December 24, 2012

Put Your Butt on Santa's Face

Merry Christmas Eve, everyone!
 
What's Christmas without a party? Family and friends and neighbors and festivities and food and Christmas decorations and twinkling lights and presents and laughter and booze and tension and calls from drunken ex-husbands and overtired children and vomit found Christmas morning in the backyard and the occasional fisticuffs, ah, the memories...
 
The prepared host or hostess must take great care to accommodate every guest's needs, and play the role of addiction enabler at every opportunity. From offering your dieting Auntie another slice of pie to preparing your drunk Uncle another Manhattan, the prepared host or hostess should also make sure that any guests who prefer to char their own lungs with poisonous gases are able to do so with an appropriate amount of cheer.
 
I offer to you the Santa Ash Tray. Fill your holidays with mirth, and Santa's mouth with nicotine residue. Tap your ashes directly into his big blue eyes and rest your Pall Mall on his cute button nose. This thing's made of plastic, so it's sure to melt and leave charred black craters all over old Kris Kringle's face.
  


Merry Christmas, everyone, and to all, a good night.

December 19, 2012

The Hulk Dares You to Make Fun of His Capris


HULK KNOW IT CHRISTMAS AND HULK HEART OPEN WIDE.
 
HULK GIVE YOU PRESENT. YOU KNOW WHAT ON HULK MIND.

GIFT REAL SPECIAL, TAKE OFF TOP. TAKE LOOK INSIDE.
 
FA LA LA LA ARRGH ARGH ARGH RAAAGH RAAAA

WHY YOU LOOK AT HULK LIKE THAT? HULK SING CAROL FOR YOU.

December 18, 2012

2012 Christmas? Awesome! Fan Submission Contest!

Mrs. Elfenstein and I thought it would be nice this Christmas to give something back to the community. So we're having a contest!

Head on yonder to your thrift stores, or your craft fairs, or your grandma's house (Joanna G. I am looking at you), cameras in hand, and snap your favorite Awesome ornament. The three most awesome pictures will see their pics posted on the site. The single most awesomest picture, however, will get posted and will win a fabulous prize.

A fabulous prize, you say? What could it be?

Why, it's a genuine Smurf ornament!

 
Featuring Smurfette and a (coal-eyed) snowman on one side, Papa Smurf and a cheery "Happy Holidays" on the other, this future family heirloom is a Smurf-hair more than a decade old, and it shows (note the fraying silk at the bottom).

You didn't think I bought this new, did you? Did we just meet?

The ornament comes in it's original box, so if you're an antique dealer, you can sell it for $25.00!

The rules are simple:
  1. You may make your own ornament, as long as it's awesome. No personal stuff, like your name or a picture of your kid or anything, though, please.
  2. You may submit as many pictures as you want
  3. Your submission must be received by Christmas Eve, Dec 24th, 2012
  4. Please do not submit pictures of people's yards, not even your own. Close-ups of a particular yard display may be featured, but please, for your safety, do not trespass on anyone's property.
  5. Please do not stand behind the ornament. If your face is in the picture, make sure it can be cropped.
How to enter is also pretty simple:
  • Email your picture to christmas.awesome.submissions@gmail.com
  • Please include your first name and last initial (or an alias, if you wish) and an email address that I can contact you at should you win.
  • The winner will be selected/contacted no later than December 31st, 2012
The legalese is simple, and therefore, probably not even legal:
  • I will not sell or otherwise take credit for your picture. If, in some future alternate reality, I happen to make one red cent off of this hobby, I'll either contact you or choose something else. I won't steal your shit.
  • I will not collect, sell, or otherwise distribute your email address. I just need it to contact you if you win. I am not a spammer.
Good luck, boys and girls!

Sometimes I am Rigid About Details

for he is the Kwisatz Haderach

Anatomy lesson! The white part of the eye is called the sclera.

It's the fibrous protective layer that keeps all of your eye goo safe and free of dirt and lint and stuff. It's typically white, unless you have jaundice. What it typically isn't, is blue. Now, this is the second character we've seen this year with an azure gaze: Admonitory Santa had Blue Sclera Disease, too.
By the way, it's called Osteogenesis imperfecta, it's a horrible disease and I'm not making fun of people who have it. 

Sure, ok, these things are mass-produced, generally in factories in countries where Christmas isn't even celebrated. I get that. But I've also got to imagine that regardless of whether you know who Frosty is or not, you've seen human eyes before.

And yes, Frosty isn't a human being, granted, but he isn't from Arrakis, either. He's meant to be human-like. Human-ish. Human-esque.

He is also supposed to have two eyes made of coal, and any other interpretation is clearly diverging from the originating song. I blame the 1969 animated version for this blatant use of artistic license.  Frosty originally had two coal eyes, but when he came to life, they got all googly. More expressive! the animators cried. Heresy, says I. Two eyes made of coal.

Is that a mandolin he's holding? What is that?

+1 for the ceramic Joseph photobomb, too.

December 17, 2012

Valium Angel


I wanted to buy Valium Angel so bad. So, so bad. She's the best tree topper I've seen so far. She's got puffy, floppy arms! She can't keep her head up! She's so big, you could put her on your head!

And I very likely would have put her on my head, but Mrs. Elfenstein uttered the four most terrifying words anyone can say in a Thrift Store:

it might have bedbugs

sigh. Back on the shelf.

Maybe next time, Valium Angel. At least I have my pictures to remind me of what could have been...

The Elusive Douglas Fir-maid



Very modestly covering herself with pine needles just as we get to the nether-regions, this sturdy lass isn't so much atop the tree as growing out of it. Or maybe it's growing out from her. Like her arms do from the sides of her head.

But modesty be damned once we get above the waist! This mama is letting it all hang out. And judging by her grin, not feeling sheepish about it one bit. Any why not? Why not, indeed.

Something's Not Quite Right . . .



. . . but I just can't put my finger on it.


December 12, 2012

Snowmoebas!


Are they carrot-nosed bacteria?

Do single-celled organisms have (five) eyes made out of coal?

Even Escherichia coli love Christmas!

December 10, 2012

If You Don't Know Him By Now...

Santa holds back the years quite well, methinks

During the 1980's, Santa was a big fan of Simply Red.


December 09, 2012

You Better Watch Out, You Better Not Cry


Is your child acting up? Can't get little Johnny to eat his vegetables or little Sally to make her bed? Fortunately, during the holiday season, parents have a secret weapon to elicit better behavior: the spectre of Mad Santa.

If you are naughty, Santa won't come this year.

Santa only brings presents for good boys and girls.

If you keep screaming, I'm going to let Santa know you were bad, and then he'll come down the chimney on Christmas night, stuff you in a sack, and take you away to Spain.

Works wonders.

But what's a parent to do when you can't be there 24-7? After all, you've got a job, possibly the tattered shreds of a social life, presumably a spouse who has . . . needs or something. Someone's got to keep the threat of vague future suffering alive to curb present unwanted behavior.

Enter, Admonitory Santa Wall Plaque:

 
This is a quality piece, cast from the same soft-yet-wholly-unnatural plastic used for kewpie dolls of old. Don't be fooled by the ring on top of his head - this isn't a tiny tree ornament. This sucker is the size of a iPad.
 
Hang this on your children's playroom wall, and never again fear that fights will break out or anything will get broken. Admonitory Santa's watchful, Fremen-blue eyes will make sure your little angel behaves, one (of his six, count 'em, six) fingers poised for the wagging. His red tongue is positioned to raspberry your offspring at the slightest hint of misdeeds. You will be free to slip off and pour yourself a Sanity Vodka in peace.
 
Thank you, Admonitory Santa Wall Plaque!
 
 

Hobbyzebracorn!

What's yellow & white, has green stripes, and a yarny tail that sweeps magnificently foward over its shoulder?
 
 
Hobbyzebracorn!
 
Allright, allright, I know that's not actually a hobby horse. I don't care. His name is Hobbyzebracorn, and that's final.
 
 

Cape Coo

This is one of Mrs. Elfenstein's favorite acquisitions of the off-season.
 
 
Maybe it's the stern-looking cat.
 
Maybe it's the fact that it's a broken sand dollar.
 
Maybe it's the fact that a stern-looking cat was poorly-decoupaged onto a sand dollar.
 
Hard to say.
 
I just know it makes her giggle.

December 08, 2012

Sinterklaas: A History Lesson

I love history.

Locked within history is a wealth of information that when analyzed, can unlock life's mysteries. Understanding the past helps us prepare for the future. Re-telling the tales told to countless generations can provide Answers to the elusive Questions about why we are here, what came to pass, what may lie ahead...

And so in the interest of providing answers to questions you may have about . . .uh, things, I will tell you the tale of one of the historical faces of Santa Claus: the Nordic-Germanic figure of Sinterklaas.

Sinterklaas was a real person. He was a Greek bishop named Nikolaos from Myra (Turkey), who loved all of the little children and poor. He is also known for bitch-slapping Arius at the Council of Nicea for arguing that Jesus was mostly human.

And when he died in the year 343, his remains were transferred to Bari, which is in Italy, but at one point (apparently, a point that people in the Netherlands were concerned with) was part of Spain.

After his death, he was canonized as St. Nicholas, the patron saint of children, oftentimes seen carrying/suckling/smothering children:



His legend traveled to other parts of Europe, such as France, Germany, and the Netherlands. We'll focus on the Netherlands.

Just like the game of telephone, where a common phrase becomes increasingly mangled as it is told from person to person, the Netherlands is quite a ways away from southern Italy, and details about Nikolaos' life and works became, understandably, pretty mangled.

For example, every year on his feast day (Dec. 5), Sinterklaas would sail to the Netherlands from Spain on a boat:

 It's supposed to be a steamboat, but as the legend translated into crappy porcelain ornaments, the steamboat morphed into just a regular old, tiny pirate ship.

Sinterklaas kept his tabs on which children were good or bad utilizing black devils who listened at chimneys (sometime in the 1800s, these "black devils" were transformed, and are portrayed to this day, as red-lipped Moorish helpers in blackface called Zwarte Piets, or Black Peters, because exaggerated depictions of other races are a laugh riot).

Anyway, Sinterklaas comes to your house and it's customary to put one shoe in front of your fireplace to welcome him (a stocking may do in a pinch). Make sure to leave him a carrot or hay for his horse!

Sinterklaas hangs around outside your house and leaves presents in a burlap sack (sometimes, a  Zwarte Piet will hide the presents in the house). Unless you are a bad child, in which case, you get a bundle of sticks. In some of the more disturbing legends, Sinterklaas would actually stuff bad children in sacks and take them back to Spain with him.


 
Being a dead bishop unaffiliated with modern merchandising, Sinterklaas isn't exactly jolly. Note his branch to beat naughty children in one hand and bundle of sticks for naughty children in the other. In theory, there would be candy for the good children in his stylish purse, but judging by the stern look of disapproval, it appears he is traveling light.

As with most children's stories from medieval times, the legend of Sinterklaas offers an unsettling mixture of fantasy, whimsy, tradition, racial stereotypes, and the unrelenting certainty of final judgment.

I promised earlier that learning about history can lead to better understanding about modern times. And now, hopefully, I have answered the question of why sometimes Santa is a jolly fat man who brings toys for all, and why sometimes, he is gaunt, angry, and carrying a handful of twigs.

I can't explain the Vera Bradley handbag, though, sorry.

Día de los Snowman

My assumption is that this little fella is supposed to appear as though he is made of stained glass. My first reaction was that there's something inherently wrong with the concept of stained glass snowmen to begin with. 
 
Oh how wrong I was.
 
 
 
This snowman, however, is not a lamp, nor is he made of stained glass. He's made of wood. Balsa, by the weight of him.
 
And no matter how much my brain reassures me that he's holding a broom, I see him holding an alto saxophone.

Christmas Awesome is dead. Long live Christmas Awesome.

 
Life gets in the way.
 
Mrs. Elfenstein and I have had, admittedly, a tough year. So when I received a notice that my domain renewal for christmas-awesome.com was up, I declined to renew, thinking, I just don't have the time and there wasn't that much interest anyway.
 
We've continued, of course, collecting ornaments and assorted holiday nightmares for our personal collection over the summer. It's an expensive hobby, though, and this year was tighter than past years.
 
I thought my blogging days were over.
 
But I also upgraded to a smartphone over the summer. I recently realized that I don't have to buy every freaky thing I see . . . I can just take pictures of them.
 
So here we are, December 2012. It's unseasonably warm, it's rumored to be the end of the world, I can't stop now.
 
I've moved the 2011 posts to Blogger, rounded up the summer's bounty, downloaded all of the pictures on my phone, and am ready to do it Elfenstein style.
 
On to the awesome!
 
This side-of-the-road farm decided to festive up their chain-link fence for the season. And around these parts, the way to scream: we love Xmas!! is to hang a snowman by his neck until dead.  
 

Festive