Finished Product
When we “finished” Hogwarts, Joe said “wouldn’t this
be great with real Christmas lights”. Hypothetically, I agreed but didn’t
think the observation was going to lead to action. Honestly, I was
skeptical. I didn’t want to risk knocking off decorations in an attempt
to string lights over the house. Unbeknownst to me, Mandy and Joe looked on
the internet for miniature lights. Apparently, the progression of choices went like
this…Joe, “should we go with a 6’ string or the longest, 19’. Mandy,
“19’". Joe, “should we go white lights or multi-colored”. Mandy,
“Colored’. Joe, “Shall we go with blinking lights or constant
lights?” Mandy, “blinking”. Lights were ordered on the spot and
arrived at our doorstep just a few days later. When the lights arrived,
Mandy immediately opened the package. Kristin joined Mandy and me in the
dining room and we evaluated where we should put the lights. There were
two choices. Place the lights around the bottom. This choice would
avoid the risk of knocking off candies from the structures. The other
choice was to string the lights like you would on a house. I voted for
the rocks. Kristin leaned toward decorating the structures. Mandy
was adamant, let’s decorate the structures. Fine, let me experiment to
see what it looks like. I started to string the lights and before we knew
it, we were advancing the lights around the entire house and the last light was
in perfect position. There was enough lead wire that goes to the battery
box to place the box at the bottom of the rocks. I suggested we hide the
battery box by crafting a Christmas tree over the top. The tree idea
worked perfectly. I’m sure you know how Kristin makes Christmas trees,
melted marsh mellows, green food coloring and corn flakes. After Kristin
finished shaping the tree, Mandy said “do another one, that tree looks
lonely”. Kristin added another tree. Then Mandy said to add some
more to make the forbidden forest.
Lights
The Forbidden Forest
1 comment:
I like Mandy's way of thinking!
Post a Comment