Archive for the ‘Outside Christmas Decorating’ Category

Monday, November 16th, 2009
Home Depot Team and Harley Driving Santas

Image by Randy Son Of Robert via Flickr

I can’t remember the last time I have been more excited for the Holiday Season to start than this year. 2009 was a tough year any way you slice it, but nothing cures my blues better than to see my entire neighborhood lit up with Christmas yard decorations…And it won’t be long now!

My wife tells me that every year I am unpacking our boxes of outdoor decorations earlier than the year before. When I was a kid, my father used to set them up like clockwork the first Saturday after Thanksgiving…rain or shine. But today, you can see stores like Home Depot setting up their Christmas displays even before Halloween.

If you are in the market for some new Holiday decorations this year, get ready to be surprised! You will have many new choices this year– From solar powered outdoor lighting, to LED animal displays with thousands of lights…and from 3-D holographic holiday images, to an amazing selection of inflatable Christmas displays, you will find plenty of new Christmas yard decorations to fit every style, theme, and budget.

Before you begin, please take a moment to carefully plan your new Holiday yard display. With the right planning, your new and improved Christmas yard decorations will be a hit with both your wife and the guy next door. Here’s a few tips to get you going this year.

Let’s start from square one: Does your front yard have a source of electricity? This may sound like a silly question, but it will determine whether your Christmas display will be visible from outer space or not. If you do have power, great! You’re off to a fantastic start. If you don’t an electrical outlet handy, don’t worry…you still have some good options available to you:

1. You will be surprised how may Christmas yard decorations do not require the use of electricity at all, including plywood figurines and cutouts, nativity scenes, bows, garlands, and large Christmas tree ornaments. Decorations like these are actually used quite often in combination with electrical decorations so that they are visible during daylight hours.

2. This year you will find many new solar-powered lights and decorations, including string lights, net lights, and path lights.

3. If all else fails, you can do what my neighbor does to light a big evergreen tree in his back yard: Run a couple hundred feet of extension cord out to this remote location (be sure to use a cord with 12-guage wire for this!)

If power is not an issue, then you can get started with some simple string lighting. Start small by lighting a few trees in the front yard. You’ll also get lots of curb appeal by installing net lights over shrubs and bushes near the house. Icicle lighting looks terrific hanging from a front porch, and a Christmas wreath can really dress up a front door.

Are you ready to do something completely different this year? Don’t know where to start? It’s always easiest to begin by picking a theme and working around that…Here are some ideas for you to get you started: Santa’s village, reindeer, snowmen, toy soldiers, Peanuts characters, candy canes, gingerbread cookies, etc…You can even brainstorm with your kids and have some fun with it!

Once you have a theme, it’s time to pick out the decorations: White lights? Colored lights? Do you prefer a contemporary display, or will you keep it traditional this year? And there’s one more thing to consider…your spouse may like to have some input as well on what the front lawn looks like during the holidays for the next ten years.

I recommend that if you are purchasing your new Christmas yard decorations online, please be careful in your choice of vendors. The fact is that it’s difficult, if not impossible, to know what quality standards your new Christmas yard decorations are manufactured, and it’s just not worth it to gamble on cheap products that can pose a fire risk to your home. You can still find a great deal online with free shipping and no taxes, but from do it from a reputable website like Amazon with solid reputation and no-questions-asked return policy.

Most importantly, have some fun this year with your Christmas decorating! And I wish you and your family all the best for this Holiday season, and here’s hoping that 2010 brings you much happiness and prosperity.

Discover the hottest Christmas yard decorations for 2009 before your neighbor does! Find them all right here this year…

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
Sunday, August 9th, 2009

It’s the season for magic-Christmas is. Anything and everything is possible during this time of the year. And because invisible gold dust is in the air, which makes the fabulous the standard of measure, you know have a license to go beyond the ordinary and go all the way with exciting yuletide decorations. So you’ve had a blue print of your home’s Christmas designs since July-have you finalized anything yet with your front yard? Read on to find awesome outdoor Xmas decorations you and your family can use today.

We have been sufficiently pepped and prepped-let’s get on with it. I dare you to exceed last year’s Christmas. One way of doing this is by involving your children in this project. But Giselle, you might be saying, you don’t know my kids. Yes, not personally but I’m sure they’re crazy, impractical, oftentimes pesky-they are children. You will be surprised how much fun and what a great bonding experience this will turn out to be. Take a leap of faith and you will not regret it.

Agree on a general theme to base all your outdoor Xmas decorations on. Remind people on the true meaning of the season by setting up a beautiful Nativity scene in your softly lit front yard. Figurines or cut outs of angels, shepherds with their sheep, and wise kings can be appropriately positioned all across the yard to making its way to pay homage to the infant Savior-it will be your homage to Him as well.

How does a Santa Claus setting sound to you? You can have him landing on your roof with his posse of reindeer; or set up the front part of your house as a chilly, toy-making North Pole factory. Incorporate Christmas tree themes into it by designing an icy Christmas tree of blue, silver and white ornaments. Attach little tin icicles on the tips of the tree’s boughs for an added effect.

Depending on the neighborhood, you can also design a few outdoor trees with edible accessories hanging from them. String popcorn or cranberry and wind these strands prettily across the tree. Hang candy canes and ribboned little treats on the boughs of the tree. Just remember that you need to space the Christmas lights well when you decorate. Keep the sizzle in the kitchen not on your tree. When you go for the food inspired creations, let your imaginations loose and don’t hold back.

You don’t even have to keep to the traditional images of Christmas. Push the envelope and see where your creativity will take you. How about a 50’s inspired holiday theme? Have cutouts of iconic men and women of this era and have them strewn around your lawn in holiday fashions. Do you have kids who are so into Disney? Then have a mini Disneyland in your front yard with characters all in Santa hats. Simulate snow by sprinkling Styrofoam balls all over the place.

There might not have been a lot of particularly happy moments the past months-but don’t count the year out just yet. Live as how you want even in the last few weeks of the year. Make your outdoor Xmas decorations work for you-it’s the faithful forerunner of Christmas magic. Enjoy!

About the Author: