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What’s the Best Way to Decorate a Christmas Tree?
The Christmas tree is a timeless symbol of warmth and festivity during the holiday season, but it’s surprisingly easy to get wrong. Often driven by nostalgia, tradition, or spontaneity, it’s tempting to just fill it with random lights and ornaments you have on hand. While this can create a unique and charming look, it’s also dangerously close to becoming a cluttered mess. To help you design a beautifully curated holiday centerpiece, here’s a step-by-step guide to decorating your tree with intention and style.
1) Choose a Christmas Theme
As the centerpiece of your holiday decor, a well-styled Christmas tree can unify your home’s overall aesthetic. So, it’s crucial to decide on a theme or concept to achieve a cohesive and visually appealing look.
To begin with, this helps determine what type of tree and ornaments to choose in terms of size, color, material, and finish. In a way, it serves as your guide to focus solely on items suited to your chosen style, eliminating any unnecessary or unrelated elements. It also simplifies your decorating process given that all components are guaranteed to complement each other.
A minimalist rustic Christmas theme, for example, might require a dainty tabletop tree, which will look best with miniature nature-inspired decor, too. On the other hand, a traditional maximalist concept might involve a tall tree filled with abundant adornments of classic holiday colors, materials, and textures.
2) Find the Perfect Spot
After taking the time and effort to choose the perfect Chritsmas tree components, you want to flaunt it somewhere nice and secure in your house.
Avoid placing it in high-traffic areas like near entrances and by a heat source. So, entryways, kitchens, and dining areas are already no-go’s. It’s also quite impractical to install it by the window as it will obstruct the view and natural light.
Rather, interior designer Gray Walker highly suggests putting this beloved centerpiece “where it can be appreciated.” Christmas connoisseur Gisela Graham additionally recommends positioning the tree facing the room where people will spend most of their time. This means that you can place it anywhere as long as it will look and feel like the centerpiece it deserves to be. Just make sure that it won’t get knocked down nor impede the flow of foot traffic in your home.
3) Accessorize the Base
Now that you’ve already assembled the tree in your chosen spot, you’re probably thinking of going straight to decorating its foliage. But before that exciting phase, there’s something you’re actually missing.
While commonly overlooked, dressing your Christmas tree’s base is as important as adorning its branches. It’s the key to accentuate this staple decor’s form and height, beautifully secure its stand, and balance the presentation of decorations. Along with concealing unsightly stands, this also protects your floors from potential damage or any debris that might fall off the tree.
You can choose from classic tree skirts, collars, pots, or even woven baskets. But for something more organic, adding moss or logs is also a unique way to accessorize the tree’s lower portion.
4) Light Up the Christmas Tree
Now that you have a securely installed Christmas tree, it’s time to bring it to life with dazzling lights. Due to its fragile bulbs and complex tangle of wires, it’s advisable to prioritize lighting before decorating (unless you have a pre-lit tree). In this way, you can freely wrap it around the tree without always having to adjust or dodge the ornaments.
Renowned global artificial Christmas tree retailer Balsam Hill suggests an effective way to illuminate this holiday centerpiece. Start from the center of the base and wind the lights around the lower branches near the trunk. As you work your way up, alternately weave the lights over and under the branches, making sure to cover all sides. Once you reach the crown, work your way back down, spreading the lights a bit further out from the trunk. Keep repeating this process until you reach the tips of the branches and the entire tree is evenly lit.
String lights have always been the popular choice in lighting up a tree. But you can also include LED lanterns and candles to add more defined and three-dimension lights. Meanwhile, ribbon, rope, micro, fiber optic, and projected lights offer even more modern and interesting options.
5) Fill In Sparse Branches
With Balsam Hill’s lighting technique, it’s now easier to see if the Christmas tree has thin or bare areas. Although it may seem like a minor detail, neglecting this step will eventually hurt the holiday item’s appearance and appeal no matter how lavishly decorated it is.
For starters, sparse stems make the tree less full and lush, distort its shape, and hinder the even distribution of light. To solve this, you can fill in the gaps with picks and sprays of the same color scheme as your tree decor. Picks are small, single-stemmed decorative accents featuring only one design or focal point. Sprays, on the other hand, appear larger and fuller due to their multiple branches filled with a variety of elements.
Select from a variety of floral, foliage, berries, pine cones, ribbons, feathered, or ornamented to give a sense of balance, depth, and visual interest.
6) Work Your Way up with Christmas Tree Ornaments
After building the foundation of the Chrristmas tree, you’re now on to the most exciting part—hanging ornaments. But instead of randomly filling every branch with objects, there’s a more structured way to cohesively decorate it.
First, you have to cluster the tree into top, middle, and bottom parts or into quadrants. Having a clear division helps you visualize the placement of ornaments and avoid overcrowding in any specific area.
For baubles, Balsam Hill Design Consultant Brad Schmidt shares that you should have at least three different sizes to create a visually pleasing tree. Logically, larger and heavier baubles should be placed further into the tree to create depth and avoid slipping off the branches. The smaller ones, on the other hand, fill the ends to appear equally prominent. This rule also applies with other ornaments like pinecones, candycanes, putz houses, and miniature Christmas figures.
As for ribbons, it’s better to use at least two types with different widths and designs for an additional layer of texture. Opt for wired types to easily manipulate their shape and keep their form better.
Of course, you’re also allowed to insert your personal touches. Family heirlooms or handmade ornaments add a unique and sentimental aspect to your tree’s general theme. You can cluster them together to create a focal point or mix them with the core ornaments according to size.
7) Finish with a Christmas Tree Topper
Lastly, complete your Christmas tree’s look with a topper. Acting as the crowning glory, it’s important to make it proportionate to the size of the tree. For example, a large, ornate star would be perfect for a towering Christmas tree, while a delicate angel would be more suitable for a smaller one.
Moreover, it’s not just limited to classic choices like stars, Christmas figures, and ribbons. You can also give it a unique touch by creating your very own topper.
Decorating Christmas trees isn’t simply a beloved holiday tradition. It symbolizes the spirit of giving, the joy of sharing, and the warmth of family and friends. By taking the time to decorate your tree with care and intention, you’re not just creating a beautiful centerpiece but a cherished memory that will last a lifetime.
Read more: The Complete Buyer’s Guide for Elevated Essential Christmas Decor Ideas