to roast Gingerbread cookies In various shapes and making dolls is a fun Christmas tradition for children in many countries, such as the United States. However, Kristen Lilly of Kyle, Texas, had an idea to go a step further: She transformed her house into a full-size gingerbread house this holiday season.
Life-size gingerbread house – Image: Reproduction / Parents Today
It all started in 2020 when COVID-19 pandemic It was at its peak and everyone was secluded during the holidays away from friends and family. Christine’s two children, both on military bases, will not be able to see their mother. Her granddaughter can’t be with her either.
“I was just giving out Halloween candy with tweezers and a mask and wanted to know what Christmas would be like,” she said. In an interview with parents today🇧🇷 Then she remembered her childhood, when her mom, Sandy, would make gingerbread houses for her and her brother to go to school.
“We would just look at the house and wait for the day we ate,” he recalls. According to her, her mom made “the best gingerbread cookie ever” and had a gift for making the holiday season look “magical.”
She wanted to share these feelings with the community, especially in the face of such a difficult time and trauma. So he came up with the idea of turning his home into a giant gingerbread house. Thus the tradition was born.
But the idea has grown and what started as an attempt to ease grief during difficult times has become a tourist attraction. Now, Christine decorates her home the same way every year and attracts hundreds of visitors. They each get a free cup of hot chocolate and they can get their picture taken with Santa Claus, played by her husband, Robert Helms.
Christine collects food for a donation: the house has become a tourist attraction – Image: Reproduction / Today’s Parents
When he heard about his wife’s idea, Robert didn’t immediately take it seriously. “He was hesitant at first,” she says, of her idea to transform their home and dress him up as Santa Claus. However, it didn’t take long for him to embrace this initiative and dive headlong into it, transforming himself into Santa Claus, taking pictures and distributing candy to everyone.
Now, the home fair has a bigger purpose: Christine is asking visitors to donate non-perishable food items to help combat food insecurity in the local community. Some visitors also donate money. She says all donations go to the Hays County Food Bank in San Marcos, Texas.
In addition, the lady of the house has learned how to make biscuits, with the recipe and talent inherited from her mother, and takes the opportunity to sell them on the veranda.
The color of your home, even outside of the Christmas season, is already reminiscent of gingerbread. So, to come to the conclusion, it was just a matter of unleashing creativity and working on the details of the decor and the lights. “It makes me wonder if the idea was already there somewhere in my subconscious mind when I chose the paint color,” he says.
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