The 2025 Kunicki Christmas Day-In (Open House)

Location: 11407 65 Street, Edmonton AB, Canada, T5W 4K7
Time: Anytime from 11:00am to 11:00pm (probably even later) on Saturday December 13th, 2025
Entrance: Walk around to the backdoor
Transportation: Lots of curb-side parking (we warned our neighbours) // ETS route 102, 104, 101 or 8 // Park your bike in the secure backyard!
Scope: If you are getting this invite - it is safe to say your household is invited.

The Extra Details & FAQs!

  1. We love ya, but there will be other Christmas parties! Be safe! It is cold out and roads can be bad! At the same time, if you, your kid, or significant other is pretty sick, please feel free to skip this one out!

  2. With small kiddos - it is probably better to come earlier with them! We will have the carpeted basement and a few other spaces set up for them.

  3. We were inspired by the below quote from a 1922 book about etiquette in New York from our fantastic neighbour Kristin to call it a “Day-in”. It is an open house though. Please come as you are with no expectation to bring anything. There is no dress code and as “regal” as this invite gives, it is just regular people hanging out when they can around other commitments! We might have a prize for who makes the most unique appearances.

  4. Your presence is enough! We intentionally opened it up as a potluck because (especially our) people love sharing food. If you are compelled to bring something else, please Home Depot GCs over booze. We also need DIY ideas for our upstairs and basement bathrooms 😅

OUR MENU

What Jess and Mike will have on hand.

DRINKS (sober)

Espresso/matcha/tea based drinks - lattes, americanos, with many different syrups.

Bubly

Regular & Alternative Eggnog

Punch

Shirley Temples (no cherry tho)

Cocktails

🍸 12L of Alton Brown’s Aged (~5 weeks) Eggnog

Espresso Martini

Old Fashioned

Negroni

(Mike takes requests)

 

Morning

Fresh Croissants w/spreads (Jam, Nutella & Biscoff)

Lunch & Afternoon

Tomato Soup (V & GF) & buns

Grilled Cheese (can be GF)

Black Bean and Corn Salad (V & GF)

Dinner & Evening

Vegan Chili

Beef Chili & buns

Sweats

Italian Lemon Pandoro

It is doubtful if the present generation of New Yorkers knows what a day at home is! But their mothers, at least, remember the time when the fashionable districts were divided into regular sections, wherein on a given day in the week, the whole neighborhood was “at home.” Friday sounds familiar as the day for Washington Square! And was it Monday for lower Fifth Avenue? At all events, each neighborhood on the day of its own, suggested a local fête. Ladies in visiting dresses with trains and bonnets and nose-veils and tight gloves, holding card cases, tripped demurely into this house, out of that, and again into another; and there were always many broughams and victorias slowly “exercising” up and down, and very smart footmen standing with maroon or tan or fur rugs over their arms in front of Mrs. Wellborn’s house or Mrs. Oldname’s, or the big house of Mrs. Toplofty at the corner of Fifth Avenue. It must have been enchanting to be a grown person in those days! Enchanting also were the C-spring victorias, as was life in general that was taken at a slow carriage pace and not at the motor speed of to-day. The “day at home” is still in fashion in Washington, and it is ardently to be hoped that it also flourishes in many cities and towns throughout the country or that it will be revived, for it is a delightful custom—though more in keeping with Europe than America, which does not care for gentle paces once it has tasted swift. A certain young New York hostess announced that she was going to stay home on Saturday afternoons. But the men went to the country and the women to the opera, and she gave it up. There are a few old-fashioned ladies, living in old-fashioned houses, and still staying at home in the old-fashioned way to old-fashioned friends who for decades have dropped in for a cup of tea and a chat. And there are two maiden ladies in particular, joint chatelaines of an imposingly beautiful old house where, on a certain afternoon of the week, if you come in for tea, you are sure to meet not alone those prominent in the world of fashion, but a fair admixture of artists, scientists, authors; inventors, distinguished strangers—in a word Best Society in its truest sense. But days at home such as these are not easily duplicated; for few houses possess a “salon” atmosphere, and few hostesses achieve either the social talent or the wide cultivation necessary to attract and interest so varied and brilliant a company.
— Emily Post, Etiquette (1922), “The Old-Fashioned Day At Home”