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Happy New Year!Dawn Heath - PublisherI hope you have had a wonderful holiday season and can begin to relax from the frantic pace of the last month! I know that the last month has been crazy in my home. We were very fortunate this year to have my Mother-in-law visit us for Christmas from England. It added a lot of excitement to my home! We also moved over the holiday season! S.S. Reflections has grown so much in the last 2 months that we needed more space! We are still based in Wisconsin, just larger facilities which are also very exciting for us. I’m overwhelmed by how much you are enjoying our ezine and I read every one of your emails that you send to me! Your input has meant a great deal to me. Our Celebrity Headliner this month is Tracey Olson of Fibers by the Yard (www.fbty.com)! I am very pleased to have Tracey with us this month; she was one of the first to join us an advertiser, so she is definitely VIP material to us! We all use fibers, and Tracey has an amazing selection!
We are celebrating Chinese New Year this month! You will see many Asian designs in this issue, not just Chinese. Jackie, of Altered Pages, sponsored our Designer’s Challenge this month. Jackie has some gorgeous papers for collage in your altered books or anything you’d like to create! Please visit her site at www.alteredpages.com. You will notice that we no longer have 2 designer challenges. We have combined our challenges to one, to show how much more versatile the products are for both scrappers and stampers.
I did some research on the celebration of Chinese New Year and I wanted to share what I found out with you. January 22, 2004 is the first day of year of the Monkey. This is from the Encarta Encyclopedia: "Chinese New Year, celebration of the new year in Chinese communities around the world. The date of the Chinese new year is determined by the lunar calendar, so festivities begin with the new cycle of the moon that falls between January 21 and February 19. Each year is named for one of 12 symbolic animals in sequence. The animals, in their sequential order, are the rat, ox, tiger, hare, dragon, serpent, horse, ram, monkey, rooster, dog, and boar. The new year celebration is the most important and the longest of all Chinese festivals, traditionally lasting for two weeks. During this period, towns and villages are decorated with colored lanterns, floral displays, and brightly colored banners emblazoned with new year greetings. Preparations traditionally begin in the home the week before the new year, when families thoroughly clean their houses to symbolically sweep away all traces of misfortune. They also pay off debts, add a new coat of red paint to doors and windowpanes, and decorate the home with flowers. To avoid bad luck, parents warn their children to be on their best behavior and to avoid the use of vulgar expressions. On the evening before the new year, families gather for a feast of various dishes of seafood and dumplings. Each dish has symbolic meaning, often signifying good luck and prosperity. At midnight, families light fireworks to attract the attention of benevolent gods and to frighten away evil spirits. The fireworks last until dawn, although celebrants may sporadically light more fireworks for the next two weeks. On the first day of the new year, people put on new clothes to symbolize the discarding of the old year and its misfortunes. Then they take gifts to friends and relatives. The gifts usually include special rice flour cakes and fruits such as kumquats and oranges. Many adults, particularly married ones, also follow an ancient custom of giving small red packets of money (called hung-pao or lay shee) to children, unmarried adults, and employees or servants. Among the most spectacular festivities of Chinese new year are the dragon and lion dances. As many as 50 or more people support long paper dragons and lions while dancing in processions down city streets. The dancers perform to the beating of gongs and drums, while other celebrants perform acrobatic displays. Some of the performers may occasionally reach up to take red money packets or fruits and vegetables hung from storefronts. The celebrations end with the lantern festival, an event in which merchants hang lighted paper lanterns outside their shops. Many of the lanterns rotate with the heat of the candles they contain. Children often parade through the streets during the lantern festival, carrying lanterns of various shapes and patterns." We have many wonderful plans for the year of 2004, I can hardly contain myself from telling you! (I’m such a tease)... Well, I can tell you this... it’s in our newsletter so please don’t forget to sign up for our newsletter and you’ll be the first to know! Cap’n Dawn publisher@ssreflections.com Publisher S.S. Reflections, Inc. This entire web site © Copyright S.S. Reflections, Inc. ![]() |
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