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Moving into your first house is a liberating, landmark life passage. After you've freed yourself of your college futon and your roommate's attempt at fine art, it's time to come up with a plan for...
100 Jolly Good Holiday Hacks
From decorating to gift giving, let this list of ideas from experts, RS staffers, and readers inspire every aspect of your holiday season.
By:Â Emily Hsieh
DECORATIONS 1. Instead of decorating my mantel, I create a holiday tableau on a bar cart with candles and ornaments. I love that itâs portable. Keep it in your foyer or living room and wheel it into the dining area for dinner. âSerena Dugan, cofounder of Serena & Lily, a home and lifestyle brand 2. At my last holiday party, I made a âbow wallâ using dozens of stick-on gift bows. Adhere them to the wall like on a present, evenly spaced. âEbony Chafey, founder of Snow & Graham, a paper company 3. Grouping decorative objects on trays helps holiday accents look deliberate and put-together. I like to fill a trio of apothecary jars with pretty ornaments and surround them with votives. âThom Filicia, interior designer 4. I love this idea if you donât have room for a tree: Use big bunches of evergreen branches in oversize heavy cylinder vases instead. You can hang ornaments on the branches. âMaxwell Ryan, founder of Apartment Therapy
More on RealSimple.com: 8 DIY Christmas Ornaments 5. You donât need holiday decorations to give a room a beautiful, wintry look. I cluster white objectsâvases, candlesticks, sculptural piecesâin different shapes and textures on a mantel, coffee table, or console. âRebecca Finell, founder and designer of Finell, a housewares line 6. I buy a bunch of magnolia leaves from a flower shop and loosely scatter them in clusters down the middle of a white tablecloth. Itâs beautiful and so easy. âTara Guerard, event planner 7. In the same spot every year (mine is a seldom-used kitchen drawer), stash a container of replacement lights and ornament hooks. Unless you know where these essentials are, the hunt will deter you from fixing the problem right away. âNancy Negovetich, RS copy chief 8. It makes me crazy when tapers wobble in candlestick holders. RabLabs has a fix: a holder with a ridged socketâlike a light-bulbâsâthat lets you screw in each taper. The grooves grip the wax, so the candle stays put. (To buy: Maquina candlestick, $75, rablabs.com.) âSamantha Zabell, RealSimple.com editorial assistant 9. I make basic votive holders look custom by wrapping a strand of leather cording or metallic thread around the middle. âYifat Oren, event planner 10. I toss a sheepskin throw on a couch, a stool, or in front of the fireplace to cozy up a space with some winter white. âJosie Maran, model and founder of Josie Maran Cosmetics
More on RealSimple.com: 6 Exterior Holiday Decorations 11. I use gelt to make glittery Hanukkah centerpieces. Fill clear glass cylinder vases in different shapes and various heights with the foil-wrapped chocolate candy, and cluster them in the center of the table or line them up down the middle. âGeri Albin Pagano, RS reader 12. I love making a table festive by stringing silver jingle bells into garlands and hanging them on the backs of all the chairs. âMeredith Waga Perez, owner of Belle Fleur New York, a floral studio 13. Other than fresh cookies, the happiest smells in our house come from the all-natural holiday decorations we use: pinecone centerpieces, fir wreaths, and cedar-wrapped votives. âJessica Alba, actress and founder of The Honest Company, a brand of toxin-free family goods 14. Itâs not necessary to buy a bunch of cake stands to create a dessert display. I set up a super-easy sweets station on my mantel by placing plates of treats on top of gift-wrapped boxes and wide-bottom vases in different heights. âEbony Chafey
More on RealSimple.com: 10 DIY Holiday and Christmas Decorations 15. We number holiday storage boxes in the order weâll need to bring them out. Box No. 1 holds ornaments, because we do the tree first. Box No. 2 is gift wrap, and so on. âJessica Fecteau, RS home assistant 16. Instead of hanging mistletoe from the doorjamb, I hang a disco ball for guests to kiss under. Itâs twinkly, it sparkles, and it adds some glamour. âJonathan Adler, designer and potter 17. I cover the kidsâ table with black paper, adhered with double-stick tape. Then I put out buckets of chalk, mini pine trees, and small woodland animals and let them go to town. âChristiane Lemieux, founder of DwellStudio and executive creative director of Wayfair THE TREE 18. The kids get the bottom half of our tree, to decorate with papier-maché and soft ornaments, and I get the top, to dress up with the gorgeous glass ornaments Iâve collected for years. âMichelle Kohanzo, managing director of The Land of Nod 19. Hereâs my easy trick to bring back the sparkle to old, vintage ornaments: Apply a coat of clear, glittery nail polish. âYolanda Wikiel, RS senior editor 20. My favorite Christmas-light palette is nontraditional: a mix of deep blues, amber, and gold. You can find the best variety of colors at christmaslightsetc.com. âBronson Van Wyck, event planner 21. We make ornaments out of oranges. Just push cloves all over them in patterns. Their scent combined with pine needles is heavenly. âHeath Goldman, RS food assistant 22. Heirlooms, like silver baby cups, costume jewelry, and even Grandpaâs glasses, make fine and meaningful alternatives to store-bought ornaments. âAnna Brockway, cofounder of Chairish, an online consignment shop 23. The highlight of my Christmas season is the Sunday- afternoon tree-trimming cocktail party I host for my 10 closest friends. I put the lights on and hang a third of the ornaments the night before, so the day is more about catching up and having fun. âElaine Griffin, interior designer 24. I love the tree skirt I grew up with but have never found a similar one. So now I have my eye on something totally different: Terrainâs clean-lined copper tree collar. (To buy: Copper tree skirt, $88,shopterrain.com.) âChelsea Renaud, RS reader ENTERTAINING 25. Everyone loves brownies. I like to doctor mine up with chopped peppermint candies or dried chilies and cinnamon. âJenny McCoy, pastry chef and author of Desserts for Every Season 26. I host Christmas Eve dinner for my extended family every year, catering from a restaurant that serves authentic food from a foreign country we donât know much about. My husband and I are the only ones who know which country. (The anticipation is hilarious.) I also research some facts about the locale to share. âJacklyn Monk, RS deputy managing editor 27. I love the idea of a holiday potluck, where everyone is asked to bring a favorite childhood dish, along with copies of the recipe. This way, every dish brings with it a story to tell. âMaxwell Ryan 28. A cocktail rimmed in edible glitter telegraphs âholiday fun.â I buy the glitter on amazon.com. âDavid Stark, event designer 29. Adding rosemary leaves to Champagne makes it look even more special. Itâs my go-to holiday drink.âKelly Wearstler, interior and lifestyle designer 30. Hereâs one of my favorite holiday âmocktail" recipes for kids: Fill an 8-ounce glass with ÂŒ cup pomegranate juice, œ cup sparkling water, and a handful of pomegranate seeds. âCatherine McCord, founder of Weelicious.com 31. I fill two drink dispensers with fresh punchâone with alcohol and one without. Start with a juice, like cranberry or apple. Add sparkling water, mint or basil, and berries or sliced cucumber. For the boozy version, finish with rum or vodka. âMichele Varian, boutique owner and product designer 32. Hire a bartender. I know, it sounds fancy and expensive. But Iâve found that itâs actually surprisingly affordable (about $18 an hour) to hire a student (21 or older) from a local university to come over for a few hours during the party. âJoanna Goddard, blogger at A Cup of Jo 33. Caramelized bacon is always a hit. I serve bias-cut pieces in a bowl in the bar area. First dredge the bacon in light brown sugar, then pop it in the oven on a cookie sheet (about 8 minutes per side, at 350° F). âAmanda Hesser, cofounder and CEO of Food52.com 34. Someone (unnamed) in my family spikes his coffee with eggnog. âSarah Humphreys, RS executive editor 35. For the holidays, we use eggnog in place of milk in our French toast recipe, with brioche bread and a touch of cinnamon. It makes for a truly special once-a-year meal. âAerin Lauder, founder and creative director of lifestyle brand Aerin 36. Roasted almonds with herbs are a delicious treat. I mix the almonds with a handful of chopped herbs: thyme, rosemary, sage, or any I have on hand. Pour into a big cast-iron skillet and roast at 375° F for 15 to 20 minutes, stirring every 5 minutes or so, until they smell toasted. While theyâre warm, toss with good olive oil and salt, then serve. âAlice Waters, chef and owner of Chez Panisse 37. Our family always eats Danish kringle from O&H Bakery in Racine, Wisconsin, on Christmas morning. When I was growing up, it was sent by my dadâs colleagues, and after he retired, we had one miserable holiday without it before we started ordering it ourselves. âChristopher Morocco, RS staff food editor 38. I like swirling cranberry sauce into vanilla-bean ice cream to give it a holiday twist. âJenny McCoy 39. Every year, my family members and I hunt the grocery stores for cardone, a vegetable in the artichoke family with a celery-like look, to serve at our Christmas dinner. We boil it and then fry it as a nod to our Italian heritage. âFilomena Guzzardi, RS editorial production director 40. This year Iâm using little snowflake-shaped cookie cutters to dress up hot cocoa for a holiday party. Iâll spread whipped cream on a wax paperâlined baking sheet and pop it in the freezer. When itâs frozen, Iâll cut out the snowflakes and use them in place of marsh-mallows. âStephanie Sisco, RS associate editor 41. For cookie decorating with more precision and less mess, I put the icing in squeezable condiment bottles. âJulie Peters, RS reader 42. I love any cookware that cuts down on cleanup, like HEXâs dish set, which does triple duty: You can bake, serve, and freeze in each of the stackable, slideable geometric dishes. Made of ceramic-coated aluminum, theyâre durable and long-lasting. (To buy: HEX three-piece baking-dish set, $395, finell.co.) âSarah Copeland, RS food director 43. I love a doughnut bar for a holiday party. Buy plain ones and set them out with toppings like flavored icings, chocolate and caramel sauce, sprinkles, and candy. âMary Giuliani, catererÂ
44. We have a Christmas Eve picnic under the tree, and every family member gets to choose a favorite guilty indulgence to be served. It never makes a real meal, but itâs the best âmealâ we eat all year! âAndrea Carter Wilson, RS reader 45. My close friends and I always have a big regifting party at my house just before the holidays. We all bring items we were given throughout the year that arenât quite right for us, and we trade. âKelly Corrigan, author of Glitter and Glue 46. Every year, I buy a fake tree at Michaels. Using mini clothespins, I hang gift cards and lottery tickets on it. Each one is in an envelope with a question about family trivia. We sit around to play, and the person who answers each correctly gets the prize inside. â Tina Huber, creator of MadPax backpacks 47. My mom once told us how her father used to do the dishes after Thanksgiving dinner and wouldnât let his girls turn on Christmas music until they were done. Now itâs our unspoken traditionâwe always do the same. âStephanie Sisco 48. In my family, everyone puts money on the table on Christmas Eve. If youâre little, itâs just a dollar; my grandfather used to put down a $50 bill. We have fun being together and opening presents all night, leaving the table a mess. The first person to wake up the next morning and clean it all up gets the cash! âAnnie Cantrell, founder of Annieâs Blue Ribbon General Store 49. The night before our annual Hanukkah party, all of my momâs friends who are attending the next day come over to help her make hundreds of latkes  together. It makes the holiday doubly festive. âRachael Weiner, RS senior style and market editor 50. My parents always left âSanta tracksâ on our porch. Just stand a pair of menâs work boots up on the porch and sprinkle flour around them, then remove the boots to leave the footprints. âChelsea Renaud 51. I love this idea if your extended family canât celebrate together: Create a family hashtag, like #fecteau, so that you can do a quick search to see all the moments captured in each location. âJessica Fecteau 52. My five- and nine-year-old girls love playing âspa.â Around the holidays, we do winter-themed treatments with peppermint lotion, a candy-cane sugar scrub, and cucumber sparkling water with cranberry juice. âBesty Goldberg, RS home director 53. Friends of mine woke up their kids on one of the nights before Christmas by announcing a âsurprise lights tour.â They got in the car in their pjâs  and drove around to see the decorated houses. âRobin Samuels, RS reader 54. My two sisters and I fly cross-country with our families to our parentsâ house. We ship our presents ahead with gift wrap, then have a wrapping night when we arrive, where we chitchat and pass paper and ribbons back and forth . âSarah Copeland 55. We bake lots of one type of cookie and make about a hundred three-packs, with a HAPPY HOLIDAYS label on the bottom of each. The kids bring more than they need to school for teachers to distribute to the custodial staff, the office team, or anyone else they run into in the halls that day. âDanielle Claro, RS deputy editor 56. My family has Bloody Marys  on Christmas morning, even though the kids have us up at the crack of dawn. It goes: coffee, Bloody Mary (pretty much). Then weâre primed for our nap after the stockings and gifts are open. âElizabeth Passarella, RS contributing editor 57. I love the matching-Christmas-pajamas tradition, so I adapted it for Hanukkah for my daughters and their cousins, giving them all pjâs  in one quirky print each year, like sushi, polka dots, or cupcakes. âBetsy Goldberg 58. Why should stockings sit empty all month? Once ours are hung in late November, we use them like little mailboxes, leaving each other silly notes and treats in the weeks leading up to Christmas. âDonna Garlough, style director of Joss & Main, a flash-sale website 59. Friends of mine do a week-before-Christmas countdown by wrapping seven books and putting them under the tree. Each night, they have their kids choose one to unwrap and read before the big day. âKelly Matthews, RS reader 60. My family is competitive, so we love giving the little kids Christmas-themed challenges, like a ball toss through a wreath (into a bucket) or a cup-stacking contest using red and green cups. âChelsea Renaud â MEMENTOS 61. Every year, I give my now seven-year-old daughter an ornament with a note explaining its significance. Last yearâs ornament was made of Scrabble letters in her name, with a note about her love of reading. One day, when she starts her own family, sheâll have this meaningful set. âSuysel Depedro Cunningham, cofounder of Tilton Fenwick, a design firm 62. A friend of mine snaps photos of everyoneâs reactions while opening gifts, then uses the app Photo Collage Maker [free, iTunes] to compile them as a collage. You can build a collection over the years and display them at every gathering. âRachael Weiner 63. Years ago, my sister Heidi started buying four of the same ornament: one for each sibling in our family. Every year, the buyer rotates, and now all our trees have these same ornaments that connect us. âBridgette Henry Deniger, RS reader 64. You can customize a tablecloth by having little ones add their hand-prints with fabric paint and marking the year. I love that each Christmas when you reuse it, youâll see how much theyâve grown. âJulie Shanklin, president of Syzygy Events International 65 We started a New Yearâs tradition of having the kids fill out a quick questionnaire with fun topics: favorite food, best after-school activity, one great thing that happened during the year. Iâm collecting them in a binder to add to every New Yearâs. âBetsy Goldberg 66. When I host a holiday dinner, I mix old and new friends. I write their names on both sides of tented place cards so the person across the table sees who you are. âDiane Gottsman, etiquette expert 67. Growing up, my siblings and I would line up on the stairs, smallest to tallest, before getting to the presents. Each year it was fun finding out the order. âAlexandra Mooney, RS reader 68. My dad is a physician. As kids, when my brothers and I helped make jelly doughnuts for Hanukkah, weâd wear white lab coats and âinjectâ the jelly with big plastic syringes. We still do it these days, and my husband and sisters-in-law join in. âRachel Christensen, RS reader 69. For a holiday party years ago, I wrote wise quotes on the backs of metallic paper and hung them from the ceiling, which looked magical. During the evening, I had everyone pluck a paper. Some of my friends still have theirs. âMichele Varian 70. My Florida hometown has a Christmas Eve tradition of lighting luminaries. Everyone turns off their porch lights, and people drive or walk by to see the candlelit streets. It creates such a nice spirit among neighbors . âStephanie Sisco 71. I love the idea of doing an annual holiday-time volunteering activity as a family. You can let the kids take turns each year choosing the cause. âChelsea Renaud 72. At my grandparentsâ house on Christmas Eve, between dinner and present opening, my uncle plays a photo montage of family events from that year. It reminds us of all we did together. âJessica Fecteau 73. To customize our fresh store-bought wreath, our family goes on a hike to hunt for pinecones, berries, and leaves. We add them before hanging the wreath up. âCassandra LaValle, blogger at Coco + Kelley 74. When our entire extended family gets together for the holiday, each individual family brings their own menorah. Itâs so beautiful to have the dining table lined with them, and everyone gets candles to light. âPam Minkin  Fishman , RS reader GIFTS + GOOD TIDINGS 75. We open stockings before breakfast and gifts after breakfast. The meal in between calms down the present-opening craze, especially effective when my sisters and I were little. â Heath Goldman 76. My kids are too young to read, so I put their photos on their gifts or cards to make them easy to find under the tree. âJessie Randall, president and creative director of fashion brand Loeffler Randall 77. I like to wrap presents for my girlfriends in vintage scarves. âClare Vivier, accessories designer 78. We have a tradition that, for each gift they unwrap, my kids need to choose something among their old things to âretireâ and give to charity. It leaves us all with the holiday spirit. âChristiane Lemieux 79. Furry booties make a fun alternative to traditional stockings. Fill them with the usual items, and later use them to keep toes toasty. âCeci Johnson, founder and creative director of Ceci New York, a design studio 80. My mom, dad, and I give each other baffling stocking stuffersâitems that are obscure or super specialized. On Christmas morning, the recipient has to guess what it is. One year it took my dad 15 minutes to realize it was a grape peeler. âNoelle Howey, RS deputy editor 81. This may seem obvious, but most people donât think of it: Wrap your gifts from largest to smallest. This allows you to use the leftover pieces from the larger presents to wrap the smaller ones. âDori McDonald, co-owner of RedBliss Design, a custom-invitation studio 82. I make my own bows using leftover wrapping paper. Cut thin strips and shape each into a loop, then affix them all together at the base with staples or tape. You can mix and match the paper patterns. âCeci Johnson 83. I cut up holiday cards from the previous yearâthe decorative parts, not photosâand use them as gift tags. âDonna Smallin, organizing expert and author of Clear the Clutter, Find Happiness 84. We hang a tiny stocking for our cat, Pony-boy, and stuff it with a can of Fancy Feastâan indulgence she gets only at Christmastime. She loves it. Itâs like McDonaldâs to her. âDanielle Claro 85. Friends of ours hang tinsel curtains in the doorway to their living room while the kids are sleeping. In the morning, the kids get to burst through it as they run to find their presents under the tree. âMary Duncan, RS reader 86. I always wrap each gift as tightly as possible, layering tape on top of tape, so that itâs a struggle to openâto build the excitement for whatâs inside. âJohn Robshaw, textiles designer 87. Once all the packages have been opened, crumple all the gift wrap into packing material in case you need to ship some gifts back home. âChristine Traulich, co-owner of RedBliss Design, a custom-invitation studio 88. If Iâm invited to a holiday party, my go-to gift is a nice bottle of olive oil. I tie a handwritten note around the wrapped bottle and include an easy recipe. âKeri Glassman, nutritionist and founder ofNutritious Life 89. My family members leave funny clues on our gift tags. Books are always from Miss Cashman , who was my quirky elementary-school librarian. Scarves and hats are from Jack Frost. âSarah Humphreys 90. Iâve taken to bringing a baby pineapple plant as a hostess gift. Itâs a beautiful decorative object, it can be eaten and enjoyed, and the crown can later be reseeded . âIndia Hicks, designer at HSN 91. A game is a great holiday gift for hosts, especially if youâre staying the weekend. Everyone can play it during downtimeâsay, before dinner. My top three: Mancala , Apples to Apples, and Wise and Otherwise. âJoanna Goddard 92. We always keep colorful bakersâ twine handy. It can be used for tying on gift tags, wrapping presents , and more. It makes amateur wrappers look like pros. âChristine Traulich 93. My mom, a preschool teacher, loves the four-gift rule that some of her kidsâ families use: The parents give something you want, something you need, something to wear, and something to read. âStephanie Sisco HOLIDAY CARDS 94. I love the idea of taping holiday cards to your wall  in the shape of a Christmas tree. Create the outline with painterâs tape, then place the cards within that silhouette. âDavid Stark 95. I take a quick snapshot on my phone of every card I get. Then I assign the photo to the caller ID so that whenever a friend calls, their holiday card pops up. âMariam Naficy, founder and CEO of Minted, a design marketplace 96. To display photo cards, I like to form a clothesline from one end of a room to another using a bit of ribbon and alligator-style paper clips. âJill Pollack, organizing expert 97. My mother puts all the cards in a big bowl on the coffee table so we can paw through them while relaxing on the sofa. âMerrill Stubbs, cofounder and president of Food52.com 98. We pack away the cards with the ornaments so that the next year, when we open up boxes to set up the tree, we have the cards to look through and enjoy one more time. âDanielle Claro 99. People get a ton of holiday cards, so to help mine stand out, I give them a light spritz  of perfume. A fresh, pretty scent leaves a lasting impression. âMeredith Waga Perez 100. I come from a family of seven. And as fun as it was to tear open our gifts, it would generate a lot of trash. Now, to be more green, each member of the family picks a song to play while they hand out their unwrapped presents. Itâs kind of like if Santa Claus had ball-game walk-up music! âBenice Atufunwa, RS reader
More on RealSimple.com:Â
11 Easy Christmas Crafts for Kids
5 Unique Gift Wrap Ideas Youâll Never Find in a Store
40 Great Gift Ideas for Men
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Have you ever wanted to know how to add bright colors to a room and still have it look good? This article demonstrates the perfect way to have an outrageous color in a calming or somewhat normal room. Check it out!