Easter Decorating Ideas for Your Fireplace

Written by Susan Penney


Sure you decorate your fireplace and mantel forrepparttar winter holidays, but don’t forget this important focal point in your room as Spring approaches. Here are some nearly-instant ideas for springtime and Easter fireplace decorating:

Daffodils in crystal or glass vases on each end of your mantel bespeakrepparttar 110311 coming of Spring. Tie a wired chiffon ribbon in a soft spring hue in a bow around each vase for a nice touch.

March a line of fluffy chicks across your mantel. Five or more chicks, whether stuffed toys, porcelain hens, or craft store chickens, make a cute display.

And speaking of stuffed toys, now is a great time to find those old stuffed bunnies and ducks and turn them into mantel ornaments. Add Easter grass, and scatter decorated eggs alongrepparttar 110312 mantel to keep them company.

Tie wired gingham-checked ribbons into bows, and attach them torepparttar 110313 edge of your mantel. Letrepparttar 110314 ends of each bow hang down various lengths from one to three feet. Atrepparttar 110315 end of each ribbon, open a plastic egg, taperepparttar 110316 ribbon’s end insiderepparttar 110317 egg, and forcerepparttar 110318 egg shut. This creates a set of eggs dangling at different heights.

Interviewing for Family History Writers - 4 Important Tips

Written by Carol M. Upton


Interviewing is an important skill forrepparttar life storywriter, no matter whatrepparttar 110310 size of your family memory project. You will want to do plenty of it as you buildrepparttar 110311 research you need to write your family stories. How will you begin?

1. Establish Trust with Simple Questions

You want to establish trust and empathy with your interview subject, so small talk atrepparttar 110312 beginning of an interview is not necessarily a waste of time. You may want to ask a few simple questions, such as date and place of birth, and chat about those answers to put your subject at ease.

2. Follow Up with Open-Ended Questions

The important thing to remember with interviewing is to ask questions which are as open-ended as possible - questions which require much more than a simple 'yes' or 'no' answer, but which encouragerepparttar 110313 person to begin telling a story. For example, instead of asking "Where did you live when you were a teenager?" - try re-phrasingrepparttar 110314 question as "Take me on a walk aroundrepparttar 110315 house you lived in when you were fifteen." You will find that you get an array of extra detail instead of a sparse response.

Once we have askedrepparttar 110316 simple questions, I move into questions like these:

What did your parents tell you about their lives?

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