^ 'Candy Cain and Abel'
Lynn and Joe Lucking's daughter developed her unique sense of humor early. When she was 9, "She put candy canes together with the story of Cain and Abel and presented us with candy Cain and Abel figures for Christmas," said Lynn of St. Paul. "Cain is complete with bloody weapon and angry face, while Abel is bleeding and in pain. We shake our heads in disbelief over this every year, but they always have a place on the tree."
^ Mink memories
Becca Gottschalk's mother-in-law, Eunice, loved everything about Christmas: decorating her home, baking cookies with her grandkids and crafting handmade gifts. When she died in 2004, she left behind the mink stoles she wore in the 1950s and '60s. Since fur stoles had fallen out of fashion, Eunice's daughter suggested using mink scraps and Eunice's brooches to trim Christmas Santas as keepsakes. "We put him by our fireplace every year in remembrance of her and how much she loved this time of year," said Gottschalk, of Eden Prairie.
^ Lost masterpiece
When Debra Parker's kids were young, she ran a small home-based business. "Access to unlimited office supplies spurred a lot of creativity," she said. "This little guy showed up on the tree one Christmas, the work of our youngest daughter, Amy, who was obsessed with Scotch tape. We thought it was cute at the time, but I have no recollection of saving it. Lo and behold, one of the first times all the girls were home together during college years, someone found him at the bottom of a box. We had an epic laugh-until-you-cry moment. Ever since, I've hidden him somewhere on the tree. ... It wouldn't be Christmas without him."
^ Looks like Grandma
Lynn Ogden's daughter, Sarah, was 9 or 10 when her grandmother, Lynn's mother, told Sarah and her two brothers that she was bringing Christmas gifts. They were all excited to see what Grandma would bring, recalled Lynn, of Buffalo, Minn. After the boys opened their gifts — crisp $10 bills — Sarah was already imagining what she would buy with hers. But when she opened her package, she found a rosemaled ornament with crazy hair. "Her grandmother thought she'd be thrilled, but the disappointment showed," Lynn said. But now, more than 25 years later, "we all laugh at the ornament that looks a bit like Grandma because of the crazy hair. Sarah and all of us are so happy she received it to remind us of Grandma and how she would have laughed with us."
^ Gem hunt
Years ago, Peggy Bhimani of Corcoran started making a holiday wreath out of vintage jewelry — some of it her grandmother's, some her mother's and some her own. "But most of it was a years-long quest involving my daughters and me and countless garage sales," she said. They made an annual pilgrimage to River Hills Day in Burnsville, where Bhimani grew up, "to search through old jewelry and watch as prices rose in later years and we refused to pay 'that much!' for someone else's unwanted jewelry."
^ Shrinking portrait
Janna Nord's oldest son, Conner, now a college student, made this ornament when he was in first grade. "It used to be a standard school-picture size from the shoulders up," said Nord, of Eden Prairie. But the mints framing the photo have flattened over the years, spreading to cover more and more of Conner's picture. "Every year, we anxiously unwrap it to see how much face he has left. We are thinking by the time he is 25, it will just be a nose picture!"
^ Farm find
This iron, brass and ceramic candelabra once belonged to Patricia Jensen's grandmother, who was born in 1874 and lived on a farm between Red Wing and Lake City, Minn. "Before the farm added electricity, the candelabra was a necessity," said Jensen, of Eden Prairie. "Now it is a lovely piece of art that I appreciate more with every passing year."
^ Care package
"My father sent me this tree when I was a college student at Carleton in the 1960s," said Bernadette Pyter Janisch of St. Paul. "It came in a box with crackers, cheese and sausage. The food didn't last, but I've displayed the tree every year since then. The angel has lost a wing, but otherwise it looks the same as when it first arrived on campus 40-plus years ago."