Christmas Holiday Tips, Tricks, Hacks

I am enjoying the unique holiday tips and tricks readers have been sending my way, to be shared with you. Over and again, I find myself saying, “Wow! Why didn’t I think that?”

Just this week, I was boiling mad at myself when I opened boxes marked “Christmas” to find supplies of cards, tags, and gift wrap purchased on sale, then promptly forgotten. You can be sure this year I’m going to file all this stuff under “Halloween!” You’ll understand as you read on.

Traditions reign

With coronavirus requiring us to make some tough decisions this Christmas, we’re just not doing everything we used to. Even so, we have determined to keep as many traditions as possible. We’re putting up all of the decorations and making all the special foods we love, even though we won’t have many people in this year. Instead, we’ll be doing a lot of facetime and phone calls while looking forward to a brand new year filled with hope. Teri

Canned bows

I use the large Christmas popcorn tins (cleaned and dry) to store my Christmas bows. I use one for red, another for green, and the other two for gold and mixed colors. I can stack them in storage, and my bows stay new looking all year. I reuse these bows for several years. Gwen

Centerpiece

I came up with the idea one year, out of desperation, that has become part of our traditional holiday decor. I needed a centerpiece. I put some vegetable oil on a rag and polished red and green apples, and placed them in a large clear glass bowl. I tucked sprigs of fresh greenery into the spaces (snipped from an evergreen bush outside the front door). I have to say it was gorgeous! The following year I added a string of battery-powered mini Led lights. That has taken my edible centerpiece up a notch. Bethany

Stale popcorn

When stringing popcorn for garland, make the popcorn a few days ahead and let it sit out uncovered for a couple of days to get stale. Stale popcorn is easier to string. For a festive outcome, add fresh cranberries to a popcorn garland. So pretty! Cath

Christmas art

I wrap some of the pictures we have hanging on the wall to look like packages, then rehang them in the same spot. This is a really cute and inexpensive addition to our decorations! Kathleen

Tree skirt

I purchased a round Christmas tablecloth at the local thrift store for a buck. I laundered it and have been using it for the past three years as a tree skirt. It is large enough that I fold it in half and wrap it around the tree holder, meeting in the back. It is reusable, beautiful, and easy to clean. Darlene

Gift of photography

We have wanted family portraits for a long time now, so last summer, we told our family members that we would make an appointment for a family photo session. The photographer took photos of individuals, small family groups, and our large family. We told everyone we would pay for the session, and we called it a Christmas gift. However, it was something that we wanted for ourselves. Everyone loved the idea. They were able to purchase any pictures they wanted from the studio. When Christmas rolled around, I still had the urge to give gifts, so I bought everyone a picture frame. Melissa

Gift of laughter

A few years ago, we decided to be creative with Christmas gifts for our two adult sons. We went through boxes of things they’d left behind, gathering some of their old childhood treasures and mementos. We wrap them as Christmas presents. One of our sons conveniently left behind a birthday gift in August. He got it again for Christmas.

One year I found school papers from their very early years of school. I put them in three-ring binders and wrapped them up. The boys loved reading their work from second and third grade.

We’ve had more laughs and fun with these “free” gifts than the gifts we purchase. Leslie

Decked out

Because we won’t have many people in this Christmas season, we decided to go all out with our outdoor decorations. You should see our deck! Not to brag or anything, we think it’s right up there with Macy’s New York City famed store windows. We nailed it! We’ve had so much fun waving and greeting passersby as the word is out. Fortunately, our home backs up to walking paths and open space. Tom

Filed under Halloween

Like many people, I buy my Christmas cards and gift wrap after the holidays when they are on sale. Instead of storing them with my Christmas decorations, I put them with my Halloween decor. When I open the bin in mid-October, I have at least eight weeks to write a well-considered greeting to each recipient and still get them mailed on time. Rosemary

Ornament storage

I have lots of small, breakable ornaments that I’ve collected over the years. They easily get lost in tissue, and the commercial ornament boxes are too large and bulky. A friend gave me a great idea—egg cartons. I save my egg cartons and put the ornaments in each cup of the carton. They stack nicely in my Christmas storage boxes with my other decorations. Betty

Family treasure

My sister-in-law is creating a cookbook for Christmas this year. She’s asked everyone in the family to submit five dessert recipes. Next year it will be a different category. She is compiling the cookbook this year and will only need to print out the new recipes each year in the future. Tracy

Tree handler

We have an artificial Christmas tree, which requires bending out the branches after it is set up to make the tree look bushy. I keep a pair of inexpensive cotton garden gloves in the tree box, so handling of the branches is more comfortable for my hands. I also use the gloves to squeeze the branches closed before packing away the tree for the season. Margie

Make memories

Once Christmas is over for another year, I scrapbook all the photos and handmade cards we receive. It’s great to look back over the years at all of our friends and relatives as they grow. So much creativity goes into some of these cards. The scrapbook is with all of my other photo albums, so I don’t have to wait until the Christmas decorations come out of storage to see them. Vicky

Fresh, fragrant greenery

Go to any place that sells Christmas trees (tree lots, Lowe’s, Walmart, etc.) and ask for the branches and cuttings that have fallen off. They are usually glad to get them off of their hands since they’re just going to throw them away. Besides using them for decorations, try tucking them in and around your artificial tree to give it that fresh tree smell. Becci

It’s your turn

Now, it’s your turn to share your best, funny, clever, heart-warming, delicious, and otherwise charming tips, tricks. and hacks with all of us! You know you want to, and goodness knows you have a few! See the comments area below? Scroll down, you’ll find it. Then … take it away!

We can’t wait.


 

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  1. Patti says:

    I save partial rolls of wrapping paper year-to-year, and hate when it frays, or tears, etc. So I save the inner roll of other paper, cut it length-wise, and put it over an existing roll to protect it. No more shredded ends or torn middles, or taping the end to keep it rolled up!
    And I refuse to buy gift tags. I save old cards, often the backs are still beautiful paper, bright, pretty, in Christmas colors, plus blue, silver, gold. I use the pieces with no writing on the flip side. I cut them into shapes, use a punch to make a hole in them, and tie them to the package. No cost at all, and they always match the gift, no matter how I wrapped it.
    And in keeping with other helpful posts, I also keep gloves in with the artificial tree, but I also store the skirt, the star, the extension cord, and the stand in there. All fits in the same box, and is where I need them.

    Reply
  2. Pam B. says:

    I was a divorced, single mother when my children were 5 and 12 and I had next to no money to spend on Christmas presents. So I went through the catalogs I got in the mail, cut out pictures of what I wish I could give them and put the photos in a gift box for each of them. We called the gifts “if I had a million dollars this is what I’d give you.” Of course, they each got an additional thrift store gift. They also cut out pictures from magazine and gave me two gifts that year—a new car and a house. As adults, they still remember that Christmas and thank me for making it special.

    Reply
  3. Patti says:

    Like many others, we were hard-pressed for ca$h at the beginning of our marriage. I was starting medical school, $$$$, and my husband was an entry-level person in a government ofice. So we went to the tree lot, and got a bunch of trimmings for free, and put them in a five-gallon pail, which I covered with a plastic Xmas table cloth as a “skirt”. Then I took a bunch of small boxes, wrapped them in red paper and tied white yarn “ribbons” on them,and hung them on the tree with ornaments, using paper clips as hooks. Back then, all my Christmas things fit in a couple of shoe boxes. Now they fill 8 red and green crates! But forty-five years later, I still have a couple of those little boxes, and they are still some of my favorites when they come out of the box.
    Later, our little girl needed Christmas presents, and again, no ca$h. So we went to an appliance store, and got a dishwasher box. We cut a “door” and “windows” in it, with little holes for little fingers to open them. I “painted” shutters on the outside of the windows, using magic markers, and “curtains” on the inside. Within about 20 minutes, she had “moved in” with her doll and doll bed, the dog’s bed, and her favorite pillow to sit on. She managed to turn it….she was 2 at the time, and have it face the TV. Best Christmas ever, and by far the cheapest. Our daughter is 38 now, and still remembers that “playhouse”. I tell patients all the time now to put any $ they plan to spend on their kids in the bank for them, and find something cheap and creative to give them instead!

    Reply
  4. Barbara Ann Tarleton says:

    Because my first married Christmas had few decorations, I bought my children a special ornament every year. Sometimes I chose it. Sometimes they did. When they moved out the ornaments went with them. We continued the tradition until they were about 30. My son has a wonderful collection of light up Star Wars ornaments.

    Reply
  5. Linda Fields says:

    My family, both nuclear and extended, has been very blessed. It was always hard to find just the right gift as there was neither much want or need, so we got together and decided to share our good fortune by donating to a cause of the gift recipient’s choice. The small children still get tangible gifts, but it has alleviated much stress among the adults.

    Reply
  6. LOUISE COX says:

    I use cake containers as see-through containers for Christmas storage. No more trying to figure out where and in what box decorations are stored. Round, rectangle both work.

    Reply
  7. Brenda says:

    For many years I struggled keeping up with all my recipes for holiday cooking and baking I used every year. I would have to go through multiple cookbooks, recipe cards, etc looking for all my recipes. A few years ago I made a binder ( I even recycled one my daughter used in high school) with dividers. I copied all my recipes and placed them in the binder. I labeled the dividers by category.. appetizers, breads, meats, cookies, cakes etc. If I find a new recipe I want to add to my holiday recipe collection I make a copy and add it. When I’m ready to cook/bake all I have to do is get out my binder and get to work!

    Reply
  8. Karen Ranieri says:

    Wine cases make great storage for anything breakable– ornaments, decor and more, and the cardboard inserts can be trimmed and customized to fit any shape or size in one box.

    Reply
  9. Kathy Putnam says:

    We still use our old tree that is NOT pre-lit. A few years ago I discovered that it is easier to put up and take down if I put the lights on with the branches, one layer at a time. The lights don’t get so tangled up, and the tree comes down much more quickly!

    Reply
  10. Sue says:

    We keep all our Christmas cards/letters from the past year in a decorated ice cream bucket. We save them until late November or early December and then choose 2-4 a day and pray for those families. Sometimes we let a family know they were prayed for and it’s amazing how God knows just who needed prayers that day.

    Reply
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