christmas decorations house beautiful

Get 10% Off on your next online order when you join our email listSome of the most beautiful Christmas decorations from all over the world truly bring out the spirit of the season. Some of the most notable decorations came from the Buckingham Palace, New York Museums, the Swedish Royal Court, the White House, and even to celebrity’s houses.Most Beautiful Christmas Decorations from RoyaltyOne of the most beautiful Christmas decorations is of course from the Buckingham Palace. A touch of royalty in Christmas decorations can always leave people at awe. The Royal Family’s official Twitter account shared last Thursday images of crown-shaped designs, with large pines, and vibrant baubles, as well as old railings, House Beautiful reports.Meanwhile the Swedish Royal Family always gets the best Christmas trees during the holiday season. Every year, they are given Christmas trees by students from the Swedish University of Agriculture Sciences (SLU), Royal Central reports.Also Read: Fifty Harmony members Hint Christmas Album;

Little Mix Collaboration ConfirmedMost Beautiful Christmas Decorations by Museums in New YorkPeople can see the original manuscript of A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens, which dates back 1843, at the Morgan Library & Museum at Madison Avenue and 29 East 36th Street. Another one of the most beautiful Christmas decorations is the Italian baroque angels with olden wings hanging on the Christmas tree at the Metropolitan Museum of Art located at the Fifth Avenue and 81st Street.Meanwhile, there are dinosaurs dangling from the Christmas tree at the American Museum of Natural History located at the Central Park West and 79th Street. There is also an exhibit of antique toys and electric trains at the New York Historical Society.The White House has a 19-foot Balsam fir Christmas tree, which First Lady Michelle Obama received back in November. Each room of theWhite House has its own elaborate design. The presidential abode is known for always bringing wonderful decorations during Christmas.Finally, houses of celebrities have some of the most beautiful Christmas decorations.

No matter what it is that one most enjoys, the full effect is possible only with much preparation.
christmas decorating ideas diyAs the saying goes, there’s the rub. Who hasn’t endured the annoyance of bumps on the head while hauling decorations from the attic, of the tree that keeps falling over, or the dish that just won’t come out right for the important dinner? The point is that it’s easy to have something of a love-hate relationship with certain aspects of the season, if not an outright fear-and-loathing response to the impending holidays. But who remembers the knuckles bruised while assembling toys and bicycles at 3:00 a.m. while surrounded by shrieks of joy just hours later? That’s just Christmas on the domestic front. For those with responsibilities to an institutional Christmas, there are added dimensions – of preparation, of annoyance, and of joy.

Having worked in historic house museums ever since leaving graduate school, I have faced my share of rooms, halls, and staircases that need a little Christmas. Different houses, different time periods, various degrees of historic documentation and accuracy. When the Indianapolis Museum of Art decided to cease using the former Lilly residence as its decorative arts galleries and interpret Oldfields as a residence of the American country place era, there were implications for what would happen at Christmas. For years, museum volunteers, many associated with local garden clubs, collaborated in an extensive effort to decorate the house using many different kinds of materials – live, dried, and artificial. These were beautiful decorations, created with much talent and effort. With the house’s rooms serving as a group of galleries with different contents and interpretive themes, their overall concept did not have to be integrated. When interpreted as a residence, it made sense to make Christmas decorations at Oldfields relate in some way to the presentation of the property as a country place-era residence.

But how to do that? The Lillys, prominent as they were in the community, had left almost nothing in the way of personal documentation or ephemera to describe day-to-day life at Oldfields – no letters, bills, inventories, or snapshot albums. The scant anecdotal evidence suggests that the Lillys’ Oldfields was never lavishly decorated for the holidays, nor was it the center of a whirl of entertainments. At this point enters the tension between historical accuracy and emotional impact. Personal experience demonstrated that perfect historical accuracy in Christmas decoration, if visually sparse, leaves many people unsatisfied. Unsatisfied visitors are unlikely to return. We settled on using the popular periodicals of our interpretive time period – focusing on the 1930s and ‘40s – to provide inspiration for the decorations. In this way, the decorations retain a relationship to our interpretive period but are not limited to inferences about what the Lilly family may have done.

Specific historical documentation could have been a severely limiting factor, but a change in focus offered latitude to explore many possibilities – and to provide a more satisfying experience. The magazines from which we draw ideas – House Beautiful, Arts and Decoration, and House and Garden, for example – suggest that Christmas decorations in the first half of the twentieth century were sometimes self-consciously traditional in character, and sometimes deliberately modern or unusual. Having some of both helps enliven a visit to Oldfields. Trees, wreaths, garlands, and bows were never out of fashion; the architectural rhythms of historically styled interiors like Oldfields’ provide the perfect setting for them. Curiosities like upside-down trees or suspended transparent bowls overflowing with ornaments can be just unusual enough to signal that one is looking at another era’s notion of holiday décor. We offer Christmas at Oldfields as a way to imagine the holidays in the decades just prior to the middle of the last century.