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Decorating with vintage treasures and collectibles discovered at flea markets, antiques shops, and yard sales gives your home distinctive personal style year-round. During the holidays, highlight your favorite prizes by using them as focal points for holiday decorations. Using the ideas on these pages for inspiration, take a fresh look at your own collectibles and their possibilities for creative new uses.
Syrup-bucket Wall VasesPainted Canadian maple syrup buckets have become so popular that manufacturers are producing new ones in a similar style. Whether you have rusted and worn vintage buckets or newer reproductions, consider displaying them on the wall like three-dimensional art.

These miniature cast-iron stars are actually new, treated to an acid bath to make them rust. They're tiny versions of the star-shaped bolts that were used to secure the ends of tie-rods in 19th-century buildings. Stack them and insert a small candle to decorate each place setting at your holiday table.
Organizer TrayThanks to the popularity of the rusted look, a rusty baking pan that might otherwise have found its way to a landfill now serves a new purpose as a letter tray, a toiletries organizer, or as a container for displaying special holiday ornaments.
An old kitchen grater with curved ends (reminiscent of a sled runner) makes an unusual stand for a pillar candle or a potted poinsettia. If the grater is rusty and you prefer a clean metal look, restore the metal by applying a commercial rust remover, available at a hardware store.

An old garden gate serves as an inventive bulletin board for displaying Christmas cards and photos. Simply tuck the cards among the wires in the gate.
Vintage dresser scarves from the 1930s and 1940s easily adapt to tabletop use as placemats or table runners. You can find scarves trimmed with crochet or decorated with embroidery at antiques shops, or keep an eye out for them at estate sales. Set the table with clear glass or plain white dinnerware to focus attention on the linens, or select dresser scarves whose colors coordinate with your china.
Tartlet-tin Twinkle LightsOld tartlet tins, often still found packaged by the dozen, are perfect as twinkle-light reflectors. Use a 3/8-inch cold chisel and hammer to punch an X through the center of each tin (rest the tin on a block of wood). Working from the back of the tin, push up the sections to make a hole to fit over the miniature bulb.

Show off your collectible plates by framing them with fresh wreaths to hang indoors.