I come from a card-sending family; on my mom's side in particular. I always know the first week in December will bring a flurry of mail from the Peters, a trait that seems to be sharpening in the younger generations. This year I got a card from my cousin's daughter two days after Thanksgiving. STOP MAKING ME LOOK BAD WITH YOUR SUPER-TIMELY PICTURES OF YOUR ADORABLE KID! UGH! (No, I'm just kidding, Emily, you're awesome.) My dad's side of the family is, as in most things, more... relaxed about it. I remember once, in college, getting a card in the mail from my grandparents on my actual birthday, the first week in May. I was shocked because historically Grandma was very late with cards. But when I opened it, it was my Christmas card, and my universe fell happily back into place.
I fall somewhere in between. My cards get sent before Christmas, but they certainly do not go out December 1st. And here's my semi-reasonable excuse: I make my own cards. Every year, somewhere around December 15th I find myself sweaty and frazzled, surrounded by schnitzels of paper and rubber cement cobwebs; cutting, pasting, gluing, addressing, stamping, and licking around 90 cards to my innermost circle of friends and family. And there's always at least another 90 people I'd like to include, but by that point I'm wishing I'd just sent a Facebook message, and you'd pretty much have to be my long-lost identical twin and/or an actual potentate to get added to the list.
I made my first cards in 2004. I know this because I dated them on the back, like they'd be archived as collectibles in some catalogue instead of tossed into recycling bins across the nation on December 26. I don't remember exactly why I started. Probably a combination of my Germanic-Midwestern frugality (cheapness) and my need for my cards to speak to my soul and represent my true self to the recipients (hippie-dippie-ness.). Anyway, I found some K-mart wrapping paper with terrifically jolly vintage-looking snowmen on a red background, cut them out with a crinkly-edged scissors so they looked almost on-purpose, hot-glued on some rick-rack (mankind's greatest invention) and sent them off. Looking back, I see that nothing was straight, but crooked gluing has become a treasured holiday tradition for me, like burning the first batch of caramels and forgetting to water the tree.
Here's another one I made. See that stitching? Cute, right? Not straight.
And this one, from the year I moved to St. Paul. Very appropriate. Also not straight.
And this is one of my all-time favorites. A illustration from a 1960s holiday cookbook, with a message from a 1950s 7-Up ad, and more rick-rack. I mean, come on! IT'S ADORABLE! And totally not straight. I imagine by now you are noticing the theme. And bear in mind, these are the ones I kept for my archive. Meaning, these were the neat ones. There were plenty of them that turned out worse. I remember once sending off a particularly messy card to Great-Aunt Frieda with the justification that she couldn't see very well anyway. I'M A MONSTER!!!
Oh, and then there was this year. I somehow convinced my artist boyfriend to cut out 90 of these silhouettes (if I'd done them myself there'd have been, like, two stumps and a garbage can.) So at least it's straight. But I was in charge of glitter and glue, and apparently I was a little lackadaisical about making sure the glitter stuck, and everyone got a glitter shower when they opened the envelopes. I got a Christmas card from my good friend Jesse saying "Thanks for making our apartment look like a gay disco." (Sorry, everybody.)
So why do I do it? It would certainly be, as my dad sad, easier to just go to Walmart. I'd free up a good 15-20 hours, send out cards my friends would actually want to display, and be far less likely to superglue my eyelid shut. (Don't ask.) Why can't I just by a $15 box of cards and be done with it? Maybe it's because I'm cheap. Maybe it's because I'm hippie-dippie. Maybe it's because I just really like the smell of rubber cement. But I think the true answer lies, as most answers do, in the Better Homes and Garden 1967 Christmas Ideas Book.
The photo isn't straight (shocker) but you can see that it's an article about homemade cards. And here's what they have to say.
I guess that's what I want; I want it to be personal. I mean, let's face it. Christmas is the one time of the year most of us send mail at all. And a lot of the people I send cards to haven't seen me in years. Now, the second glance I get may be my relatives saying "Wait, when did Melanie have kids? Because surely no adult made this." The amusing cutout may be surrounded by hateful, insidious glitter. And the special message may look suspiciously like someone went on auto-pilot and started writing "Melanie" where it should have said "Merry Christmas" and tried to scribble a design over it to make it look on purpose. (Sorry, Aunt Delores.) But it's personal. It's a bit of me that I can send and say, "you might not see me very often, but here's who I am. I'm a person who likes glitter, and rick-rack, and 7-up ads from the 1950s, and whose glue-gun can't keep up with her crafting excitement. I'm a person who really, truly wants you to have a merry Christmas, and wishes she saw you more often, because she really likes who you are too." My cards, like me, are not perfect, but we mean really well. And honestly, if you look closely at that red-and-white stamped card in the magazine? That's not straight either. AND IT'S IN BETTER HOMES AND GARDENS!!!!
So here it is. The 2017 Melanie Christmas card. If you get one in the mail, please know that your tree may be raggedy because my scissors are dull, your zip code may be scribbled over because I forgot to buy extra envelopes, and your candy-striped ribbon will almost certainly not be straight. But you'll think about me for a second, and that's really nice to know. So Merry Christmas everyone...from 7-up.