples’ boat, but honestly, try not to give useless junk.
November 13th, 2008 at 5:32 pm
This is a totally awesome post.
I’ve made calendars last year on KodakGallery and they turned out great, though they cost $20 that way. To the person asking about calendar templates, just Google search it, there are tons of free downloadable calendar templates, you do not have to create your own in Word or Excel, don’t reinvent the wheel.
http://www.printablecalendar.ca/
http://www.vertex42.com/calendars/
Wow, suddenly the word ‘calendar’ is looking really weird to me.
Also last year I decided to send electronic Christmas cards because I didn’t want to waste paper or spend money on postage when e-mail is so easy. I took a nice holiday picture of me and my husband, Photoshopped in a decorative holiday border of holly leaves and berries, and sent it to all my friends with a personalized message (not a mass email of course, though I think that would be nicer than nothing if you’re short on time). All you have to do is download the border (again, free by web search) and then you open it in Photoshop or your equivalent (the Gimp is a free shareware version of Photoshop that I use) and change the background of the border to transparent, and paste it into your photo. If you have a little computer skill, it is not hard.
http://www.gimp.org
http://www.southworth.com/page.php?id=118
http://www.leehansen.com/clipart/Holidays/Christmas/
(there are a zillion more but you have to wade thru ads on many sites and some aren’t that good).
save the trees, and send personal holiday cards electronically…
November 13th, 2008 at 5:37 pm
Very nice! Reminds me of my own attempt to get out the word about unGrinchy holiday activities:
http://www.tinkerx.com/2007/11/25/christmas-spirit-20-50-ungrinchy-holiday-ideas-for-2007/
Bah… FUNbug!
November 13th, 2008 at 5:54 pm
I rather pay for an experience (ie, movie or concert) with a friend or family than buy something they might now want. These are great suggestions in a pinch.
November 13th, 2008 at 6:11 pm
I found this the other day and I’m making them for a ton of family and friends. How easy, cheap, useful and special!? I can pick a special paper for each and every person on my list. http://www.simplyvintagegirl.com/blog/index.php/2008/09/08/notebook-easy-to-make-easy-to-use/
Also, she is hosting a homemade christmas so you’ll find links all over her site to tons of other ideas at other blogs involving all different crafting skill levels and styles.
If my friends get mad because I gave them something like this rather than a $50 gift then maybe I should re-think what I thought was a friendship.
November 13th, 2008 at 6:30 pm
I just saw this article posted on Consumerist and I have some other ideas for gifting
* infused vodka (http://www.wikihow.com/Infuse-Vodka-With-Flavor and https://www.rachaelraymag.com/party-planning/holidays/in-spirit/article.html)
* infused olive oil (http://www.diynetwork.com/diy/cr_diy_people/article/0,,DIY_13752_2277178,00.html)
* cute hand sewn magnets (http://bittersweetblog.wordpress.com/2008/05/22/you-know-youve-been-a-bad-blogger-when/)
* fabric flowers that can be glued to hair clips, headbands, magnets… (http://corvustristis.livejournal.com/8981.html)
and this link has a bunch of recipes for baking and candy as well as easy bath and beauty stuff: http://community.livejournal.com/diy_tutorials/381357.html
November 13th, 2008 at 7:19 pm
Humm… so many different ways to make ones Christmas even better. I liked the #24 about love coupons.
November 13th, 2008 at 7:19 pm
My husband is a amateur winemaker. Not very long though. But we’ve been giving away bottles of wine he makes for the last couple of years. I am going to buy a little something for each one bottle that I found recently online.
Cheap and goes well with the wine. It these cute little wallet-sized wine reference guides I found. I bought one for myself and liked it, so everyone is getting one.
http://www.winevintagecard.com
November 13th, 2008 at 7:52 pm
re: #46 ab
Why do you go into a post about Christmas if you’re just going to dump on the holiday? Were you dropped on your head when you were a small boy? Maybe you didn’t get that special toy when you seven? Regardless, away with you, Mr. Grinch!
“manmade creation” — what holiday isn’t?
To the contributors, thanks for the ideas and tips!
November 13th, 2008 at 8:12 pm
As a fine china lover, the teacup candles make me shudder. Just be careful not to use Limoges! ^^
November 13th, 2008 at 8:53 pm
One gift I am giving is organizing photos from my parents ENORMOUS collection to send to a company that digitizes them so they can put it on their digital picture frame and as computer backgrounds and screensavers and such. Totally worth it should you have a flood or some other disaster. Cause you can’t stuff all your photos somewhere watertight or fireproof… but you can protect a disk.
November 13th, 2008 at 10:30 pm
Honestly I love the photos idea, we did a similar thing many years ago and it went over well.. A personal new idea for this year is finding a toy that my little brother used to love when he was a baby. He lost this toy many years ago and I just recently found it buried in a closet. Hopefully this is technically not “regifting.”
November 14th, 2008 at 5:16 am
Good article but I hate the link to BuyNothingChristmas. They are a bunch of whackjobs. Unfortunately most of the vocal people against overspending at Christmas are either radical environmentalists, anti-capitalists, anti-business etc.
Unfortunately my family would not much appreciate homemade gifts but I did keep to a budget of ~$20 per person.
For coworkers and friends I will be doing some homemade items with things like homemade kettle corn, Chex Mix, a fruit basket, homemade candies etc.
I personally have 95% of my shopping done so all I have to do now is sit back, relax and let Christmas come (not from a store) and instead purge the stress this year.
November 14th, 2008 at 5:40 am
Great post! These things are much more meaningful than everything they’ve got at the mall. Christmas did not used to be so much about gifts and commercialism, not until the 20th century (or perhaps beginning in the Victorian era, approximately the 1840s.)
November 14th, 2008 at 5:48 am
Battra92- “Unfortunately most of the vocal people against overspending at Christmas are either radical environmentalists, anti-capitalists, anti-business etc.”
Mennonites started BuyNothingChristmas -I’ve never heard them called whackjobs. My understanding of Christmas is that it celebrates the birth of Jesus - not the support of overspending or increasing the profits of Best Buy and Macy’s. I’m pretty sure most people here are capitalists. Perhaps you are just having a little post-election meltdown.
November 14th, 2008 at 5:58 am
One year I gave my siblings’ children (2 kids in 1 family, 3 kids in the other) fabric–just fabric. Each piece was about 6×8. I gave fake fur, camo, bright red, hunter orange. They played and played with it–tents, costumes, wild animals, army, flags, picnics, etc. Cost about $3 for each piece in the remnant bin at the fabric store.
November 14th, 2008 at 6:09 am
As an extended family, we’ve decided not to gift to the adults and only to gift to our specific godchildren. That way each child feels that they get something special for them, but they aren’t overwhelmed by so many gifts that they stop appreciating them. This arrangement saves me about $300 each year in other gifts!
For token gifts for friends, coworkers and hostess gifts, I’ll be gifting jars of my homemade jams which I made throughout the summer from locally grown fruit. I also make my own gift tags from scrap fabric & ribbon and recycled cardboard. I’ve found most people don’t need more stuff, but getting a treat they can eat is appreciated.
We also host a Christmas party with a Tacky Gift Exchange. All items must be under $10 and should be as tacky as possible. Most items are recycled and everyone gets a laugh.
November 14th, 2008 at 6:19 am
I am also the candy box lady–I make last year’s Christmas cards into little boxes (I got directions from Highlights kids magazine years ago, I’m sure you can google directions for this), make fudge (the marshmallow creme kind), wrap a piece of fudge in plastic and drop it in each box. Stack two boxes, tie with ribbbon. I also print instructions (very tiny to fit under the fudge) for poking a hole in the corner and using the ribbon to make the boxes into Christmas ornaments. Takes time, but I give these to the dozens of teachers and co-workers I need to give a gift to for very little money. The recipients REALLY like them!
November 14th, 2008 at 7:00 am
(As you can see I am miss cheapie when it comes to gifts.)
Two years ago our Moroccan exchange student wanted to give something to her host grandpa (my FIL). He visited a port in Morocco in the Korean War, so she found pics on the internet of then and now, along with other pics of Morocco, printed and put them all in a clear-cover folder. He LOVED it, and he is impossible to buy for. My husband did a similar thing a few years ago, compiling pics and histories of the four ships he served on, which he also enjoyed.
November 14th, 2008 at 8:39 am
Andrea, in the about section they stated they were anti-capitalist. Reading more on it just turned me off of them completely. Plus they came off as a bit self-righteous but whatever.
By the way, I was at one point in my life a photographer so I may take some of my photos and make them into prints for people. I just need to find a good Kodachrome scanning service.
November 14th, 2008 at 10:02 am
All good, as long as you are very very sure the person will want/value it.
I’d say the safest are any food-related ones. The crafty ones would end up in my garbage (though that piggy is cute, but still).
We love getting anything food-related; just make sure the ingredients are quality and go for it!
November 14th, 2008 at 7:32 pm
Related to gifts of experience/consumables, you can do a gift basket tailored to a hobby.
We gave movie buff friends a pop-up popcorn bucket stuffed with an invitation to a “theater night” at our house. We hung up a sheet and played a film on the projector.
November 15th, 2008 at 1:50 pm
If you’re looking for a unique valentines gift idea for your husband, these personalized soaps from soapcard. com might do the trick. they make soaps with your message embedded inside. I got one for my boyfriend and he loved it. You can write all kinds of funny stuff…. My boyfriend thought it was super cute! .the “Think of me when you’re feeling dirty” soap was the one he loved the most
November 15th, 2008 at 5:05 pm
I loved this post so much, I featured it over at my blog for my readers. I have started a crusade of my own to “take back Christmas,” and your wonderful ideas are right in line with what I am trying to accomplish.
http://atouchoftuesdayweld.blogspot.com/
My own little tidbit: I am a photographer and am very interested in essential oils. Some of our loved ones are receiving framed photos of Arizona sunsets that I shot from our back yards, per their requests, for their homes. Others are getting oil blends with a burner or other aromatherapeutic items that I concoct myself (something different for each person).
November 15th, 2008 at 10:34 pm
my large extended family has agreed to do a “green” secret santa this year — the rules are that in order to save gas, money, resources, etc. you must give the person you’ve picked a gift that comes from things inside your house. that means homemade items and regifts (!) are ok.
November 15th, 2008 at 10:57 pm
wonderful list, as well as comment ideas! i’ll bookmark this!
thanks for all the hard work in making the list with links!
November 19th, 2008 at 8:37 am
I was doing some searching online and thought I should point out that #5 might not be such a great idea, as is. Apparently, a lot of people have had problems with them catching on fire…
http://sassypriscilla.typepad.com/sassy_priscillas_craft/2007/12/martha-stewart.html
However, my sister makes bedwarmers out of old socks and rice (for personal use, not gifts) and says they work great. I’m guessing you could substitute rice for the ceramic weights and use cotton material and you’d probably be fine.
November 19th, 2008 at 10:09 pm
I was just starting to think about what to get everyone for Christmas that wouldn’t cost me an arm and a leg!
You are AMAZING. Really. Just amazing.
November 20th, 2008 at 10:43 am
These are great ideas!! I am thinking about the candles for my social group that meets at a local coffee shop.
I am probably making most of my gifts this year, except I’m not sure what to do for my mother and and my niece They are both addicted to online games, but, of course not the same online game (My mother; Club Pogo and my neice: StarDoll) so I’m getting them Ultimate Game Cards so they can pay for the paid areas on those sites. I’m thinking I’ll put the card in a themed gift-basket thing and include snack foods that you can eat while you are parked in front of the computer for several hours.
I’m sure I’ll be labeled an enabler by my family, but hey…I can live with that.
If anybody has ideas on what else I can put in the basket, please let me know. It’s kind of a challenge.
November 20th, 2008 at 2:39 pm
I would suggest trying to get healthy-ish foods, but still tasty (like dried mango, yum!). Also print out and staple together a posture guide and toss in a back massager (those little hand held ones with the four nobs), sitting at a computer can really mess with your back. (speaking from experience)
November 21st, 2008 at 10:25 am
Wonderful suggestions. A couple years ago, I started sending out a personal favorite recipe with all of my Christmas cards as a gift for the holidays. On principle, I like the idea of saving the trees and using email for holiday cards but (for me) it’s not the same as receiving a card in the mail, with a handwritten personalized note from an old friend. Certainly much better than a bill!
I now buy cards from charities so that a charity gets the benefit. I make the caramel corn (recipe from Cooking Light) for many friends. One friend calls it “crack” because it is so good. I love the ideas though and want to branch out more.
My older brother has everything he needs. It’s hard to get him anything. One year I made him and his wife a scrapbook of family photos (focussed on the new baby). I worked days on it. At first I thought it didn’t go over well, but when the baby got a little older, she would ask to look at the scrapbook ALL the time. It turned out to be a wonderful gift for the whole family!
Part of the fun of Christmas for me is finding something so wonderfully perfect for that person. I would much rather someone spend $10 on me if it fits me to a tee than $100 and have it be lame.
November 22nd, 2008 at 9:14 pm
Last Christmas we decided to have old 35mm slides scanned for my parents. They had a wonderful time going through the boxes of family photos that hadn’t been out in years. And after receiving the DVD back from digmypics.com, we all got together to remember our favorite childhood memories! It’s a great way to bring old photos and slides back to life and now it’s easy to share with the whole family!
November 24th, 2008 at 7:00 am
1. Coupon for “Soup of the Month Club”–a quart of soup every month for the coming year (lots of seasonal possibliites) would be a good gift for a busy family or older neighbor who doesn’t cook much.
2. Gifts for pets and other animals. Catnip mice (cute holiday fabrics–I did Chanukah mice last year); home-made dog biscuits; home-made suet + seed balls for bird feeding friends. (I’m a member of a coop so I can buy ingredients in bulk.)
3. Gourmet ice cream sauces are easy to make and package in a jar with a bow.
4. Mulling spice mix–again in a nice jar with a bow, along with a half gallon of cider.
5. Spicy nut mixes–also easy to make and customize flavors.
November 27th, 2008 at 9:27 am
Everyone loves drinking during the holidays.
Go out and spend 10-$20 on the cheapest vodka you can find. Infuse the vodka with just about anything. (jalapeno, mango, berries, basil, melon, oranges, whatever!) strain it through cheese cloth after a month or a couple of weeks. The new infusion will take on the color and flavor you chose. AWESOME!!!!
I saw Alton Brown use black peppercorns to make the ultimate bloody mary vodka.
November 28th, 2008 at 11:37 am
Holy awesome ideas Batman!
I, too, was just thinking about how I would save some money this oh-so-tight holiday. My husband and I just bought our first home, and want to give thoughtful gifts without breaking the piggy bank. I love crafts, and baking, etc, but have a hard time finding crafty stuff that is also practical/useful (i.e. something I can give to my handyman dad). This site was just what I needed, and the responses offered many additional perfect ideas!
Here are my two cents, and just a different twist on the food/sharing of recipes idea: A video recipe book. We have a digital video camera that we bought when we lived frivolously. I was thinking about investing the time to film myself making my favorite dishes and treats (things I would already be making) and then use our modest video editing software to put together a video recipe book so friends and family can actually see how these things are made and what they should look like when they’re done. Our computer also has lightscribe technology, which means I can “burn” a photo onto a lighscribe DVD after I burn the video. If you don’t know anyone with this kind of technology, I would check out Staples, or some other techy store, they might offer this kind of thing for small fee.
November 29th, 2008 at 4:51 pm
This is a great post! I’ve been busy knitting up scarves to give as presents, but some of your ideas will be even better for some of the people I have left on my list!
November 30th, 2008 at 8:01 pm
Indeed, this is truly a great list! I think my favorite this year is baking cookies for friends and shipping them. It’ll cost a couple bucks for each package, but in total should be an inexpensive, sentimental gift. This is the best frugal-gift xmas list I’ve seen this year. Cheers!
December 2nd, 2008 at 7:48 am
What a wonderful article with such unique ideas. I really enjoy this. We need to get back to honoring Jesus and giving simple gifts that come from the heart!
December 3rd, 2008 at 11:31 am
Hi J.D., a little late here, but I love your tips so much I suggested your entry as a starting point for homemade gifts as a way for couples to save this season: http://www.quickencommunity.com/quickenOnlineBlog/!quickenOnline=true
I suggest also that people consider old-fashioned tree decor like popcorn, cranberries, etc. in lieu of buying a whole holiday setup (if you don’t already have one like Madsow does).
December 6th, 2008 at 8:51 am
I discovered a website similar to “Buy Nothing Christmas”. It’s called Redefine Christmas and it’s centered around making charitable contributions in the name of others. I have already asked to people to give me a favorite charity of theirs so I can make the donation. I believe in paying it forward and I think it’s a good idea.
December 6th, 2008 at 9:06 pm
The whole family agreed to give simple, homemade and functional gifts this year. I am making lounge pants and scarves for the twenty somethings. My aunt is a budding photographer, so I am currently in the process of designing a photographer’s vest for her. Wish me luck. Making a laptop messenger bag for my brother.
Giving a lot of canned and home baked goods to coworkers, and making tote bags for the girls in my knitting group.
We are also making fabric gift bags so that we cut back on the waste and expense of wrapping paper. I should explain that most of the fabric that I am using was picked up at auctions this summer.
December 11th, 2008 at 9:10 am
Buy bath towels in various colors. Then lay them out and sew velcro on one of the long side to make wraps. Make sure you put it on the front of one end and the back of the other so they overlap.
They work great and it keeps the towels in place while fixing your hair or applying make-up and men can use them too. You can get nice towels for $5 to $8 but get the velcro in strips so you can make it adjustable.
December 12th, 2008 at 4:20 pm
hey i am in middle school and dont have much money. i was wondering what to get my dad for christmas because he is so hard to buy for. then i came across this posting and absolutley love it! there are so many great ideas and now my problem is that i have to pick one! i love the “love coupons” nad “memory drawings.” they are such great ideaas!
thanks so much!
December 15th, 2008 at 12:44 pm
Last year I made audiobook CD from public domain recordings at LibriVox.org and covers I designed myself. I’ve posted more detailed descriptions on my blog at http://freelistens.blogspot.com/2008/11/audiobooks-for-christmas.html
December 15th, 2008 at 5:50 pm
Why not scan and fix up old family photos with photoshop… reprints can be done for a few cents at most drug stores… throw them in a cheap black frame (Ikea sells these for super cheap made of sustainable woods).. and you have a very low-cost, family centered-semi home made gift that people really get blown away by.
December 18th, 2008 at 9:43 pm
This is one of the best and most useful lists I have ever seen. I will most certainly be using several of these ideas and also some of the great stuff suggested by the commenters.
What fantastic ideas! Thanks so so so much!
February 4th, 2009 at 10:41 pm
I love all of these great ideas! One thing I’m doing for next Christmas is starting very early-it’s only February. I’m a busy mom of two, and my family usually spends around $1000 on Christmas, but I thought that for next Christmas I can start way early and save a bit of money by making my own gifts, keep busy while my husband is deployed and be waaaaay less stressed for the holiday. And maybe that money we normally spend can go towards a vacation!
Thanks for the ideas!
March 2nd, 2009 at 12:59 am
Here’s a radical idea: skip Christmas altogether. I grew increasingly disenchanted and then disgusted by the pressure to ‘buy buy buy’ during the holiday season. In 2001 when W’s response to the 9/11 attacks was, basically, ‘Buy more stuff’ I realized I was done. I was completely done with Christmas shopping, Christmas cards, Christmas stockings. I stopped giving Christmas gifts to everyone, and I asked people not to give me any (I have way too much stuff in my life as it is) It is amazing how much simpler my life has been since then. I look at the mad rush of holiday shoppers each season, and the unbelievably huge pile of waste it creates and I breathe a massive sigh of relief. On Christmas friends and I go out for dim sum and then see a movie, and call it a day.
I would far, far rather give someone a gift when I am moved to than to do it because “’tis the season.” Life is way too short to be a marketing tool.
My .02¢
March 6th, 2009 at 12:51 pm
Great post - I love your list (especially the tea cup candle!)!!
July 22nd, 2009 at 4:43 pm
Two ideas for you:
1)For a gift that will bring tears to a family members eyes, but will only cost you time. Do a “Where I’m from poem” the template is on the internet, just google search “Where I’m from Poem” and you’ll find a step by step template to write a story about how you or a cherished family member became who they are. ANYONE can write one, the template draws out your memories, and I guarentee it’ll be the best gift you ever gave! Write about yourself or write one from the perspective of the person you’re giving the poem to, such as parent, grandparent. Or honor a cherished family member who has recently passed away.
2) This year I’m making I spy ornaments Filling those plastic round fillable ornamets with rice or doll pellets( that you stuff dolls with) and then I’m doing 2 versions. Religious putting in small miniature nativity pieces and in the other miniature winter/christmas items. after filling one half of the ornament, glue the 2 pieces of ornament with super glue to ensure doesn’t come apart and attach a small tag that says :I spy and a list of things for the child to look for in the ornament. They shake it around and let the items shift in the ornamet. I purchased items after christmas when they were 75% off and are making them for this year for just pennies! I used all kinds of those little “ornaments” that you decorate those tiny little table top trees with as the things to Spy.
August 13th, 2009 at 4:45 pm
I love the I Spy ornaments ideas! I have also heard of I Spy quilts- you buy a bunch of fabric remnants and cut them into squares and quilt them together. Then you give the quilt to a child along with a list of things to find on their quilt. Makes a nice before-bed winding down activity for toddlers.
I have always kepts a list of who to buy for/make a present for. I think it is really easy to get carried away with the idea of making all these things and then just run out of time and end up running to the store and spending unnecessarily just to have a gift. I guess the most important thing is to start early!
August 26th, 2009 at 4:41 pm
WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Okay so I am 12 and It is REALLY hard to make money and these gifts will totally meet my bugegt!!!!
THANK YOU SOOO MUCH!
September 22nd, 2009 at 11:50 am
I have to add my two cents here. I LOVE all of these ideas! For the last two years, my significant other has gone way overboard with gifts. Last year he bought his mother and her husband a brand new generator, 42″ flat screen TV, and a new microwave. He got me a flatscreen as well. But the gift I liked most last Christmas was a homemade flag case for my late father’s flag. S.O.’s grandfather had made it out of leftover pieces of hardwood flooring in a way that made me really think of my dad (he was ALWAYS being crafty and making elegant stuff with inelegant materials). I have to be very careful not to focus on the homemade stuff I get, no matter how much more I like it, because it feels like he spends so much money that it would be heartless not to show as much appreciation as such a lavish gift deserves. It just leads to a huge issue, though, when I feel like I have to compete against his big spending with my homemade picture frames and quilts!! I’m so glad to see that the world is making a shift back to what really matters… love and family during the holidays.
September 27th, 2009 at 1:06 pm
I made photo blocks for all of my siblings and in-laws last year. You take a 4″ x 4″ and have it cut at the hardware store to make blocks. Sand the edges, and paint the blocks in nuetral colors. Glue pictures of places or family members four sides and a quote about rememberance on the top, and then give singly or as a set. My husband has 4 siblings, and I have five, so I glued two pictures to a block and put quotes on three sides, then gave every one three blocks. They worked out great and cheap. I also made some with black and white photos of my mom and her siblings for my aunts and uncles. They LOVED those since they didn’t all have the same photos.
October 17th, 2009 at 11:51 am
Thanks for all the great ideas on this post!!! I love Christmas because of the food, midnight mass and seeing my family. It is just a great time, even with no gifts. Caroling, cocoa, bundling up, watching Christmas specials and listening to music, trimming the tree and visiting, there is so much! I love it!
I am from a big Italian family. As we have all grown older, we have moved away and my aunt and grandfather just died 2 years ago (the first deaths for my family). So, to keep us all closer, I made a family tree with the software Inspiration and an address book with birthdays, addresses (duh!) and email addresses (for those who had them) with Microsoft Excel. I put both items on a writable CD.
Then I found an old family movie where we were all singing and dancing (we are a fun group when put together with food!), including my aunt and grandfather. I cried when I watched it because it was such a wonderful memory forgotten! I found a local company that makes DVDs from old VHS tapes. So, I ordered a few copies and had a friend burn a whole bunch for me. I sent the CDs and the DVD to each branch of my family. The shipping costed more than anything. But it was the time I invested and what I got out of it that meant more than anything to me. Now, my cousins, uncles, aunts, etc. have stayed in better touch. It was so appreciated by everyone. It made my year.