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1. Create a banner you can use year after year. Use what you have in the house to create a gratitude banner to decorate your dining room on Thanksgiving. Here are a few ways to do it, depending on the materials you have:
  • Cut and sew letters from fabric scraps onto fabric tape.
  • Cut out letters from wallpaper samples or oilcloth, and sew them onto grosgrain ribbon.
  • Glue letters cut from pretty gift wrap onto cardstock for strength, punch holes in the tops and tie them onto ribbon or twine.
  • Cut out pages from an old book and use stencils to paint a letter onto each page, then staple the pages onto twine.
by Shannon Malone  
2. Display the year in photos. Take the time to collect your favorite photos of family, friends and adventures over the past year and display them in the entry hall on Thanksgiving. You can have multiple photos made into oversize posters — add one more each year if you make it a tradition.

Or tape up a quick family tree on the wall using photographs and Japanese masking tape (which is easily removed) as the branches.
by Wilson & Company Ltd
3. Invite someone who doesn't have a place to go. Whether it's a work colleague or a friend of a friend, if you hear of someone who won't be able to go home this Thanksgiving, invite him or her to your home to share this special meal. It can really make a difference for the person you invite; besides, the more people are squished around the table, the more fun the dinner usually is.
by R Brant Design  
Gold Floral Thank-You Card - $4.50 [ Link ]
4. Send gratitude notes to friends and family far away. Sending gratitude notes for Thanksgiving would be such a welcome surprise for loved ones who can't be at the table with you. Of course, this being the digital age, you could also send an e-card, call them on Skype or use whatever method works for you. The point is to connect.
by Rifle Paper Co.
5. Set up a never-ending gratitude list. Unfurl a roll of butcher paper and set it on a side table or buffet with a cup of pens and a little sign encouraging guests to record the things they are grateful for. It would be fun to keep the roll from year to year and make a tradition of reading through the past entries.
by Jaye Lee Interiors  
6. Share the bounty. Before the holiday comes, take stock of your own good fortune and see if you can afford to donate a few bags of much-needed food to your local food bank or soup kitchen.

I recommend calling in advance to see what they really need. I also know families who choose to volunteer serving food or washing dishes at a soup kitchen on Thanksgiving, so if that is something you are interested in, why not give it a try this year?
by Murphy & Co. Design
7. Have a potluck of objects. Ask your guests to bring something to place on the table that is meaningful to them, whether it's a salt cellar bought on a special trip or Great-Grandma's gravy boat. Coordinate beforehand, and your table will be a potluck of meaningful treasures.
by Tucker & Marks  
8. Share your family's treasured recipes. If you always make a favorite dish that's been passed down through your family, this year take the time to copy it out on cards to give guests, along with the story behind it.
by Lisa Nieschlag "Liz & Jewels"
Wooden Fall Leaves - $8.50 [ Link ]
9. Make a gratitude tree. Using wooden leaves like the ones shown here or paper leaves you cut yourself, encourage guests to note something they are grateful for on a leaf, then clip the leaves with clothespins to bare branches in a tall vase.
by Paper Source
10. Share the feast with the birds. Try making a classic DIY bird feeder from an apple rolled in peanut butter and birdseed. This is a great activity to keep kids busy while the grown-ups are cooking — then you can send them outside to place their treats around the yard for birds or squirrels to find.
by Jeni Lee
11. Create a musical tradition. If someone in your family plays piano, guitar or another instrument, encourage him or her to share a song on Thanksgiving. No musicians in the family? Just select some favorite albums to play — since this is an American holiday, why not go with an all-American playlist?
by Michelle Hinckley
12. Invite friends into the kitchen to help cook. If you are one of those cooks who takes on the entire Thanksgiving feast on your own, I beg you to reconsider this year — even if only a little. Assign family and friends kitchen duties you know they can handle, and everyone will feel more useful and have more fun.
by Jessica Risko Smith Interior Design  
13. End the day outside. Take a walk, play football or sit around an outdoor fire with a final glass of wine. After all of that cooking and eating indoors, it feels lovely to step out into the crisp air.

Tell us: What is your favorite Thanksgiving tradition?
by B. Jane Gardens

Comments

kennedytarheel Lovely suggestions for Thanksgiving!!!! Thanks.
7 months ago · ·
tcufrog Our special tradition is decorating Turk the Turkey. A few years ago I made him by wrapping two different size styrofoam balls in yarn. I stuck them together with a wooden skewer and made the face out of craft felt and googly eyes. I'm not crafty but Turk was easy to make.

At the beginning of November we cut feathers out of different colored construction paper and write what we're thankful for throughout the month on the feathers. Our guests on Thanksgiving Day writing their messages of thanksgiving on feathers as well. The feathers are taped to popsicle sticks and pushed into Turk's back.

Every Thanksgiving Day we take a picture of the family with Turk.

I've kept all of the feathers in a leather scrapbook along with photos from that Thanksgiving. The family loves looking through the past years to see what everyone was thankful for the previous years.
7 months ago · ·
mojov Everyone in my family knows that if Aunt Nina has made it home, she will go around the table and make everyone say what they are thankful for. One year I made little pieces of paper with the names on them and had people draw a name and say what they thought that person would/should or could be thankful for.
7 months ago · ·
marie3333 This is the first year we will attempt an outdoor dinner (with a tent and heaters). Living in Connecticut, the weather could make it interesting, but we will pull up our log and hay bale seats and make the best of it!
7 months ago · ·
cchowdy ONE of our most memorable Thanksgivings was when all of my family decided to come up to Oregon for the holiday. Not having enough dining space inside for 25 people, we set up a large tent with heat and lights and turned it in to our outdoor dining space. It felt cozy for all of the family to be together in a tent for Thanksgiving Dinner..Fond memories!
6 months ago · ·
mamalaytee I enjoy Thanksgiving much more than Christmas and it seems like it gets blasted right over when halloween candy is on the shelves next to Christmas decorations! Thanks for this article full of ideas to make it a special holiday!
6 months ago · ·
terrabrockman We count up the number of food items on the table that we grew ourselves, or that were raised by local farmers that we know. Including herbs, fruits, veggies, meats, and grains, we are up to 36 locally grown items! But you can start with just one, and increase the number year by year.
6 months ago ·
Connie I cut out 3 different leaf shapes from autumn colored card stock and wrote "I'm thankful for . . ." on them. As guests arrive, I give them each a leaf and tell them to answer the question and be sure to sign their name as well. After collecting them back from guests, I attach them to a string hung across the dining room windows and tape each leaf to the string.

Since we only have one person say grace before dinner, we have everyone gather just before guests are about to leave and hand out a leaf to everyone, making sure they don't get their own to read. It's really alot of fun and brings the family closer together! With the kids getting older now, I hope this tradition will remind them to concentrate on this special holiday and not rush into Christmas right after Halloween.
6 months ago · ·
fde2024 this is a great article that I'll share with customers at my coffee house
6 months ago ·
c2blum Be thankful for nature!
Tofurky is a great vegetarian alternative to killing and eating a sentient animal.
6 months ago ·
babsjc I'm thankful that my people came here from Europe, survived and created the United States of America. I'm thankful for our forefathers who gave us the best system in the world and I'm thankful for freedom and free speech.

I hope that Western civilization can survive and not be destroyed by those who are working to set up a One World Order and take away our freedoms.

I'm thankful when the United States is at peace and not waging illegal aggressive wars against the consent of the people and attacking defenseless people who cannot defend themselves from the world's only military superpower.
6 months ago · ·
Maria de Luca Design Oh!This article is very emotional.Thank's God for everithing .
6 months ago ·
Maria de Luca Design Dinner with my family .
6 months ago ·
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