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How to Celebrate the Holidays in Sammamish-Issaquah on a Budget

Here are ten ways to have fun and spread holiday cheer in Sammamish and Issaquah without breaking the bank.

This year’s holiday season can be special for you and your family regardless of your budget. Here are some fun tips for creating new holiday traditions while saving money.

1)    Make your cards from recycled materials. Cards can be made from paper grocery bags, cereal boxes, used file folders and even last year’s holiday cards. Feature your family’s artwork and use recycled wrapping paper or paper from catalogs and magazines for backgrounds. A great resource for making cards from recycled materials is "Creative Correspondence" by Michael and Judy Jacobs, available on Amazon.com. 

2)    Have fun together and create a festive decoration by making a gingerbread house. You can bake the gingerbread yourself and use royal icing to construct the house and attach the candy. Another option is to use graham crackers and hot glue to make the house and frosting from a can to attach the decor. Great royal icing recipes and other gingerbread house tips are available on Cooks.com.

3)    Save on your holiday treats. Kathryn Manchip, a Sammamish mom and hobby baker shares these tips. “If you are going to be doing a lot of baking, buy your ingredients in bulk from places like Costco." Manchip also recommends participating in a cookie exchange so you can sample different treats without having to bake them yourself. "And if you want to be adventurous and thrifty, try making a fondant as an icing – it works on both cakes and cookies. You can make your own at home for a fraction of the cost of the store-bought fondant. It tastes better, too, since it's mostly made out of melted marshmallows.” Manchip recommends this recipe for fondant.

What are low-cost and free ways that you celebrate the holidays with your family and friends? Tell us in the comments.

4)    Cut your own Christmas tree from any one of these Eastside Christmas tree farms. Thornton, CO’s Jennifer Miller, author of Where the Best Books Are!, a blog with reviews and recommendations of books for kids, says cutting your own tree saves money and creates a great holiday memory for your kids. “Here in Colorado, USFS [U.S. Forest Service] permits are just $10 per tree. We meet up with friends, share cookies and cocoa, and our boys have adventures in the forest. Plus, you can get more than one permit and cut down a fresh tree for a needy family or elderly friend.” 

5)    Make your own decorations and ornaments. Seattle artist, author and instructor Carla Sonheim says, “My favorite Christmas decoration is a drawing of Santa Claus done by my son Christer when he was 9 years old. I also have made 'holiday card/ornaments' with my own drawings or my kids' drawings. I'll scan the image into the computer and then print it out on sturdy card stock or other heavy paper. Then I'll cut around the image and punch a hole in the top and thread with yarn. On the back I write my holiday greeting and then send it out as a holiday card, which doubles as a paper ornament. I also have made ornaments from photographs of my kids at various ages.” 

6)    Give gifts of your time and skills. Make a gift certificate up for an afternoon of tech support for your friend who's about to toss his new computer out of the window, an evening of babysitting so friends with little kids can have a date night, or a day of housework or yard work for an elderly relative. 

7)     Check out the free and low-cost holiday activities in the area. Local productions of holiday favorites including "The Nutcracker" or "A Christmas Carol" can be just as magical as a big city production for a fraction of the ticket price. School and community bands and orchestras often offer free holiday music concerts. 

Throughout the holiday season, the Bellevue Magic Season features many local events that are fun and low-cost, including ice skating in Downtown Park, the free Snowflake Lane show nightly near Bellevue Square, and Garden D'Lights at the Bellevue Botanical Garden.

8)    Classic toys such as wagons, riding toys, puzzles, board games and wooden blocks make great holiday gifts and are often available at your local consignment and thrift stores for a fraction of what you would pay at a big-box store. 

9)    Skip the expensive Santa breakfast or holiday dinner out and spend time at your favorite service organization. Give back with your family by sorting donations or serving a meal.

10)  Check out your favorite movies, holiday books and music from the King County libraries in Bellevue -- in downtown Bellevue, Newport Way, Crossroads and Lake Hills -- and schedule some evenings to share childhood favorites such as "It’s a Wonderful Life" or "Miracle on 34th Street" with your kids. 

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Imagine Housing May 20, 2013 at 08:19 am
We had a really great time and are very grateful to EBC for all they do for our residents and theRead More Eastside community. Volunteering was a great experience and we hope other groups are inspired to help out!
Jeanne Gustafson (Editor) May 17, 2013 at 01:54 pm
Thank you so much for sharing this great event on Patch! What a cool thing to do--as an IssaquahRead More resident, I really appreciate your involvement with EBC.
Photo by Jean Johnson
Susan Gerend May 18, 2013 at 07:58 am
We too, love having our Farmers' Market return! Opening day was a bit weather-challenged. ThankRead More you merchants for enduring the wet and cold for our new extended hours! What a wonderful sight will return to the plaza when the sunshine calls back all the families with happy, giggling children. Market day is a date of dinner out (side) & shopping (vegetables, fruits and now HedgeHog Toffee) with my husband. Doesn't get much better than that! SEE YOUR THERE! Susan Gerend
Margaret Santjer (Editor) May 16, 2013 at 12:17 pm
Thanks for posting that, Jean! I love this time of year when the markets open. Were there a lot ofRead More people for the opening day?
David V May 15, 2013 at 02:49 pm
Thx Kendall, bear news just isn't what it used to be. thinking it has something to do with the komoRead More anchor moving out of our trossachs neighborhood:)
Kendall Watson (Editor) May 15, 2013 at 01:19 pm
Hey, thanks for the bear photos on Friday! Sorry about the slight delay in posting!