When there's lots of holiday spirit but not much space, how to deck the (small) halls
Tis the season to decorate for the holidays
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Your support makes all the difference.It seems like the frost hasnāt even hit the pumpkin before āholiday cheerā starts showing up everywhere, from social media feeds to the aisles of CVS. Tis the season to decorate.
But if youāre in a small apartment, there are limits to what you can do. A full-size artificial tree might take up half a room. You might have limited shelving for trinkets. How can you let your holiday flag fly when you donāt have much space to do it?
Here are some seasonal style ideas that max the merry but wonāt eat the room. And that store easily.
SET THE STAGE
A monochromatic palette is a good place to start, says Todd Carr, who runs the botanicals and homewares shop Hort & Pott in Freehold, New York, with partner Taylor Harrington.
āIt helps keep the holiday dĆ©cor cohesive and ties together pretty much whatever you do. I love green on green, for example ā but take inspiration from your space,ā Carr says. Think stacks of books, a scarf, and ornamental design elements like candlesticks and natural or faux greenery.
No room for even that? āJust adding bows and streamers of ribbon in your color will add a festive feeling to a tight space,ā Carr says.
BRING IN SPARKLE
Brynn Whitfield, a star of Bravoās āThe Real Housewives of New York City," has a social media following for photos of her one-bedroom Manhattan apartment. She says small square footage shouldnāt stop you from celebrating.
āGet clever with surfaces! Guests truly donāt care about the size of your table or how big your tree is. You can impress them with the right decorative pieces," she says. "Everything looks better when the presentationās good.ā
CB2 has a new collection of transparent, opaque, and reflective glass and metallic ornaments that give traditional holiday motifs a fresh twist. There are amber glass balls that look like bubbly champagne; a trio of modern pines in smoky hues; milky-white glass snowmen; stainless steel orbs; and mini presents in mirror-finished steel.
Artificial trees with a slim profile work well in apartments. Get one pre-lit so you donāt have to store bulky light strings. Balsam Hillās got a Norway Spruce, for instance, that comes with itās own zippered storage bag. CB2 has a super-slim one in several different heights. You donāt have to load up a tree with ornaments, either.
GET UP OFF THE FLOOR
āUse your walls and ceiling to get festive,ā advises Carr. āGarlands are gorgeous draped on bookshelves or chandeliers. And wreaths arenāt just for the front door. Suspend a foraged pine branch over the dining table with some cup hooks and floral wire, and decorate it as you would a tree.
"Or put a potted amaryllis in a hanging planter, and fill the base with evergreens for an uplighting, magical arrangement that takes up little space.ā
Tempaperās Scandinavian Holiday tree decal has folk-arty Nordic Christmas ornaments like reindeer, hares, stars and stockings instead of branches. Itās large enough to take the place of a real tree, and the peel-and-stick feature lets you lift it off the wall easily when the seasonās over. Unless you love it so much you decide to leave it up all year as artwork.
Thereās a white winter village set here, too, that works nicely on a window, as well as removable decals of illustrated laurel branches, wreaths and a pretty Festival of Lights menorah.
DECOR THAT STORES WELL
Flat-pack ornaments that donāt need to be protectively stowed in a special container are a boon to small spacers.
For instance, Loll Designsā minimalist, contemporary Christmas trees and reindeer fit together with simple slots, and are easy to stash under a bed or behind a cupboard. Magic Ornaments has sets of glitter- and mirror-finish ornaments; pull the drawstring and youāve got a 3-D decoration. Each set comes with balls, stars, angels, snowflakes, a tree topper and 40 feet of ribbon garland. When the holidayās done, everything flattens back down to be stored in a cardboard envelope.
ADD SENSORY AMBIENCE
āA warm glow is key to a cozy, wintry mood,ā says Carr. Try switching lamp bulbs with high wattage or cool light to ones that cast a more golden glow. The softer light makes even the sparest of holiday dĆ©cor feel homier.
Scents can also bring home a nostalgic holiday vibe. Nest New Yorkās Holiday wall diffuser refill combines pomegranate, mandarin, pine, cloves, cinnamon and vanilla into an aroma thatās spicy and seasonal. Spices, musk and golden amber evoke a nice vibe in Puraās Winter Noir diffuser refill.
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New York-based writer Kim Cook covers design and decor topics regularly for The AP. Follow her on Instagram at @kimcookhome.
For more AP Lifestyles stories, go to https://apnews.com/hub/lifestyle.