Xmas Mantel Decor | Wooden Mantel Decorations| Wood Christmas Decor | Fireplace Decor | Christmas Window Decoration

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SKU:
ZD453597
UPC:
665415039832
Condition:
New
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2 Piece Set - Laser Cut Wooden Mantel Decor - Christmas Decorations - Assembly Required!

This easy-to-assemble Mantel Decor kit comes with 2 pieces (the word XMAS and the Base). The XMAS word with the Tree as the "A" is perfect for your fireplace mantel!

We use a very precise laser machine to cut the intricate pieces. So don't worry about your wood decor set being uneven or cut wrong. When your Christmas Mantel Decor set is cut, we inspect and make sure each piece is perfect and fits together nicely.

These are labeled "Mantel Kits" but you can set these beautiful little pieces anywhere in your home. Place them in a window seal, on an end table in the living room, in your kids bedroom, in the kitchen, in the foyer, or anywhere else you'd like!

FUN FACT:
Here’s a holiday surprise that only the dictionary can provide. Do you find the word Xmas, as an abbreviation for Christmas, offensive? Many people do, but the origin of this controversial term might change your mind! The history of the word Xmas is actually more respectable—and fascinating—than you might suspect. First of all, the abbreviation predates (by centuries) its use in gaudy advertisements. It was first used in the mid-1500s. X represents the Greek letter chi, the initial letter in the word Χριστ?ς (Chr?stos). And what does Χριστ?ς mean? “(Jesus) Christ.” X has been an acceptable representation of the word Christ for hundreds of years. (And why would people need to abbreviate Christ? Well, the word is very widely written.)
Other abbreviations for Christ include Xt and Xp, the P here representing the Greek letter rho, source of our letter R. A stylized version of the Greek chi (X) and rho (P) is ?, a symbol of Christ called a Christogram. In the same vein, the dignified terms Xpian and Xtian have been used in place of the word Christian.