all images © 2008 Señor Enrique
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Please note:
I very much appreciate my articles and photos appearing on fellow bloggers' sites, popular broadsheets, and local broadcast news segments, but I would appreciate even more a request for permission first.
Thank you!
I very much appreciate my articles and photos appearing on fellow bloggers' sites, popular broadsheets, and local broadcast news segments, but I would appreciate even more a request for permission first.
Thank you!
What a jolly post. As if we needed more reminding that Christmas is just around the bend.
ReplyDeleteHappy Holidays, as early as today.
my mom would always be the first to say "time to decorate the house for christmas!" and it would just be early november! She would start playing christmas tunes about late october (haha) just to set the mood. Then she would reluctantly get the decors off even way off the usual time to put them down which is Three Kings' Day. The house kasi would look very drab and colorless after.
ReplyDeleteYour pics really show why my mom and now our nephews and nieces love Christmas! Masasaya ang kulay and all those sparkling tinsels---wow!!! I and my siblings love it too...but then we do the toil-ey work of setting them up and putting them down :-C.
I like the the colorful flowers. They are so cute.
ReplyDeleteOh! I miss these sights. I miss all the colorful holiday decorations we have back there.
ReplyDeleteYour pics just warmed my freezing heart. Thanks.
Iba talaga ang Pasko sa Pinas.
ReplyDeleteVery colorful photos, Senyor! Advance Merry Christmas!
ReplyDeleteAdvance Merry Christmas !
ReplyDeletenice colorful shots, Eric. paskong-pasko na nga...pero wala pang pang-shopping!:D
ReplyDeletethe thing i like about christmas season, is when i get to pass by those market stalls where they sell all those parols and shiny christmas trimmings like in divisoria or nep q-mart. it's not just the dizzying colors of all those christmas decors hung from the rafters of the stalls but THE SMELL of the plastics and bamboo sticks and glue. the smell always brings me back to when we were kids making those parols for school. i enjoy those times i get to make these decorations.
ReplyDeletehehehe... i was in grade six elementary when we had this usual parol project. me and a classmate of mine solicited money from our parents and relatives so we could make the biggest parol. it was so huge that we'd have to use a ladder to do the trimmings cut from papel de hapon and wound around the bamboo ring around it. it got paraded proudly during the annual christmas parade at school and got hung on the building facade.
hehehe, those were good memories.
You can definitely "feel it in the air" when it comes to Xmas in Pinas. Sometimes it makes you wonder if Pinoys live and die for Xmas :)
ReplyDeletemerry Christmas!!
ReplyDelete