Natural and Free Thanksgiving Decorations

Decorate Wonderfully for Thanksgiving with Nature's Bounty

By Pat Veretto, published Oct 02, 2006
Published Content: 77  Total Views: 75,306  Favorited By: 12 CPs
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Make your home look festive this Thanksgiving by bringing in the outdoors! Sure, you can go to the store and buy Indian corn and fake leaves and plastic squashes to decorate with, but why, when you can do it yourself and have a lot more fun? Autumn is filled with lively colors, no matter where you live.

To decorate your Thanksgiving table, serve a large winter squash, baked whole. When it's done, move it to a large plate or platter, then cut off about a third of the top and scoop out the seeds. (You can toast the seeds for snacks even after they've been cooked inside the squash.) Scoop out some of the flesh (don't scoop too deeply or the squash shell may collapse), scrape the flesh from the piece you cut out, mash it all up with a generous amount of butter and salt and return it to the squash shell. If you put the squash on a large enough plate, you can put leaves or small dried plants, nuts, other decorations around it. Don't forget a large spoon to dish it up!

Gather colorful leaves and use them to scatter on the table around bowls and platters, or put them on a platter or plate and cover them with clear plastic wrap. You can use this to serve cookies, bread or anything for your Thanksgiving dinner that doesn't need to be served hot. Finger foods are best so the plastic doesn't get torn with a serving utensil.

Fall bouquets are easy to put together and they make great Thanksgiving decorations. You can find "weeds" to make them from almost anywhere, except in a park or tidily kept lawn! Go out in the country if you can, and walk along the roadside. If you can't do that, look for a vacant lot. Look for a variety of colors and shapes to mix in a vase for the best decorative effect.

You can use flowers, too, after they've gone to seed. Leaves and seed pods from iris and daylilies, sunflowers, seed heads from columbine... look around and you'll be sure to find something. Put them in an elegant vase or funky jar or a simple can or whatever you like. Put the tallest ones in the center and the shorter ones to the outside. You don't have to do a proper arrangement to make it look good.

Takeaways
  • Use autumn produce to decorate
  • Decorating naturally doesn't have to cost anything
  • Bring the outdoors in for natural decorating
Did You Know?
George Washington declared the first official Thanksgiving Day for the US as a nation in 1789, but it was only for that year.
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