Christmas, Holidays, homeschooling, printables

Themed Christmas Stockings: Creating Memory-Filled Traditions (+ Free Jane Austen Printable!)


Some of the most cherished Christmas memories aren’t just about the gifts under the tree – they’re about the thoughtful details that show someone truly sees you. One tradition my mom created that I still treasure decades later was giving me a themed Christmas stocking that reflected my obsessions and interests from that particular year.

Instead of generic stocking stuffers, each December brought a carefully curated collection tied to whatever had captured my heart that year. For me, that meant an Ariel-themed stocking during my Little Mermaid phase, a Beauty and the Beast year (complete with rose and book-themed treasures), an Aladdin stocking when Princess Jasmine was my absolute favorite (spoiler: still obsessed with her to this day), and even a swashbuckling pirate year. I could be a bit of a tomboy:)

These themed stockings became time capsules of who I was at different ages. Looking back through photos, I can instantly remember what I loved, what made me laugh, and what sparked my imagination during each season of childhood.

It also helps differentiate years between themselves so they don’t all run together! It makes those years distinct and special, standing out bright and clear in my memory.

Now as a mom myself, I’ve continued this tradition with my own kids. Last year, after my daughter devoured Pride and Prejudice, I created a Jane Austen-themed stocking filled with literary treasures that perfectly captured her current passions.

This must be said, in case you are a Jane Austen person and were wondering… We are team Colin Firth all the way around here!

Why Themed Christmas Stockings Create Lasting Memories

They Celebrate Your Child’s Unique Interests
Generic candy and trinkets are fine, but a themed stocking says, “I see you. I notice what lights you up. Your interests matter.” Whether your child is obsessed with dinosaurs, outer space, a particular book series, or watercolor painting, a themed stocking validates their passions.

They Create a Visual Timeline of Childhood
Years from now, when you look at Christmas photos, you’ll instantly remember: “Oh, that was the year she was obsessed with horses!” or “That was his Lego Movie phase!” These stockings become beautiful documentation of your child’s changing interests and development.

They Make Gift-Giving More Intentional
Instead of scrambling for random stocking stuffers, having a theme focuses your search. You’re not just filling space – you’re curating a collection. This often leads to more meaningful, useful, and beloved items.

They Build Anticipation
When kids know their stocking will reflect something they love, the excitement builds. Will there be a fingerprint kit ala Sherlock Holmes? New art supplies? Another book in their favorite series? The personalization makes it even more special than a surprise.

How to Choose a Theme for Your Child’s Stocking

Follow Their Current Obsessions
What are they constantly talking about? What books are they rereading? What characters do they pretend to be? What posters are on their walls? The theme should be fairly obvious if you’re paying attention to their everyday conversations. Something usually jumps out at me!

Consider Recent Milestones
Did they just finish a significant book? Master a new skill? Discover a new hobby? A theme can celebrate these achievements – like a “budding artist” stocking after they completed their first serious art project, or a “junior chef” stocking after they learned to bake. Sprinkles and baking tools make amazing stocking stufffers.

Look at Their Room Decor
Often, kids surround themselves with what they love. If their room is filled with space posters, NASA patches, and astronomy books, you’ve found your theme. If they’ve covered their walls with Lord of the Rings maps, that’s your answer.

Themed Christmas Stocking Ideas (+ Free Printable!)

Over the years, I’ve collected really fun themed stocking ideas – some from my own childhood, others I’ve created for my kids, and many more I’ve dreamed up for future years. I’ll try to include some in future blogs!

Here’s a preview with one of my favorites…

The Jane Austen/Pride and Prejudice Stocking After my daughter finished Pride and Prejudice, I knew exactly what her stocking theme would be. Vintage-inspired items, tea-related gifts, beautiful writing supplies, and literary treasures created a perfectly Regency-era Christmas morning.
(Full item list and sources in the printable!)

Want 16 Jane Austen Themed Stocking Ideas?

I’m giving away my complete “16 Jane Austen Themed Stocking Stuffer Ideas” printable absolutely free to all subscribers!

After creating my daughter’s Pride and Prejudice stocking last year, I was super excited about finding perfect Regency-era treasures and literary gifts.

So I compiled them all into one beautiful printable for you!

The printable includes items like:

  • 📚 Miniature Jane Austen books for collectors
  • 🎵 Pride and Prejudice sheet music
  • 💌 Elizabeth Bennet inspired roll-on perfume
  • 🍃 Cottagecore English houses scrunchies
  • 🎴 Book lovers playing cards featuring P&P
  • 🌸 Jane Austen floral pen and pencil sets
  • 🫖 Adorable teacup fabric bookmarks
  • 📝 Pride and Prejudice VHS cover notebooks
  • 🎨 Waterproof Jane Austen vinyl stickers
  • 🌿 Washi tape with Pride and Prejudice patterns
  • And 6+ more delightful Regency-inspired treasures!

Each item includes specific product names and links where to find them to help you build the perfect literary stocking.

Tips for Assembling Your Themed Stocking

Mix Practical with Whimsical
Include items they’ll actually use (quality colored pencils, fun socks in theme colors, useful tools) alongside purely fun treasures (themed stickers, small figurines, collectibles).

Don’t Forget Consumables
Themed candy, hot chocolate mixes, specialty teas, or snacks that fit the theme are always appreciated and don’t add to clutter.

Include One “Wow” Item
While most items should be small stocking-sized treasures, include one slightly bigger or more special item that really captures the theme – maybe a book, a piece of jewelry, or a special collector’s item.

Add Personal Touches
Handwritten notes from the perspective of a favorite character, custom bookmarks with meaningful quotes, or small DIY items add warmth to purchased gifts.

Consider Future Value
Some themed items become genuine keepsakes. That vintage-style Jane Austen bookmark or those enamel pins might end up treasured for decades. I like to think about the future when giving them gifts and give them things that will grow with them and not just be space-filler-uppers.

Making It Work on a Budget

Themed stockings don’t have to be expensive. Some of my favorite theme items have been:

  • Printed quotes or images in small frames from the Target’s Bullseye’s Playground
  • DIY items (hand-painted ornaments, custom bookmarks, themed baked goods)
  • Thrift store finds that fit the theme perfectly
  • Free printables (bookplates, art prints, game cards)
  • Library sale books related to the theme
  • Handmade items from Etsy sellers

The theme is about thoughtfulness, not price tags.

My “16 Jane Austen Themed Stocking Stuffer Ideas” printable includes items at every price point – from $5 treasures to special $30+ literary collectibles. You can create a beautiful Regency-inspired stocking on any budget!

Documenting the Tradition

Take photos of each year’s themed stocking before it’s opened. Create a digital photo album showing the progression of themes through the years. These become treasured family history – visual proof of your children’s evolving interests and your attention to their inner worlds.

Years from now, you’ll look back and smile, remembering exactly who your child was at eight, twelve, or fifteen. And your grown children will have tangible proof that someone saw them, celebrated them, and delighted in their unique passions.

The beauty of themed Christmas stockings isn’t just in the gifts themselves – it’s in the message they send: “I pay attention. I see what makes you uniquely you. Your interests and passions matter to me.”

Whether it’s a Little Mermaid year, a Jane Austen year, or a year obsessed with coding and robotics, themed stockings create a tradition of intentional gift-giving that celebrates your child’s authentic self. They transform stocking stuffers from afterthought to artform, from generic to genuinely meaningful.

This Christmas, consider making your stockings tell a story – the story of who your children are right now, in this exact moment of their childhood.

Because these moments are fleeting, but a photograph of that perfectly themed stocking will remind you forever of the year they loved dogs, American Girls, or archeology, or the Mysterious Benedict Society books.

And someday, when they’re grown and creating their own family traditions, they might just continue this one – remembering how special it felt to wake up on Christmas morning and see that someone had filled a stocking with treasures chosen just for them.

Ready to create a Jane Austen themed stocking?

Subscribe to download my free “16 Jane Austen Themed Stocking Stuffer Ideas” printable and create a literary Christmas morning your Austen-lover will treasure forever.

Subscribers, you can log into the Resource Library with your password and find it there.

Perfect for Pride and Prejudice fans, Regency aesthetic lovers, or anyone who adores all things Jane Austen!

P.S. Even if your kids are past the “stocking age” (are we ever, really? we do adult stockings at our house!), this works beautifully for teens, adult children, spouses, or friends. My Jane Austen printable is perfect for gifting to any Austen lover in your life – and themed stockings make holidays feel special at any age!

Kids playing outside in spring
Holidays, homeschooling

Spring Adventures in Your Homeschool: Joyful Ideas to Bring Nature into Your School Days

“Nothing ever seems impossible in spring, you know.”
~L.M. Montgomery, Anne of Ingleside

As the world bursts into bloom this spring, let’s invite the season’s vibrant energy into our homes with a delightful blend of art, nature, living books, and hands-on learning.

At Homeschool With Joy, I believe in weaving simplicity, faith, and creativity into our days, and today, I’m sharing a spring-inspired plan to spark wonder and connection in your homeschool.

Now that the rush and preparations of Eastertide is wrapping up, we still want to enjoy the fresh feeling of spring while it lasts, until it gets too hot to enjoy being outside more than two seconds here in Texas…

“‘Is the spring coming?,’ he said. ‘What is it like?’… ‘It is the sun shining on the rain and the rain falling on the sunshine and things pushing up and working under the earth,” said Mary.'”
~Frances Hodgson Burnett, The Secret Garden

Using a handful of inspiring resources, we’ll explore nature through art projects, read-alouds, and playful experiments that celebrate the season’s magic.
This Post Contains Affiliate Links.

Grab your nature notebooks, a cup of tea, and let’s dive into this joyful adventure!

🌳Art and the Imagination: There’s something about treehouses to make the spirit feel free. We have an Aaron Becker framed treehouse print in our home and it makes me extremely happy. Check out this You Are An Artist lesson for kids to make their own beautiful treehouse art. This project is no pressure and is good for various art levels.

🕰️Time-Travel Reading Adventure: One of my absolute favorite books on the planet is The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Spring seems like the perfect time to go a hundred years back in time and let the beautiful story unwind around you.

I remember being read aloud the story by my grandmother and now my daughter has memories of us reading it together. My favorite edition is the 100th anniversary edition which includes the original artwork. Below, check out the first chapter free on Amazon.

🤓I feel really cool for having figured out how to embed that…

🖌️Woodland Magic Painting: I cannot say enough good things about Usborne magic painting books. Unlike traditional paint-with-water books with boring, blocky pictures and blocks of difficult-to-work-with paint in the corners of the page, these books have vivid and finely detailed thick pages that are a joy to paint with.

“This book is packed with beautiful woodland scenes for you to bring to life. Simply dip the brush in water and sweep it across the black and white pages to fill the scenes with glorious colours – from squirrels playing in a tree, a badger out at night, a deer and her fawns and lots more.”

📒Nature Notebook: I adore the Nature Notebook from the Good and the Beautiful. Its lush pages just beg you to go out into nature and explore on your own. Sometimes it is hard for my kids to just “go outside” but this book gives them a reason and purpose to do so, while providing knowledge all the while.

At a full 117 pages, there are plenty of activities teaching kids about leaves, bark, tree identification, and more – all divided up by season.

📚Beautiful, Seasonal Booklist: Traditionally when my kids were little, we always did Morning Time! This printable PDF booklist from Read Aloud Revival has plenty of reliably gentle and wonderful tales of the season to share with your kids.

We would always reserve books at the library. If your library doesn’t have them in their regular collection, most libraries have a free or low-cost interlibrary loan option.

🌿Whimsical Leaf Art: What better way to embrace spring than art projects that utilize the imagination as well as leaves and the freshly- blossomed flowers outside? I’m totally obsessed with Thimble and Twig’s beautiful leaf art. These are impressive yet simple and inspire kids to see more in nature than just what is on the surface level. For just a little bit of prep, you can help your kids create memories that last.

🐦Nature Study Packet: The Homeschool Compass never fails me… This beautiful, full-color, and free printable nature study packet has everything you need to easily make an otherwise hum-drum day special.

  • Label the Bird – An educational sheet that asks children to identify and label the parts of a bird
  • What Can You See? – Encourages children to go outside and identify as many creatures as they can in the great outdoors
  • The Signs of Spring – An opportunity for children to get creative and draw what signs of spring they can see in their own backyard
  • Nature Scavenger Hunt – A fun game that will have children exploring outdoors on the hunt for a list of spring and nature inspired items
  • Observing Nature – A worksheet that is designed to help children form an appreciation for the natural world around them
  • Nature Word Search – A fun way to familiarize children with nature words and help to grow their vocabulary

🌈Rainbow Bubble Bottles: Another extremely cool yet extremely fun idea are rainbow bubble bottles! Using food coloring – I prefer natural colors like these – you create iridescent streams of colored bubbles!

All you need is dish soap, food coloring, a sock, a hairband or rubber band, and water bottle. Tada! Instant magic!

By weaving together art, nature, and hands-on experiments, spring becomes a season of joy-filled discovery for your homeschooling journey.

Whether it’s designing treehouses, painting woodland scenes, or documenting discoveries in journals, these activities offer something special for everyone.

Scatter Joy,

Jessica Lovett

Need some ideas on starting your own warm, cozy Morning Music Playlist to scatter joy on busy homeschool mornings?

Subscribe to download your music playlist ideas printable!

Your password to the resource library will come in instantly after your email is confirmed.

Squishmallow Header Image
Holidays, homeschooling, joy

Squishmallows are Perfect for a Valentine’s Day Party!

Hello, Everyone ~

What a busy couple of months it has been… After the Thanksgiving and then Christmas holidays, starting back up with school and music activities really was a whirlwind and then we had lots of Adulting Problems (why do central heat and air conditioning systems have to be SERIOUSLY fixed for bagillions of dollars when they are merely 6 years old… and right when Texas decides to have a heat spell in winter? Thank goodness for amazingly thoughtful friends who loaned us a portable air conditioner so that my ❄️snow-craving-yet-🤠Texan Self was able to not wilt too terribly much waiting a week for the fix), but here I am!

See? I did the above just for you. That sentence right there proved that I’m not an AI Robot. Would a robot write a sentence that long? Absolutely not. In a world where so much is AI, you can trust that I’m genuine and here for you with Real Person Ideas! Plus, I have 2 degrees in writing and literature – small brag – so therefore I have permission to write whatever I want. Or even make up words! Like this: Squishmallowtastic! See!?

We have been having fun inventing a small Valentine’s party for a few of my daughter’s friends and we thought, What better theme than Squishmallows for Valentine’s?! Their cute cuddliness and pastel colors just magically lend themselves to Valentine’s Day perfectly.

Here are several ideas for celebrating, whether you are having people over or just want to make the day stand out with a bit more sparkles and glitter than usual for your homeschoolers!


For littles, these Squishmallow color sheets have lots of activity pages that help them practice their scissor skills as well as coloring.


Here are 68 (yes, 68!) coloring sheets of varying vibe and difficulty from Simply Love Coloring! She notes that they can be used for crafts like greeting cards, to create banners, mobiles, storybooks, and more.


This adorable Squishmallow name art from Stardust Digital Finds even has name tags. It would be a fun and easy party centerpiece.

Just to be *extra*, note that these are not just made up names…

“The names were created from actual Squishmallow names. The names listed on each month are from Squishmallows who were created during those months.”


These Squishmallow clip art graphics are all perfect for making your own Valentine’s or doing other projects. Each one fits with the theme! Created by Kangey Squishmallow, they are only $6 for 50 images! Older kids can enjoy doing digital projects on their own on Canva or similar software.


We choose to make this Rainbow punch from BitzandGiggles, which looks really fluffy and Squishmallow-y!

H.E.B. magically has sherbet that doesn’t have all those fake colorings and actually uses natural flavors, too. We are not using her exact recipe and using seltzer water to avoid caramel coloring in ginger ale. Curious why? Head over to Food Babe’s Master List!


Among other snacks, we will also be having this Unicorn Dip from SimplisticallyLiving. We will be using natural colors from Natural Candy Store to create ours.

The fluffy texture is definitely Squishmallowtastic!!


The thing that I’m most proud of is this Icebreaker Question game! I tried to make up questions that were not hard to answer – i.e. Tell us your ultimate favorite thing right now! – and also help the kids get to know each other.

As far as how to play, I printed off the cards, one set for each guest. The person who is “it” will read a question off the card. The other kids will write their answer on the back and then hand the cards back to her in a basket.

The person who is “it” has 2 tries to figure out whose answer is whose! If they get it right, they get to keep that card and gain a point. After that, the answerer can let everyone know who they were.

I have the Squishmallow Icebreaker Game cards as a free printable if you’ll become a subscriber to Homeschool With Joy!

You can also have my coordinating Squishmallow Valentine Cards!

Once you subscribe, you’ll get a password to our download library with those printables and others are they are built.

Hope you have a fun Valentine’s Day in your homeschool and that these ideas will help you create a more joyful home environment.

Scatter Joy,

Jessica Lovett

Need some ideas on starting your own warm, cozy Morning Music Playlist to scatter joy on busy homeschool mornings?

Subscribe to download your music playlist ideas printable!

Your password to the resource library will come in instantly after your email is confirmed.