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From Prague to Edinburgh, Alsace to Manchester, Sweden to Spain, Christmas markets are a hallmark of the holiday season in ...
Whether you prefer soft shells or crunchy, World Market's 4.5-inch glass taco ornament could become your favorite. The touch of sparkle gives it an extra dollop of glam.
European Christmas markets are straight out of a holiday movie. Twinkling lights, towering trees and brightly colored ornaments dot little lanes where artisans sell their goods from peaked-roof ...
The markets carry everything from knitted scarves and carved ornaments to games and cheese boards. There is plenty of Christmas decor too, including nativity sets, angels, Santa Claus figures, and ...
These thin, light, hand-blown Christmas ornaments were starting to be seen around Europe in the 1880s, when — the story goes — F.W. Woolworth was on one of his buying trips.
For 20 years, a home decor company called December Diamonds has been designing and producing ornaments — which include mermen — celebrating the LGBTQ community in kitschy coastal style.
But its markets felt less commercial, including a Christmas tree-filled Fairy Tale Forest, with crafts like gingerbread decorating (7 francs), and a children’s train (3 francs).
Topical ornaments like Old World Christmas’s toilet paper roll can have a time-capsule quality, said Jessica Fitzsimons, 38. She bought the company’s hand sanitizer ($22) and masked Santa ($28 ...
At the Christmas market, visitors will be able to purchase T-shirts, ornaments and train whistles with the studio's logo to commemorate their visit, in hopes of encouraging a return to the market ...
Edinburgh’s Christmas market ranked as the most picture-perfect since the Scottish capital has racked up more than 55,200 hashtags. Strasbourg, France, follows with 34,400 hashtags, and Vienna ...