Joanne Seelig: Welcome back, my name is Joanne Seelig and I am the Family Programs
Coordinator at the National Building Museum in Washington DC. I am
teaching you how to make a gingerbread house. Well congratulations, you
have built your house and now you might be wondering what should I do
with it?
Well, a gingerbread house makes a beautiful table top or windowsill
decoration and it is quite easy to transport. I like to use a garden box to
help make that transition a little bit smoother. I simply lift up the
gingerbread house on the cardboard base and I slide it into the box. Now,
it is really easy for me to move it around and hopefully you are one of
many happy families who created a gingerbread house at the National
Building Museum.
You might be thinking, I really do not want to go through the trouble of
making a gingerbread house next year. I would like just put it and add it
out, a year from now. Well, insects and heat do not make good house
guest for a gingerbread house, but you can preserve it. What I would
recommend is using a little bit of craft furnish and you can purchase this at
your local craft store or online and you may just give it a light spray and
after you spray some craft furnish on it, you may want to put it in a plastic
bag and then in a box and you will be ready to go.
Maybe when you are transporting your gingerbread house your window
falls off or a roof top decoration comes a little bit loose. That is not a
problem. Go back to clip to and make your own icing to help or just buy
some new icing and stick it back on. Maybe you want to enter your
gingerbread house in a contest. Many local restaurants and organizations
have gingerbread house contests. Well, congratulations you have made a
beautiful gingerbread house.
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