chomiji: Kami-sama form Saiyuki with angel's wings and the caption, Angels we have heard on high ... (Kami-sama - angel)
[personal profile] chomiji

It's definitely That Time of Year, for better or worse:
 

At the first sign of Solstice, I assembled all my stuff:

12 bows like pompoms
11 rolls of foil
10 spools of ribbon
9 bows that pop up
8 rolls of Kraft
7 sheets of stickers
6 books of art wrap
5 Hannukah rolls!
4 spools of silk cord
3 rolls of scotch tape
2 art tissue packs
and some sharp scissors with the long blades!

I used to do a fair number of artsy-craftsy things: crewel embroidery, paper-cutting, batik, sewing (including things like dice bags and SCA costumes), making maps and drawings for the RPGs I ran. Over the years, with increasing family and job responsibilities and the advent of the Intarwebs, these have devolved into two hobbies: LJ icons (very recent) and gift wrapping.

There are lots of correct ways for others to wrap holiday gifts, but there is only one correct way for chomiji to wrap gifts:

  1. Every gift in a given batch (such as "The Hanukkah presents for my sister's family that we gave out on Saturday night") must have a different wrapping paper. This is not as hard as it sounds because I have been doing it this way for decades, and saving ends of wrapping paper rolls for that long ... big gifts get wrapped from that year's new rolls, and little ones get decked out from tail-ends of previous years. However, it can be a problem at my sister-in-law's January blow-out (her husband, a minister, is too busy on Xmas day, so we celebrate with them later), which is often attended by 25 or more people, some of whom receive multiple presents.
  2. All gifts given at a Hanukkah event must have wrappings in white/silver and blue, with accents of purple and gold. Other colors are permissable only in small amounts.
  3. All gifts given at a Christmas even must have wrappings in red, green, and white/silver, with accents of gold (either metallic or flat). Other colors are permissable only in small amounts.
  4. People who are receiving presents at such events but who are not followers of the religion involved will have their gifts wrapped in the appropriate colors but with a neutral design: snowflakes or other nature themes, stripes, dots, etc.
  5. All gifts have some sort of ribbon or bow or tie on them, unless gift bags are used (see next).
  6. Gift bags are used only in extremis, as in the case of a really oddly shaped gift or when time is seriously running out.
  7. Gift tags are for utility purposes and are not part of the package decor. So they should be placed on the bottom of the package (or bag). They should be written neatly enough that the underage helpers who pull gifts from the massive group stack to deliver to the individual recipients (which is the custom on both sides of the family) have a snowball's chance in Hell of reading the names.
  8. At gift-giving events, nice boxes, large pieces of relatively unbattered paper, fancy bows, and fabric/wired ribbon should be scrounged, except when the mom-in-law expresses interest in a piece of paper, in which case she gets first pick.

This is How It Is Done.

My family attempts to distract me from gift wrap displays during the holidays ... they seem to think I have an addiction problem. They're so silly ... .

Date: 2007-12-12 06:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sanada.livejournal.com
>.>;; I guess you'd find my "newspaper and duct tape!" method to be appalling... but I do take sadistic glee in covering my sister's gifts with so much tape that she can't open them.

Date: 2007-12-12 07:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ipperne.livejournal.com
heh, if you used my moms gfttags, you would use them as decoration. she makes little santas and such in cross stitches (I think that's what they're called) and then insrt it in some pretty colorful paper... but other than that; gift tags are pretty ugly in general, so they should be hidden away.

...actually, my involountary post as giftwrapper in my family has marked me for life... No tape, many ´colors, different wrapping, cord in all sizes, shapes and colors... Wow, I'm almost as obsessed by wrapping as you are.

Date: 2007-12-12 08:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sanada.livejournal.com
But I bet your presents look really great for the ten seconds before they get ripped to shreds~~

Oh, she gets back at me - she puts a tiny jewelry box inside several large cardboard boxes.

Hehehe, my mom is really obsessive about wrapping things, too... she has color schemes and coordinated ribbon and all sorts of craziness! She even does that curly ribbon trick with a knife (whenever I do it, I end up with flat ribbon and a bleeding hand...)

Date: 2007-12-12 09:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sanada.livejournal.com
Hehe, a shrine to the Goddess Excess... how appropriate!

We do the whole Christmas morning presents-under-the-tree thing, so we're lucky if the boxes get five seconds of bleary-eyed staring before the zombie-like destruction commences.

Date: 2007-12-13 03:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] freeradical9.livejournal.com
Ah! You are so organized!

I am a shameless last-minute shopper, and therefore usually wrap everything the night before a given holiday with whatever four paper designs come in a bargain wrapping paper set. Gift tags and bows may or may not make it onto presents in time. I fail utterly at presentation, and therefore am in envy your elegant system. ^_^

Date: 2007-12-14 05:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sanada.livejournal.com
Well, you could put them in a password-protected album somewhere?

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