Friday, 25 December 2015

Creative Christmas Tree Decorations: 6 New Ways to Deck Your Tree

Creative Christmas Tree Decorations: 6 New Ways to Deck Your Tree

This holiday season, take your tree from "ho hum" to "heavenly" by trying out one of these clever concepts.


The Giving Tree

The Giving TreePaige Green
This concept takes all the fun of an advent calendar and presents it in glorious 3-D. The baskets and envelopes hanging on the tree serve as the calendar's "windows," so every day in December a new one can be opened. Since bare is better when it comes to the tree, feel free to re-purpose an outdoors tree for this project. You can even just use a single sturdy branch supported in a bucket. Here, The New Christmas Tree author Carrie Brown used a fruit theme for all the gifts and decorations, but you can let your imagination run wild. Race cars? Sock monkeys? Wind-up toys? The theme (or no theme at all) is up to you.

Popcorn, Peanut, Pretzel, and Pickle Tree

Popcorn, Peanut, Pretzel, and Pickle TreePaige Green
This is the perfect tree for the often-overlooked people who prefer the salty and savory over the sweet. Pretzels and strings of peanuts and popcorn are festooned on the branches, interspersed with glass pickle ornaments (you can find them on eBay) or small cucumbers from the supermarket (be sure to replace as needed). The hardest part about making this tree? Stopping your guests from nibbling on it.

Paperwhite Tree

Paperwhite TreePaige Green
By using only decorations made from cut white paper and fabric, this tree takes the simple and makes them sensational. Paper snowflakes, flowers, chains, birds, bows, and boxes bedeck the tree, highlighted by basic white lights. When creating your ornaments, play around with different textures of paper, from shiny wax paper to sheer tissue, and fabric to add some visual interest.

Birdland Tree

Birdland TreePaige Green
Here's a tree for all the bird lovers out there. In addition to all your favorite avian ornaments, this tree sports feathers, nests, and small glass balls. Keep the lighting subtle (it's not the time to break out your eight-color strobe) so that the focus stays on the birds and the overall effect is muted and natural.
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Hansel and Gretel Tree

Hansel and Gretel TreePaige Green
What if a gingerbread house exploded onto a tree? This tree would be the result. It contains every kind of candy imaginable, some of it strung into garlands and some tucked into paper cones, accompanied by an army of gingerbread men. A star constructed from glued-together pixie sticks and hard candies tops the whole thing off.

Shimmering Tinsel Tree

Shimmering Tinsel TreePaige Green
Having this tree on display would be like showcasing a waterfall in your home. An abundance of tinsel drips down from every branch, letting the lights and ornaments peek out from the silvery depths. Using only glass decorations adds to the shine. Author Carrie Brown recommends Lametta lead tinsel from Germany since it is heavier and less flyaway than the mylar variety.

Read More: 'The New Christmas Tree'

Read More: 'The New Christmas Tree' Paige Green
All of these photos come from the just-published book The New Christmas Tree. You'll find creative Christmas tree decorating ideas for 18 other Christmas tree themes, plus how-to information to craft more than 100 decorations.

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