Christmas decoration ideas for garden


13 tips for a festive yard |

(Image credit: Jon Day/Max Attenborough/Debi Treloar)

Outdoor Christmas decor ideas are a magical way to greet your guests on arrival for festivities, and help extend the holiday enchantment beyond your home's four walls. 

Visiting a Christmas light show in a public garden is gradually becoming a festive tradition for many, so it makes perfect sense that we want to recreate that enchanted wonderland to enjoy for ourselves in our own back or front yard.

Beyond lighting, al fresco decor can also encompass door wreaths and garlands made from foraged pine branches, cozy seating areas bedecked with blankets, and even full-blown Christmas trees. 

Outdoor Christmas decor ideas

From lanterns filled with baubles to an all-out exterior light display, we’ve found the best outdoor Christmas decor ideas to give the exterior of your home a decorative treatment and set the perfect mood for the holidays.

1. Make your own wreath 

(Image credit: Mark Bolton)

Christmas wreath ideas are among both the easiest and most effective way to spruce up your outdoor space – and you can have even more festive fun by setting aside some time to make your own.  

‘We recommend foraging and working to create a more organic design,’ says Holly Bannon, Design Manager at Milc Interiors . This wreath has been made with willow and branches of winter berries, which can be easily forages and formed into a wreath. ‘For a wreath, start at the top, bottom, left and right and then work to fill the gaps so it’s balanced’, advises Bannon.

2. Deck your doorway with garlands 

(Image credit: Debi Treloar)

'We have seen a huge trend in customers wanting to decorate the outside of their homes as much as the inside,' says Jason Billings-Cray, Christmas Buyer at John Lewis . 

Of course, Christmas door decor ideas are about much more than wreaths. If you want to extend your holiday decorations above, around and beyond the door area, garlands are a great way to continue a festive theme over a wider surface area. Pin them above the doorway or across a porch roof, or wrap them around porch columns like in this example, where a garland that features pine cones, dried oranges and cinnamon sticks.  

3. Scatter faux snow to create a winter wonderland

(Image credit: Jon Day )

Dreaming of a white Christmas? Not everyone will be lucky enough to wake up to freshly fallen snow on the morning of the 25th December, but it’s possible to recreate that magic in all sorts of climes with a bit of trickery. Using faux snow to turn your porch area into a winter wonderland will create a magical experience for kids – save it for a Christmas day surprise for maximum effect. If you’re wondering how to make a Christmas wreath feel a little extra special on the big day, consider scattering a handful of it on your wreath too for an immersive feel. 

4. Decorate trees

Photography/David Brittain

(Image credit: Future)

Christmas light ideas for outdoor trees are a dazzling way to make your garden glow from top to bottom. Wrap trees or shrubbery in an abundance of golden string lights to create a display to delight guests or passersby. 

Twinkling lights outside the front or rear of your home also create a magical atmosphere when glimpsed through the window from inside come dusk.

‘Festoon lights make any space happier,’ says Dani Taylor, Buying Director at Cox and Cox . 'If you have a small patio or balcony just one or two sets can make a huge difference to the ambience, and you can connect multiple sets to decorate a bigger space or garden.’

5. Embellish steps

Photography/Ben Anders

(Image credit: Future)

For an easy way to dress up your doorstep or Christmas porch decor ideas, fill smart hurricane lanterns with a beautiful array of baubles in various shapes and sizes, lit with simple battery-powered string lights. 

Wind the lights around the decorations so that the bulbs are reflected in the baubles to maximise the twinkle effect, so the lanterns will add a welcome glow to your entrance. 

6. Go big on foliage

(Image credit: Dobbies)

If you don’t have a porch to decorate, you can still go to town with real Christmas foliage ideas to frame your front door. 

Wire fir and evergreen branches together to form a lavish, oversized garland, wrap with simple warm white string lights so it looks as good come nightfall as it does during the day, and hang the garland around the doorway.

Continue the theme with a wreath on the front door, made from the same foliage for a coordinated look. 

7. Use symmetry

Photography/Mark Bolton

(Image credit: Future)

For a festive touch that matches the elegance of a pillared stone portico, keep the display simple and restrained, with a pair of identical tall hurricane lanterns in smart silver, placed symmetrically either side of your front door. 

As well as looking striking, the lanterns will protect candles from the elements, meaning you don’t need to worry about them being accidentally blown out. Continue the sense of scale with an oversize wreath on the door – real foliage or a frosted finish brings a sophisticated flourish. 

8. Create a tree from lights

Photography/Paul Raeside

(Image credit: Future)

Use outdoor Christmas light ideas to conjure up a festive focal point in your front or rear garden. 

Hang strands of warm white LED string lights from a central pole (or peg the strings to a bamboo cane wigwam designed for climbing plants) to create a showstopping outdoor tree.

‘Creating your very own winter wonderland is easier than you may think,’ says Becky Tasker, Brand Creative at Lights4Fun . ‘The key is to focus your efforts on one stunning focal point.’ 

9. Line the path

Photography/Polly Wreford

(Image credit: Future)

Draw the eye up the steps to your front door with a glowing arrangement of lanterns and flickering candles.

‘Place potted trees either side of your front door to create an alpine feel, complete with outdoor lanterns around the porch area and down steps. As the evening draws in, the lanterns will produce a charming glow to welcome you home,’ says Becky Tasker, Brand Creative, Lights4Fun. 

Battery-operated candles mean you don’t have to worry about the potential fire hazard and they’ll last longer, too. 

10. Hang paper lanterns

Photography/David Brittain

(Image credit: Future)

Evoke Christmasses past with these classic Oriental-style concertina lanterns, hung from simple shepherd’s crook hooks –  just the ticket for lining a path.  

'Lanterns can be used to illuminate a garden pathway and offer an intimate glow along the path or be hung from trees to accentuate the natural feeling of your garden,' says Michael Meiser, President of Lumilum. 

Choose simple, white, fire-retardant paper lanterns and fill them with a tealight (real or battery) to provide soft, ambient light and a magical glow. 

You could also string them up from trees, or hang them from ribbon from the porch ceiling for an extra outdoor display.

11. Gift wrap your door

Photography/Emma Lee

(Image credit: Max Attenborough)

Stand out from the crowd and make a flamboyant statement by gift wrapping your front door theatrically in giant ribbon, created using a roll of festively cheerful red taffeta. 

For extra flounce and flourish, finish with a luxurious bow. 

12. Light up shrubs

Photography/Ben Anders

(Image credit: Future)

Swap the classic net of fairy lights across hedging for something more striking.  

'If your garden has features you want to show off, use LED spotlights to highlight your gardens best bits – and any decorations you might have put up – while giving that striking appearance to the area this festive season,' says Meiser. 

'For a less intense alternative, weave warm coloured bulb fixtures or lanterns into your plants or shrubs to create warmth that emanates from amongst them – giving your whole garden that warm, cozy feeling.'

Nestle classic star-shaped outdoor lights (usually to be found lighting up the walls or roovces of houses) into hedge foliage – if you have an opening, decorate around it so that it feels as if you’re stepping through into an enchanted wonderland. 

Take your cue from professionally lit gardens by lighting trees and shrubs from below to give an ethereal ambiance. 

13. Style a porch scene

Photography/Ben Anders

(Image credit: Future)

Treat the porch or doorstep as an extension of the home, and deck it out for the holidays as you would your rooms inside.  

Decorate a mini tree (fresh or artificial) with lights and baubles, fill vases or urns with festive foliage, and cluster groupings together with lanterns and votive holders. 

Vary the height and size of the objects in the display to create a well-balanced vignette and dress the front door with a coordinating wreath for a harmonious look.

What Christmas lighting do I use outdoors?

‘Wrap trees in glowing golden string lights and place an illuminated garland and wreath on the door to welcome guests in. Icicle lights look dazzling lining gutters and their stalactite style create the perfect winter display,’ says Becky Tasker, Brand Creative at Lights4Fun.

What’s the best way to decorate a Christmas front porch?

‘I love an Instagram shot of a big American porch with trees up either side of a grand staircase,’ says Cox and Cox’ s Buying Director, Dani Taylor.

‘Most front doors could accommodate a small indoor outdoor pre-lit potted tree – if you have enough room then one each side of the door – perhaps pop them in a fluted zinc planter to look fabulous and give you instant curb appeal. ’ 

How do you hang a garland or wreath without nails?

There are some creative hanging solutions if nails aren’t an option. For wreaths, look out for over-the-door hangers – these come in a host of finishes so choose one to suit your scheme. 

Command hooks are a stylist’s favourite – these clever hooks come in different finishes and are easily removable. Choose one to suit the weight of your wreath – they’re also the perfect answer for hanging a garland without nails – fix them at regular intervals to hook the garland in place.

Ailis started out at British GQ, where a month of work experience turned into 18 months of working on all sorts of projects, writing about everything from motorsport to interiors, and helping to put together the GQ Food & Drink Awards. She then spent three years at the London Evening Standard, covering restaurants and bars. After a period of freelancing, writing about food, drink and homes for publications including Conde Nast Traveller, Luxury London and Departures, she started at Homes & Gardens as a Digital Writer, allowing her to fully indulge her love of good interior design. She is now a fully fledged food PR but still writes for Homes & Gardens as a contributing editor.

55 Best Outdoor Christmas Decorations

Sara Ligorria Tramp

You don't have to have the most lights on the block (but if you want to, go for it—we're not stopping you) to have the best-dressed house in the neighborhood on Christmas. But you do need to have the right outdoor Christmas decorations that feel both festive and elevated, tasteful and spirited. We rounded up 55 stylish and fun outdoor holiday decorating ideas to inspire you. From the front porch to the mailbox and front door, we've got you covered. Where's Santa stopping first? Oh, that'd be your house, of course.

Lisa Hilderbrand

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Cover All Your Bases

"An antique home is the perfect backdrop for classic decorations. I weave together fir, cedar, white pine, and boxwood for a door garland. hang matching window wreaths, and fill the holly with white lights," says interior designer Lisa Hilderbrand of her festive outdoor decorating traditions at this Connecticut house.

Sara Ligorria Tramp

2 of 55

Keep It Understated

For a front porch holiday display that's equal parts festive and chic, decorate a tree with metallic ornaments, hang a garland around the door, and make it glow with string lights. Emily Henderson also gave this front porch a seasonal update with a plaid doormat.

JAMES MERRELL

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Turn It Into a Winter Wonderland

Charlotte Moss's Manhattan townhouse gets the full holiday decorating treatment, which includes the patio, even if guests won't even set foot out there. She made the outdoor fireplace as welcome as possible by hanging whimsical Spanish moss on the trees and a large wreath. "Step outside and it feels like you're entering the world of Narnia," she says.

JAMES MERRELL

4 of 55

Keep a Sense of Humor

Here's another decor detail from Charlotte Moss's holiday patio we couldn't help but include. If you have any outdoor statues like this one, make them a little merrier by staging them with cedar, winterberries, seeded eucalyptus, and pinecones.

Mike Garten

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Include Santa

Put up a "letters to Santa" mailbox so your kids can drop them to be sent to the North Pole. Consider swapping out your welcome mat, too.

Pernille Loof

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Go Simple But Chic

Obvious, but needs to be said: A simple wreath looks clean and tasteful, but still seasonally on point.

Stacey Brandford

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Update Summer Staples

Why stop at one wreath when you can have two? Then update a summery adorondack chair by throwing a plaid blanket over it.

Erin Kunkel

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Decorate Your Outdoor Fireplace

Your outdoor fireplace deserves the same treatment as your indoor mantel. Deck it out with a garland, then place a bowl of red fruits near it for a color pop.

Erin Kunkel

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Put a Wreath on Your Car

Are you going to be that person who decorates your car? Oh, totally. Especially if it's parked in front of your home.

Sara Ligorria Tramp

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Lean Faux or Antique Skis

Emily Henderson gave this front porch a wintery feel with pine cones, a basket of logs, and a pair of faux skis. Replicate this look for a spirited yet modern and neutral feel.

Cheetah Is the New Black

11 of 55

Add a Fragrance

Add nice-smelling ingredients to your wreaths to evoke a wintery, jolly mood before you even step through the front door. This wreath from Cheetah Is the New Black contains sweet orange slices, but you could also add in cinnamon sticks, cloves, or plumberries.

Annie Schlechter

12 of 55

Double The Wreaths

Why have one when you could have two? This pair of magnolia wreaths is simple but stunning.

Mike Garten

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Display a Sled

Antiques always have such a charm to them. If you have an old sled lying around, lean it against the wall next to your front door this Christmas.

Courtesy of Citrine Living

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Put up a Christmas Tree

Why wouldn't you put a full-sized Christmas tree on your porch? Double the trees, double the presents.

See more at Citrine Living.

Mark Scott

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Bring Presents Outside

And to take it one step further. ..

Presents? Under the indoor tree? Overrated. This year, let your porch get in on the action. If you don't want snow to melt through your actual presents, just wrap up old shoeboxes for the look and reuse them again next year.

Loon Peak

16 of 55

Wrap Your Columns

If you have columns on the front of your house, warm them up with a garland that'll turn the space into a winter wonderland for the season.

The Holiday Aisle

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Make Your Gifts Glow

Garland and wreaths strung with lights are standard, but colorful green presents are a bit more unexpected. This set adds color to a classic white bench.

Courtesy of Citrine Living

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Hang A Wreath on Your Lantern

You could (and probably will) put a wreath on your door, but look how chic they look hanging from lanterns, too.

See more at Citrine Living.

Infarrantly Creative

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DIY a Hanging Star

You'd never believe this star was made using yardsticks. Plus, this is a great way to spruce up parts of your home's facade besides the front door.

jgareriGetty Images

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Tie a Bow

Put all that extra ribbon to good use: Gift wrapping your door takes five minutes, but the results are stunning.

Courtesy of Lia Griffith

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Make A Snowman

It won't cost you anything, and it's actually fun to make. The only downside? We can't guarantee Frosty will last until Christmas day.

See more at Lia Griffith.

MarjeGetty Images

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Display Poinsettia

Plant wintery flowers in your garden, or just put poinsettia in a planter for the same vibe but with less planning involved.

Mark Scott

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Stagger Lanterns

Flank the front door with a ton of lanterns, then fill them with real or flameless candles (the latter is safest, of course). The more the merrier.

Bon Traveler

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Don't Forget the Backyard

You don't only have to show love to the front porch! Bring the cozy vibes to the backyard with plenty of cushions and plush throws around a fire pit. Then hang cafe string lights. This look from Bon Traveler is stylish and understated enough to keep up throughout the season.

VICTORIA PEARSON

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Clean Up Your Landscaping

You don't need to go all out with Christmas decorations to make your front porch look pretty and inviting... With clean, simple landscaping and lantern scones, your front porch will look dressed up, but you won't be dreading the day you have to throw out the holiday wreath.

Victoria Pearson

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Add Some Mini Evergreens

Popped in a galvanized tub and orchard basket, pint-sized trees add greenery to a bare porch. Scatter leftover trimmings around the base and in a rustic crate for even more foliage.

See more at Country Living.

Steven Randazzo

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Use Cones

Don't stop at your wreath—add pine cones in your garland, as well. And if you're bored of wreaths, opt for a door hanging like this one instead.

See more Country Living.

Frances Janisch

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Mimic a Candy Cane

Sweeten a plain exterior with a jumbo treat. This door decoration is coated in real peppermints, just like a gingerbread house. And it really pops against crisp white background.

Get the tutorial at Good Housekeeping.

Max Kim-Bee

29 of 55

Dress Up a Bench

You don't necessarily need to put your front porch bench in storage. Just add some plaid blankets and a throw so it doesn't look out of place.

See more at Country Living.

Sugar & Cloth

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DIY Lights

For something especially festive, considering DIYing some oversized felt Christmas lights. If your door is painted a bright color, match some of the "lights" with it, but keep the others on-theme for Christmas.

See more at Sugar & Cloth.

New Year's holidays in the garden - winter decor ideas for the street

The garden in winter should and can look attractive too. Nature itself has already taken care of many things - the trees are covered with a shimmering snow-white veil, and shrubs, hedges and sculptures have acquired bizarre shapes.

Obviously, snow decoration alone is not enough for a festive mood in the garden. But I don’t want to spoil the natural beauty with multi-colored trinkets from China. In decorating the garden, we suggest not to deviate from its natural beauty - only to emphasize what is available and add a bit of festive brightness.

DMSW landschaft

Austin Ganim Landscape Design, LLC

1. Keep the decor as natural as possible. But if you want to save the bright berries for decoration, offer the birds an edible alternative: install grain feeders on fruit trees and shrubs! The birds are full, the berries are in place, and in the garden there is cheerful chirping and noisy fuss.

Your Space By Design

2. Place a Christmas planter at your doorstep
Garden planters are a great field for decorative experiments in the garden. Your task is to create a New Year's composition from natural materials and decorate the entrance area to the house with it. We have already written about what material is suitable for long-lasting winter compositions in garden pots, how to assemble and arrange it.

SEE ALSO…
Winter decor for street planters: Rehearsal for the New Year

GreenCraft Associates

3. Use window flowerers
In the summer, you used window boxes with flowers to decorate your windows, and for the New Year holidays, instead of earth, put snow in boxes, instead of flowers, stick coniferous branches, cones, intricate driftwood and dry branches ... Bright fruits of hawthorn, barberry and wild rose, straw balls and stars, nuts - in nature you can find a lot of "ingredients" for creating winter and New Year's compositions. If you didn’t find it or simply didn’t have enough time, make bouquets from Christmas balls.

Envy Decor LLC

3. Decorate your porch
Decorate the outside of your driveway or gate with at least a bow-tied fir branch or a large Christmas ornament. This will immediately set the guests in a festive mood.

By analogy with a wicket or gate, you can decorate the front door of the house into a decorative portal made of spruce branches.

Holly Marder

Your Space By Design

4. Hang a wreath on the door
It is believed that the prototype of the Christmas wreath was ... a wheel. The theologian from Hamburg guessed to put candles in it (they began to be lit a month before Christmas). Over time, paraffin was replaced by electric garlands, and the wheel was replaced by coniferous branches. Some connoisseurs of historical traditions (like the owners of this house in Calgary) do not deviate from the historical truth - they supplemented the festive decoration of the local area with Christmas wooden wheels.

The formal rules for making a Christmas wreath are as follows.

  • The Christmas wreath should be round, symbolizing the circle of the year.
  • Historically correct colors are green (life), red (love, hope), white or gold (divine light).

Usually a wreath is made from coniferous branches and decorated with ribbons or a bow. But what is stopping you from rethinking traditions and adding, for example, dried oranges to spruce branches?

Outdoor Advantage

5. Turn on the lights in the garden
In winter, daylight hours are much shorter, and therefore, properly planned lighting in advance will bring indescribable pleasure. Create visual effects: directional beams, light grids, garlands, candles in wooden or metal lamps, installed on both sides along the paths.

It is better to install high lanterns on the sides of the main paths: this will allow you to freely walk from the gate to the house without resorting to additional lighting.

Solar lights can be attached to the trees. Wire trees with a luminous garland on a string are completely ready to be "planted" near the doors.

KAMEYA

Tip: Fill buckets with snow (or sand), place glass cylinders in them, and place candles inside the cylinders. A variety of buckets, candles and cylinders will give the whole group a very eccentric look. If you don't have enough buckets of the same color, paint them with spray paint. So you can light up the Christmas tree in your garden or any other tree.

ThisIsKC ThisIsKc

6. Decorate Trees and Shrubs with Light
If your yard has plants with pronounced contours, you can try to beat them with the help of garlands of multi-colored light bulbs. To do this, a bush, or a small tree, or a herbaceous plant that has left before winter with foliage is cleared of snow, decorated with a thin garland that does not heat up, and then covered with snow again.

Bulbs, by the way, can completely imitate the own color of the plant. The main thing is to choose a garland or duralight cord as light as possible so as not to damage the plant.

If you have a spruce in your garden - just wonderful! But if not, no problem. You can decorate any trees: it is advisable to have larger toys for decorating on the street than for decorating a home Christmas tree.

Tip: By the way, you can decorate trees not only with light garlands, but with the help of wind music or bells that chime beautifully from wind gusts. In addition to them, we decorate the tree with tinsel and rain.

If on New Year's Eve nature treats you with a mild frost, part of the feast can be organized outside. Dress up your summer gazebo in classic Christmas spirit with garlands, candles and fir branches. The main thing is not to forget blankets, warm bedding for chairs and benches, hot food and drinks.

KAMEYA

7. Decorate structures and paths
Any decorative elements of the garden (pergolas, arches, gazebos) deserve their own illumination. In the photo - a garden from Belarus. Facade and yard lighting works on a low-voltage cable through a step-down transformer. This means that the wires do not need to be laid deep into the ground, and their damage is safe for humans.

Lowe's Home Improvement

Clear the paths by creating large soft drifts in convenient places - it will be very convenient to fall into them during the snowball fight. Along the driveway or other garden paths, as well as at the porch, you can install snowmen or fashion other fairy-tale characters and animals.

You can get garden figurines, cleaned for the winter, from the closet and decorate them with tinsel. All this is complemented by various flashlights and garlands. Put a few candles in special street candlesticks (or just heat-resistant glasses) and do not forget to light the extinguished ones and change the burnt candles in time.

John Hill

8. Add themed decor
In this photo, the owners of the yard in Orlando preferred inflatable sculptures to ordinary sculptures - this is a hit of recent years in the USA. Inflatable reindeer, snowmen, carousels and Christmas trees captivate with ease of use: blew it off and put it away until next year.

John Hill

9. Arrange a shadow theater on a free section of the wall
And in this courtyard, the owners staged a real shadow theater: spotlights aimed at carved silhouettes create a spectacular image on the wall of the house. The biblical story is recognizable from afar.

Westphalen Photography

10. Ice Festival
You can make decorations for the garden yourself from ice, for which various bright elements are placed in containers, for example, plastic cups - tinsel, fruits, pieces of fabric - and all this is filled with water and freezes. Take care of the hanging ropes in advance in order to freeze them into toys in time. To easily remove the resulting toys from the molds, lightly pour over them with hot water. Color the freezing water first.

Fill in a slide for the kids, and if there is a pond in the garden, then it is quite possible to organize a skating rink right on the site. To bring a lot of pleasure and fun to decorating your garden, involve the whole family and children. Maybe all this decoration will not be durable, but it is worth it, because if the holidays had not left us, then they would not have been holidays at all!

YOUR TURN…
How do you decorate your garden for the holidays? Share your ideas in the comments section below the article!

Do-it-yourself garden decoration for the New Year.

Wonderful ideas

A country house is a great place to celebrate the New Year 2017. Indeed, in a country house or in the country house you can gather a huge family and celebrate the holiday on a grand scale. Naturally, in order to celebrate the New Year of the Rooster correctly, it is necessary to decorate not only the dwelling itself, but also start decorating the garden. It is worth saying that decorating the garden for the new year with your own hands is a responsible task. But, if you listen to our advice and see interesting ideas, you can deal with this matter without any problems.

How to decorate a garden

We are thinking about consecration.

First of all, you should think about the beautiful illumination of the garden plot and country house. For this situation, be sure to prepare and buy a lot of lighting fixtures. To create a festive mood, get: interesting lanterns and luminous garlands. Decorate the facade of the house and garden plot with these devices. And luminous cords are perfect for decoration. These products can be used to decorate the gate and porch.

How to decorate the gate and front door?

When decorating the garden for the New Year holidays, it is important not to forget about decorating the gate and front doors. Be sure to make them festive. It is worth mentioning that in Europe the entrance doors are decorated with a wreath, which was created from evergreen branches. Therefore, you can safely use this idea to decorate your gate.

The front door of the house can be decorated with garlands of spruce branches and garlands. Garlands can decorate not only the interior of the house. It turns out that they are used to decorate the garden. Moreover, they are very easy to make. Be sure to decorate this composition with garlands and cones.

Fir branches for garden decoration.

Above we have described several ways to decorate the garden. But if this is not enough for you, then you can freely use spruce branches in the garden decor. They are placed in special tubs. And these tubs are placed on the porch of the house. As an addition, figures of New Year's characters are used. You can put a figure of the Snow Maiden or Santa Claus.

What to do to decorate the garden

We have described the main points of decorating the garden above. Now we will report on what kind of street decorations for the new year you can do with your own hands. So, the easiest way to decorate your garden is with snowmen. Put them on with the whole family. Make a whole family of snowmen. And for decorating snowmen, use: cones, hats and other attributes.

An ordinary candle, which is in the original transparent glass, is suitable for decorating the garden. These cups can be placed along the edges of the steps.

A chandelier that was hung in front of the entrance to the house or on a tree will also look festive.

How to decorate a Christmas tree?

If the windows of your house overlook the courtyard, then the well-decorated Christmas trees that look out of them look beautiful and very beautiful. Festive garlands in the windows also look beautiful.

A Christmas tree in the courtyard of the garden, it is also worth decorating in an original way. Of course, the best option in this case is to decorate the Christmas tree with a garland. However, other options can also be used. But, if you plan to use a garland, then in this case choose only a quality product.

A few more garden ideas.

Fans of creating various products are used to creating everything with their own hands. And making New Year's decor for them is not a problem.

So, if you have a hanging planter left from the summer, then you can easily make it an original decoration of the garden. To make it really look festive, you need to pour cones into them or put Christmas decorations. And the cache-pot, which is decorated with garlands, looks very impressive.

Even ordinary wood cuts can be turned into original decorations. Just draw interesting faces on them. And your decoration will amaze many.

The Christmas tree in the yard can be decorated with an original decoration. So, choose some form, pour water into it and, until the water has frozen, put pieces of fruit and Christmas tree branches there. The finished product is suspended from the spruce with a ribbon.

Candles look good in the New Year's decor of the garden. But in order to keep the fire, you need to put candles in jars. And the jar should be decorated accordingly.

Cones are also an original decorative element. You can make a garland or a wreath out of them.

You can use the simplest ideas to decorate your garden. For example, you can make New Year's mobiles. They are usually made from gypsum or polymer clay.

And the lights that float in the air will also look great.


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