No place like decorated homes for the holidays
Transcription
No place like decorated homes for the holidays
See the lights No place like decorated homes for the holidays By Vickie Jurkowski 14 Z1, Z2 • music and showcased on YouTube has brought the tradition a long way, too. But for many, the classics are still keepers. Nostalgic plastic blow molds – those hollow snowmen, Santas, elves and penguins you see on folks’ front lawns – and handmade designs are popular as ever this holiday season. “I’d say I have one of everything,” said Rick Tarulis, whose home at 827 Morven Court in Naperville has been featured on HGTV and the Naperville Trolley Holiday Lights Tour since it started 17 years ago. “If I see a new Santa or elf or candy cane, I buy it.” Plastic Santas, elves and candy canes are joined on his lawn by Mickey, Minnie and Snoopy. “The nostalgic blow molds are still one of our most popular items,” said Rick Septoski, marketing manager for Tinley Parkbased retailer American Sale, where the plastic figures range from $14 to $200. An animatronic plastic blowmold Santa in a handmade chim- familytimemagazine.com ney has been the centerpiece of Bill Christoffel’s display for 25 years, from Des Plaines to his current residence at 1622 Clarence Ave. in Arlington Heights. “Santa comes out of the chimney whenever a car goes by and music comes on,” said Christoffel, who is also slowly converting some 6,000 lights to LEDs. He used his electrical engineering skills to create a chain-driven assembly and also hid a motion sensor and FM radio transmitter inside the chimney. The Pop-Up Santa action triggers a nearby blow-mold snowman to spin on its saucer sled. Tarulis, an attorney and grandfather, also incorporates homespun ingenuity into his holiday décor. He designed the 17-foot steel snowman on the The Frohn residence at 1443 W. Briarcliff Road in Bolingbrook features 52,000 lights, 100 flashing snowflakes, 20 blow-mold soldiers, 30 ball ornaments made from Solo cups and filled with 100 lights, four large inflatables, a wooden sleigh and reindeer, candy cane tree, a train and an airplane. Photo: Courtesy of Jack Frohn I f parental warnings of “Don’t use the hair dryer while your brother’s running the microwave!” were a normal part of your childhood, you know all about the interior hazards of oodles of outdoor lights during the holidays. Two things may have happened since: You got enough of the lights and ensuing fiascos as a kid and now leave the extreme decorating to others; or you caught the family bug for the Christmas crazies and spend October and November lining the perimeter with soldiers and candy canes, dotting the rooftop, gutters and trees with lights, and filling the yard with a party of penguins, snowmen, elves, Santa, his sleigh and nine reindeer to rival the North Pole. Whether you fall into category A or B, looking at the lights and other holiday décor likely is an undeniable treat for you and your family year after year. Those who take on the task of keeping the tradition alive say LED lights have made their “fun hobby” more simple and economical. Technology enabling displays to be synchronized to Photo: Courtesy Rick Tarulis Thousands of LED lights and dozens of plastic blow molds decorate the Tarulis home at 827 Morven Court in Naperville. The display has been featured on HGTV and the Naperville Trolley Tour since it started 17 years ago. side of his house on a piece of notebook paper and had it fabricated at a welding shop. He sawed, drilled and painted pegboard and incorporated drop ceiling light covers to make four-foot stockings and candy canes for the front of the house. LED lights have improved his 30-year decorating tradition. “About four years ago I maxed out all the power” and an electrician recommended a new meter, subpanels, etc.,” Tarulis said. “Instead I switched to all LED. They use one-tenth of the power and last forever. It’s very economical.” Modern also meets nostalgic and handmade at the Frohn residence in Bolingbrook. The house itself is almost invisible amid 52,000 lights and 20 plastic soldiers outlining the corner property at 1443 W. Briarcliff Road. Jack Frohn, a letter carrier, and his wife Laura Frohn, a former letter carrier now in manage- ment, add plenty of homespun ideas to the store-bought décor. They designed their own flashing 14-inch snowflakes, which used to be sold at grocery and hardware stores, and 110 snowflakes are on display from the rooftop down. The couple modified a friend’s idea for ball ornaments made from Solo cups and filled with 100 lights, and gave him some snowflakes in exchange. “It’s quite a task” to make 30plus ball ornaments, Jack Frohn said, “and each year our trees get bigger so we have to make more and add more lights.” Family members and friends also have contributed handmade décor. Hanging in trees and on the North Pole are elves created by the Frohns’ nephew, Garret Popek, who also made a video of the display (www.youtube.com/ watch?v=ldj4YAtxbFE). His late father Bart Popek made a wooden sleigh and reindeer for the Frohns’ front lawn. Neighbor Peggy McMillan did the elves’ hair and clothed them thanks to Goodwill. The handmade décor has another way of bringing people together. Laura Frohn has a tradition of hiding small elves in the snowflakes for kids to find. The couple handed out 1,600 candy canes to onlookers last year. Santa even makes an appearance at the Frohn residence, with this year’s visit set for 6 to 9 p.m. Dec. 8. “It’s … um … big,” Jack Frohn said about their holiday display, which Annette Wehrli of Naperville Trolley & Tours Ltd. (www. napervilletrolley.com) calls “the largest of them all.” While it’s a given that the Frohn and Tarulis homes will be featured on the tours, Wehrli said residents call her to request being on the tour and don’t always make the cut, even with four trolleys operating every single night in December. “More and more people are decorating and synchronizing displays to music and LED lights,” said Wehrli, also known as the Trolley Chick. “Now there are enough homes that we do a north tour and a south tour. Going around looking at lights brings friends and family together.” “We used to do it for them,” Jack Frohn said of decorating for the couple’s three children, who have grown up and moved away. “Now it’s a tradition for the trolleys and literally thousands of people who come by and we get to meet them. There’s a group of au pairs from all over the world who come and it’s amazing to see the shock on their faces as they take pictures and send them instantly to their (native) homes.” The Rest of the Story: Read this story in its entirety and see many more photos of decorated homes on our website at www.familytimemagazine.com. • tell them you saw it in the December family time magazine • Z2, Z1 15