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Memoirs of Christmas Decorating at The White House
decorate your house like the White House for ChristmasU.S. Army Sergeant Frank Lazzaro was just discharged about eight months from active duty at Fort Bragg, North Carolina during the Viet Nam Era, when little did he know that his life was going to be changed completely with one telephone call. It was The White House Chief Floral Designer calling his home inviting Frank for an interview after receiving his letter of ideas to The First Lady in decorating The White House for Christmas. After reading about the new first family moving in and how First Lady Betty Ford wanted a special First Christmas at The White House, Frank's letter to Mrs. Ford was received on his decorating ideas. His road to happiness in a career that the only experience he had in decorating a Christmas Tree was in the barracks at Fort Bragg, was about to take off - big time! OFF THE RECORD: The tree in the army barracks was decorated with empty beer cans, soldier's military "green socks" and colorful flashing lights with the help from the soldiers in that unit!
Decorating The Cross Halls Decorating The Red Room Decorating The Blue Room
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| A White House Christmas Arrangement designed by Frank Lazzaro for The Red Room - Reagan Administration |
Frank Lazzaro decorating the Christmas Tree Toys on the Tree The Blue Room - Carter Administration Toys to Decorate your Christmas Tree - There is something to say about having small plush teddy bears and toys, antique toys, wooden trains and soldiers at Christmastime. That is Christmas! Below image will show you a Christmas Tree that I assisted in the decorating using toys and toys and toys. Most of the beautiful antique toys were about 5 inches long, some were as high as 12 inches. I loved decorating the tree with these antique toys. They were simply beautiful to look at. Each antique toy decoration was very valuable in price. Most of these unique masterpieces were on loan from museums around the country. Many of these decorations were from Christmases past from Presidential administrations in the 1800's.
Frank in The Blue Room after all the decorating is completed. Notice the antique toys hanging on the branches. Assorted clowns, rocking horses, dolls, soldiers and 19th century Christmas cards. It is so easy, inexpensive and elegant looking to use antique wooden soldiers, trains, hand carved wood animals and unique plush little toys for your very own tree decorating. Add some rag dolls too! That was a beautiful vision with rag dolls made by hand from homecrafters around the country. Make this an all year hobby of collecting unique little toys at garage sales and fea markets and small store closeouts. Start in January and collect them all year. Check out ebay too! Ask a friend with a baby if you can have small wood blocks with the color letters and numbers on them. Glue 3 together and add gold string, and you have a Christmas decoration for your tree. Load your Christmas tree up with these beautiful offsprings from toyland and add white tiny lights, (no twinkling lights). You will want to keep the tree up all year round after you're done decorating your masterpiece. Just keep away from those multi color flashing lights, angel hair and tinsel. Those days are long gone A Doll House Christmas - Here is something that you will enjoy doing and it should be plenty of fun for the entire family. Find an old antique looking doll house, look for one at a garage sale. Try to get one to look like the dollhouse I am kneeing next to in this Christmas display ( below ) under the Blue Room Christmas Tree and make a toyland of colorful holiday wrapped presents, (notice the wrapped fake giftboxes behind me against the wall) antique dolls, wooden trains and whatever you can find to make it look like something that came out two centuries ago. The doll house in this photo with me is the "Real McCoy" antique house dating back to the Victorian Era and worth millions of dollars. I believe that one of the Presidents and the First Lady in that century gave it to their daughter as a Christmas present. (I hate to have that mortage payment every month) That was the story, but I don't know which President. Here's a note to amaze you! Only myself and a handful of decorators, who had the great honor of viewing this masterpiece home, toured the inside of this very elegant doll house with my own eyes. Each room in this beautiful home had scaled miniature furniture of the Victorian era. All hand carved wooden furniture. I glazed down at every tiny room in the house and what really had my eyes wide open in disbelief was the tiny hand-carved baby grand piano in the large center room. This house was filled with antique tiny furniture dating back to that period in time. I felt that the clock was turned back to the last century. I knew that when the White House had its tours for the holiday season, no one would know this and be able to glance inside of this Victorian home to see what I saw. I was privileged to be there to view this, it was truly a beautiful sight to see.
Frank adding the finishing touches to an antique doll house under the White House Christmas Tree in the Blue Room. Reagan Administration
Frank on the 25 ft scaffold decorating the White House Christmas Tree in the Blue Room. Carter Administration Make sure that before you start hanging all the decorations on your tree, that the light bulbs are all in place and working with no electrical problem. Tighten each bulb one by one to make sure they light and in the socket properly. Put the lights on the tree first after the Christmas tree is secured in its place with a water tree pan on the floor. (If this is a fresh tree) Always use support with the proper equipment before decorating your tree. Rope, two by four wood planks, wire, nails, whatever it takes to secure it down. Make sure, if it is a fresh cut tree, that you cut the bottom main bark of the tree to a long point or slant. Almost like a pencil being sharpen with a knife. Why? When you cut the tree trunk on a point or slant instead of a straight cut at the end with a saw, it takes in a good amount of water, and keeps the tree lasting longer. A tree with a straight flat cut can not drink the water very well. It will last longer and not dry out as fast with this techique. Add water daily to the tree water pan. Fresh cold water, everyday up until the day you discard the tree. Do not let the tree dry out one single day or it will cause a very serious fire. Also, I always spray my tree with a water mist bottle to keep the branches looking green and fresh. It also makes a beautiful presentation with water drops all over the tree. Try it out yourself this holiday season. (remember, to do this with the water spray, you would need "outside" weather proof lights for your tree) If you have a large tree, seven feet high, don't decorate it all alone, get help if neccessary. It's more fun and you will not be very tired halfway into the job. Don't think you can do all this by yourself, it's not easy. Look at all the people it takes to put the tree up in Rockerfeller Center. Remember, the most important job in decorating a tree is securing it down to the floor. The biggest nightmare that can happen to you if it becomes loose in the tree pan and falls down. Secure the base and if the tree is placed in a corner of the room, attached strong fishing line to the top center bark to the walls. Keep it secure at all times. Drap the electric lights on the outside branches for the best results. Use light bulbs that are always clear. Do not use multi-colors or flashing lights. The 1960's are way over! I never had a problem with the electrical lights on the White House tree because the U.S. Government Parks Department employees had them all in place for us. That was their job! We just decorated the tree. Spray your fresh tree with a water mist every day if possible. Keep it bright green, cool and fresh as long as possible. Keep the tree away from heat, a stove, away from the sunny window and fireplace. Always have a fire extinguisher handy in the room and check it throughout the holiday season for the proper contents. Purchase a large family size one at the Home Depot. (How did my Grandparents ever use lited candles on the tree?) Use a secure ladder when climbing the steps to decorate your tree and do not carry a million Christmas balls in your arms. Get the exercise and go up and down to get more decorations. I lost five pounds decorating that tree in the Blue Room. I reached the very top and hung the star up on the branch that was touching the ceiling (25 feet high). The scaffold I was climbing could be around the Statue of Liberty, it was very secure and strong. I also did airborne training at Fort Bragg, so the height did not disturb me at all. I felt more like a trappeze artist at Ringling Bros climbing that scaffold with my feet and hands. One day I had to reach the center of the tree for a empty space that needed a Christmas ball - I was a peerfectionist and wanted that space filled with a decoration. I had one foot and one hand on the scaffold while my right foot touch the inside of the branch and my right hand hung the ball on the branch. I was always elected to do that because of my youth and strength. Here's a quickie! One day I was on the very top and I heard people talking and entering the Blue Room to observe me in my decorating. It was First Lady Betty Ford with Hollywood celebrities Warren Beatty and Diane Keaton. You'll never know who is watching over you in that house! Tony Bennett one year came in with Mrs.Ford when I was putting the finishing touches on the tree also. I wish my mother could have been there to see this scene. She loved Tony Bennett. He came to visit The First Lady and to sing at a White House holiday dinner that week.
Frank decorating an elegant mantle in the Blue Room. Carter Administration The Mantles If there is something that The White House had plenty of, it was mantles. I have never seen so many mantles in one house in my life. There are other facts of interest and I have them listed below:
Frank in The Red Room finishing the mantle centerpiece in the gold urn (shown on the mantle) Notice the tag on my suit? All decorators and staff must wear the security tag on them and have it exposed at all times to the secret service assigned to guard the White House. The security there was very, very tight, and that was thirty years ago. Can you imagine how it must be in today's world? - There are 132 rooms, 32 bathrooms, and 6 levels to accommodate all the people who live in, work in, and visit the White House. There are also 412 doors, 147 windows, 28 fireplaces, 7 staircases, and 3 elevators.
- At various times in history, the White House has been known as the "President's Palace, " the "President's House, " and the "Executive Mansion." President Theodore Roosevelt officially gave the White House its current name in 1901.
- The White House use to receive approximately 6, 000 visitors a day. I believe it is closed to the public now.
- Presidential Firsts President John Tyler (1841-1845) was the first President to have his photograph taken President Theodore Roosevelt (1901-1909) was not only the first President to ride in an automobile, but also the first President to travel outside the country when he visited Panama President Franklin Roosevelt (1933-1945) was the first President to ride in an airplane.
- With five full-time chefs, the White House kitchen is able to serve dinner to as many as 140 guests and hors d'oeuvres to more than 1, 000.
- The White House requires 570 gallons of paint to cover its outside surface.
- For recreation, the White House has a variety of facilities available to its residents, including a tennis court, a jogging track, swimming pool, movie theater, billiard room, and a bowling lane.
The above photograph shows an image that I am adding the finishing touches to a holiday arrangement in the very famous "Red Room". Assorted holiday foliages with added touches of berries, designed in a beautiful antique bowl, makes this very elegant piece a "masterpiece" that I am very proud of. Reagan Administration.
Frank just finishing designing a holiday centerpiece for The Green Room - Reagan Administration The Green Room The above photograph is taken of me placing a holiday arrangement, that I have just created in The Flower Room, on a table in "The Green Room". It was made of assorted Christmas greenery with red berries, holly, juniper with blue tone berries, ivy, evergreen and moss base in an antique bowl. The Green Room has served many purposes since The White House was first occupied in 1800. It was first used as a "Lodging Room." Thomas Jefferson, the second occupant of The White House, used it as a dining room. James Madison made it a sitting room. Styles in the room changed many times during the years of Presidents. The Green Room was completely refurbished in 1971. Its walls were recovered with the delicate green watered-silk fabric originally chosen by Mrs. Kennedy in 1962. Draperies of striped beige, green, and coral satin graced the room. The walls of The Green Room are covered with elegant paintings of various people and scenes. It is a beautiful room to one's eyes. If you have a room in green tones, and want to create a holiday centerpiece for a table, its color co-ordiation is on your side. For your own home interior decor - you cannot fail in your interior decorating blends if you keep your holiday centerpiece in shades of assorted Christmas greenery and just add a couple of fresh apples or lite green pears. Use an elegant bowl of china or ceramic in ivy color or a Laura Ashley type white ceramic bowl with touches of blue trim. White House compotes, vases or bowls that I have designed floral arrangements in are all the "Real McCoy" antiques. I have created many simple green foliage designs in my time there, using all assorted fresh holiday foliages worth about fifty dollars at the wholesale level in a ceramic or gold bowl that was worth a couple of million dollars in antique value. It's the container that counts for more than fifty percent of the floral design. With a beautiful elegant container you can place dried weeds in it and if designed with a little flair, would look beautiful. I love to add some fruits to holiday arrangements when I am working with an early American interior decor. Many of these containers that I have designed in date back to the first President that occupied the White House, so I had to always be very careful in carrying these lovely pieces to the rooms. I always enjoyed decorating the Green Room while in The White House. Reagan Administration. The East Room
The bronze electric light standards are displayed in The East Room along side the large majestic fireplaces. I trimmed these (above photo) many years at The White House. They looked so elegant when decorated with assorted fresh holiday greens and berries wrapped around the bronze standards. When the lights are all lite up in The East Room, and the decorations are all in placed, it is a most beautiful scene to view for Christmas. The East Room is for very large formal State Dinners and White House parties and evening entertainment by great performers from all over the world. It is the largest room in The White House and is also the home of The White House Nativity Scene display and The Christmas Gingerbread House display created from the baker's kitchen. Reagan Administration.
I love this Creche on displayed in the East Room of The White House every Christmas. It is a White House tradition to see this when I use to travel there to decorate the rooms. I have always looked forward to viewing this beautiful elegant Nativity Scene and said a prayer to The Holy Family, requesting peace in the world, when I was before this majestic display. In all the twelve years I have been at The White House decorating the mansion, I have never seen the people that assembled this great masterpiece in The East Room. One day the room is empty and the next day this most beautiful vision is there - As if it came in the middle of the night, placed there by angels, just like the birth of Our Savior. How I wish I could bring this back to New York with me and display it in my own home, it would be up all year round. Reagan Administration.
The photograph above was taken in The East Room of The White House in the mid 1980's. I was setting up an antique urn on a wall table preparing for an evening holiday reception. (I looked in the elegant wall mirror to see if I aged a little while worrying to meet the deadline for this formal reception). Sometimes when I was decorating the mansion on the main floor and in the rooms, and no "VIP's" are in the area, (Especially The President or First Lady), I would remove my suit jacket, role up my sleeves and get deep into the business of decorating this graceful, most elegant room, feeling very comfortable as if it was my own home, sometimes, I think it was my second home, I was there so many years. Whenever The President or First Lady would enter the room that I was working in, I would quickly role down my sleeves and place my suit jacket back on for a more respectful dress attire presentation. (Notice the Christmas Wreath refecting in the mirror on the window paine). There were always fresh green wreaths hung in every window on the main floor of The White House.
This This is an earlier display of the famous White House Creche during the 1970's. This one also was in the East Room and in the same place as the other Creche that was constructed later on in the 1980's. The White House always had just ONE grand Creche in The East Room every holiday season. There were plenty of poinsettia plants all around the Nativity display. It really added a finishing touch to the complete vision of this elegant presentation. This was my favorite set of the two of them. I stared at this beautiful creche for a long time dreaming of that most holy night. Would you like to perk up your own home Creche with some ideas to make it more "attractive" and spending very little amount in dollars for this project? It's very easy and I will explain in detail exactly what you can do to make your Nativity Scene a unique home display. If you have your Nativity placed on the mantle, or a table this set-up I am going to tell you about will have no effect on the presentation - it will work very well on both styles of display. Purchase some bright red poinsettia plants (about five to eight crown heads on them planted in six inch containers (your local garden store will have the best pick for a larger selection) - and cover the containers with gold foil. Place the plants all around the nativity set on high and low levels about three inches of height from each other. Keep them close together - about an inch apart from touching each other on the table or mantle. Take spanish moss, gray colors, and spread it around the manger up and around the base of the plants, (do not touch the stem of the plant) keeping most of the gold foil visible and interwined it around the statues. Place different assorted sizes of natural color pine cones in sets of three's on the spanish moss and around the complete set. Add a set in the manger behind the child and outside on the side of the manger. It would also look very nice to have some sets of pine cones in the base of the poinsettia plants for a final touch. This is a great rustic effect to have using these pine cones. Remember, the child was born in a stable. Add a light to the inside of the manger and your Creche presentation will have a most beautiful added touch. For a very unique additional touch - build your own manger, and find all the supplies you need right in your neighborhood park, jogging trail, or forest. Take pieces of forest wood tree barks, logs, sticks, a few small rocks and green moss. If the statues in your Creche are about eight to twelve inches high, the manger's height should be at least double the height of the largest statue. Be very careful if you have a candle lite near it that the flame of the candle is maintained with a cystal clear glass enclosed cylinder, and never leave a burning candle unattended. One tiny spark of a candle's flame can hit the spanish moss and cause a serious fire in your home. Always, use great caution with candles, and if I were you, don't light them up until Christmas Eve when you and your family and friends are gathering at home, in front of this display. There were many candles on display at The White House inserted in holiday arrangements during the Christmas season but never lite. Just used for decorative display purposes only. Beautiful holy figures, properly placed on a display with all the trimmings I directed you with in this chapter, will create in your home an exclusive nativity display for your family and friends to view and enjoy for years to come. Bona Natale! THE APPLE FRUIT TREE CHRISTMAS TABLE CENTERPIECE
This photograph above was taken during the 1980 Christmas decorating season in The White House Flower Room, I was creating something very special for a Christmas reception that evening in The East Room. Instructed and under the supervision of The Chief White House Florist, he gave me the pleasure of designing Fruit Trees to place on the buffet tables along near the walls in The East Room. I do not remember the exact count, but I kept creating these very elegant fruit trees all day and into the evening. When I completed four of them at a time, I would transport these creations on to the tables in the East Room.....The East Room, scene of many historic White House events, and the largest room in The White House, is used for large gatherings, such as dances, after-dinner entertainments, concerts, weddings, funerals, award presentations, press conferences, and bill-signing ceremonies. It has a beautiful Steinway grand piano with gilt Americn eagle supports and was given to The White House as a gift in 1938 by the manufacturer. The elegant Bohemian cut-glass chandeliers are installed in the delicate plaster decorated ceiling. This massive room has an 18th-century classical style to which it was restored by architects during the Theodore Roosevelt renovation of 1902. All my twelve Christmases have been in this room decorating the mantles and Christmas Trees during the holiday decorating season. The White House Nativity Scene is always displayed in this room. These elegant Christmas Tree Centerpieces were used on the buffet tables along near the walls in The East Room. I do not remember the exact count, but I kept creating these very elegant fruit trees all day and into the early evening. When I completed a couple of them at a time, I would transport these creations onto the tables in the East Room ( PHOTO BELOW ).....The East Room, scene of many historic White House events, and the largest room in The White House, is used for large gatherings, such as dances, after-dinner entertainments, concerts, weddings, funerals, award presentations, press conferences, and bill-signing ceremonies. It has a beautiful Steinway grand piano with gilt Americn eagle supports and was given to The White House as a gift in 1938 by the manufacturer. The elegant Bohemian cut-glass chandeliers are installed in the delicate plaster decorated ceiling. This massive room has an 18th-century classical style to which it was restored by architects during the Theodore Roosevelt renovation of 1902. All my twelve Christmases have been in this room decorating the mantles and Christmas Trees during the holiday decorating season. The White House Nativity Scene is always displayed in this room. HOW TO MAKE A 20" CHRISTMAS APPLE FRUIT TREE CENTERPIECE - The Chief White House Florist created a sample Fruit Tree for me to follow, and I duplicated the design procedure over and over again. The Supplies you will need in creating this very elegant table centerpiece tree are the following: a gold ceramic compote about 10" in diameter, a 12" high green cone shape form that holds water, ( Most national-chain arts and crafts stores will sell these items at a reasonable price ) an assortment of fresh bright color fruits from your favorite quality food market, fruits such as one medium size pineapple, about twelve large dark red apples and twenty small green apples, 6" florist green wooden sticks and you will also need a nice size bouquet of dark boxwood greenery. DESIGN DIRECTIONS: Soak the green cone form into a bucket of warm water for about 20 minutes until it absorbs plenty of water. Make sure there are no air bubbles coming out of the form. Place the heavy water filled form cone in the middle of your work table on a plate to hold all the extra water coming out of the cone with plenty of space around you so you can view this entire cone on every angle of the design. It is much easier to work with while you turn the tree around when designing it on the plate. Insert one six inch wooden stick into the bottom of the pineapple. Tab it with a small hammer. With a florist knife or table knife, make a point on the other end of the stick and insert it on the very top of the green cone. That is your center focal point in the design. ( The height of the completed centerpiece would be around 20 inches tall. 12" for the cone and approximately 7" for the top pineapple ). The second step to this lovely centerpiece is very important. Insert the green wooden florist sticks into all the apples. Tap it with a small tap hammer halfway into the fruit. Make a point on the other end with a florist knife and insert them one by one into the green cone. The point on the stick holds it stronger in place in the form than a flat end stick. Balance the apples around the tree cone using one large red and small green alternating them about a couple of inches apart from each other. Add more apples if neccessary, the goal is to have a nice balance tree with the apples of small green and large red ones around the complete project. Make the red apples the primary color on your tree. Place the boxwood greenery ( this you can buy very cheaply at Home Depot as a small bush tree ) and with a wire cutter or foliage cutter, cut the boxwood on a slant-cut leaving about 3" in stem from the foliage and insert the twigs into the remaining empty spaces around the apples. Cover only about one half of the bottom fruits with the boxwood foliage. Make sure that the boxwood is evenly inserted in the tree and nothing is sticking out like a sore thumb. Fill the spaces tightly and spread the boxwood out to get the full even effect all around the tree of this beautiful dark green foliage. Spray the complete centerpiece everyday if possible, with a bottle mist of fresh clear cold water to give it a nice raindrop effect look and to keep the fruit and foliage fresh throughout the holiday season. . Water this centerpiece every other day, to keep it from drying up in your home, just place it in the sink and pore cold tap water over the entire piece. Place this lovely tree into antique gold compote, and you have yourself a masterpiece creation from the Reagan Administration Christmas dating back to an era long gone. Another photo will be on display soon showing the centerpiece on the buffet table. It is taken with a small over the counter flash camera, it was almost evening and all of the lights in the State Dining Room were not turned on. This was the only photo that was taken of my Apple Fruit Trees on display in that moment of time. The bottom photo is of me placing my Apple Fruit Trees onto the banquet tables in the East Room of the White House during the Christmas Season of 1980, taken by one of my florist peers. It was the Reagans first Christmas in The White House. I designed all of them, one by one, all day and night, until the complete project was done. I was a great success with the Christmas centerpieces at that reception, and so very proud of myself for doing such a challenging job. The First Lady enjoyed viewing them at inspection time before the dinner party. She was very pleased and I was on top of the world that day. The newspapers and national magazines had a field day with my centerpieces and the other White House reception decorations. The photograph below was taken during the 1980 Christmas decorating season in The White House Flower Room, I was creating something very special for a Christmas reception that evening in The East Room. Instructed and under the supervision of The Chief White House Florist, he gave me the pleasure of designing Fruit Trees to place on the buffet tables along near the walls in The East Room. I do not remember the exact count, but I kept creating these very elegant fruit trees all day and into the evening. When I completed four of them at a time, I would transport these creations on to the tables in the East Room.....The East Room, scene of many historic White House events, and the largest room in The White House, is used for large gatherings, such as dances, after-dinner entertainments, concerts, weddings, funerals, award presentations, press conferences, and bill-signing ceremonies. It has a beautiful Steinway grand piano with gilt Americn eagle supports and was given to The White House as a gift in 1938 by the manufacturer. The elegant Bohemian cut-glass chandeliers are installed in the delicate plaster decorated ceiling. This massive room has an 18th-century classical style to which it was restored by architects during the Theodore Roosevelt renovation of 1902. All my twelve Christmases have been in this room decorating the mantles and Christmas Trees during the holiday decorating season. The White House Nativity Scene is always displayed in this room. These elegant Christmas Tree Centerpieces were used on the buffet tables along near the walls in The East Room. I do not remember the exact count, but I kept creating these very elegant fruit trees all day and into the early evening. When I completed a couple of them at a time, I would transport these creations onto the tables in the East Room ( PHOTO BELOW ).....The East Room, scene of many historic White House events, and the largest room in The White House, is used for large gatherings, such as dances, after-dinner entertainments, concerts, weddings, funerals, award presentations, press conferences, and bill-signing ceremonies. It has a beautiful Steinway grand piano with gilt Americn eagle supports and was given to The White House as a gift in 1938 by the manufacturer. The elegant Bohemian cut-glass chandeliers are installed in the delicate plaster decorated ceiling. This massive room has an 18th-century classical style to which it was restored by architects during the Theodore Roosevelt renovation of 1902. All my twelve Christmases have been in this room decorating the mantles and Christmas Trees during the holiday decorating season. The White House Nativity Scene is always displayed in this room. HOW TO MAKE A 20" CHRISTMAS APPLE FRUIT TREE CENTERPIECE - The Chief White House Florist created a sample Fruit Tree for me to follow, and I duplicated the design procedure over and over again. The Supplies you will need in creating this very elegant table centerpiece tree are the following: a gold ceramic compote about 10" in diameter, a 12" high green cone shape form that holds water, ( Most national-chain arts and crafts stores will sell these items at a reasonable price ) an assortment of fresh bright color fruits from your favorite quality food market, fruits such as one medium size pineapple, about twelve large dark red apples and twenty small green apples, 6" florist green wooden sticks and you will also need a nice size bouquet of dark boxwood greenery. DESIGN DIRECTIONS: Soak the green cone form into a bucket of warm water for about 20 minutes until it absorbs plenty of water. Make sure there are no air bubbles coming out of the form. Place the heavy water filled form cone in the middle of your work table on a plate to hold all the extra water coming out of the cone with plenty of space around you so you can view this entire cone on every angle of the design. It is much easier to work with while you turn the tree around when designing it on the plate. Insert one six inch wooden stick into the bottom of the pineapple. Tab it with a small hammer. With a florist knife or table knife, make a point on the other end of the stick and insert it on the very top of the green cone. That is your center focal point in the design. ( The height of the completed centerpiece would be around 20 inches tall. 12" for the cone and approximately 7" for the top pineapple ). The second step to this lovely centerpiece is very important. Insert the green wooden florist sticks into all the apples. Tap it with a small tap hammer halfway into the fruit. Make a point on the other end with a florist knife and insert them one by one into the green cone. The point on the stick holds it stronger in place in the form than a flat end stick. Balance the apples around the tree cone using one large red and small green alternating them about a couple of inches apart from each other. Add more apples if neccessary, the goal is to have a nice balance tree with the apples of small green and large red ones around the complete project. Make the red apples the primary color on your tree. Place the boxwood greenery ( this you can buy very cheaply at Home Depot as a small bush tree ) and with a wire cutter or foliage cutter, cut the boxwood on a slant-cut leaving about 3" in stem from the foliage and insert the twigs into the remaining empty spaces around the apples. Cover only about one half of the bottom fruits with the boxwood foliage. Make sure that the boxwood is evenly inserted in the tree and nothing is sticking out like a sore thumb. Fill the spaces tightly and spread the boxwood out to get the full even effect all around the tree of this beautiful dark green foliage. Spray the complete centerpiece everyday if possible, with a bottle mist of fresh clear cold water to give it a nice raindrop effect look and to keep the fruit and foliage fresh throughout the holiday season. . Water this centerpiece every other day, to keep it from drying up in your home, just place it in the sink and pore cold tap water over the entire piece. Place this lovely tree into antique gold compote, and you have yourself a masterpiece creation from the Reagan Administration Christmas dating back to an era long gone. Another photo will be on display soon showing the centerpiece on the buffet table. It is taken with a small over the counter flash camera, it was almost evening and all of the lights in the State Dining Room were not turned on. This was the only photo that was taken of my Apple Fruit Trees on display in that moment of time. The bottom photo is of me placing my Apple Fruit Trees onto the banquet tables in the East Room of the White House during the Christmas Season of 1980, taken by one of my florist peers. It was the Reagans first Christmas in The White House. I designed all of them, one by one, all day and night, until the complete project was done. I was a great success with the Christmas centerpieces at that reception, and so very proud of myself for doing such a challenging job. The First Lady enjoyed viewing them at inspection time before the dinner party. She was very pleased and I was on top of the world that day. The newspapers and national magazines had a field day with my centerpieces and the other White House reception decorations. http://www.FrankLazzaro.com |
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