For interior designers such as Monique Tollgard, a beautifully decorated door or front porch at Christmas is also a prelude for the style that lies within: ‘The entrance is the first encounter for you, your guests, and your home this season. The materials and colors we use at Christmas allow us to introduce the “red thread” of the house immediately.’ Our front porches, the most practical but often overlooked element of our homes, are undergoing a festive transformation this year. For us, Christmas decorating ideas for the front of the home are so important; it is the start of the story and first and last impressions are so important. Therefore it is certainly worth considering what the best Christmas door decor ideas and Christmas patios are, and exactly what rules you should be following to ensure that you have the most beautiful front porch and door on the street,
How to decorate a front porch for Christmas
How to decorate a front porch for Christmas
We decorate the inside of our houses for Christmas, so why not take the festivities outside? A festive front door and front porch can be transformed into something quite magical with a little effort and imagination. Think of festive wreaths, playful door mats, and pergolas as a framework for decorations – some ephemeral for a special event and others that will last throughout the winter months.
1. Dress your front door with a Christmas wreath
1. Dress your front door with a Christmas wreath
No front door is completely dressed for Christmas without a flourish of foliage and flowers. The humble Christmas wreath is one of the most versatile outdoor Christmas decoration ideas at your disposal during the holiday season, and more often than not, sometimes less is definitely more. Make your Christmas wreath the center of attention, with garden foliage, fragrant herbs, and colorful flowers used on a grand scale. This year’s festive wreaths are showpieces. They are big and bold, colorful and shapely, so much so that we think they should be your first port of call when it comes to Yuletide decorating. Holly, ivy, and pinecones are among the more obvious pieces for your Christmas wreath ideas, but there are other beautiful winter florals and foliage out there too. A glaucous eucalyptus is a contemporary option for the minimalist at heart. However, we say ’the bigger, the better’ when it comes to holiday decor ideas. But why stop at one on the front door? Make several in different sizes – an enormous wreath could even make a gateway from one area of the front porch into another, while smaller ones can be strung from trees or arbors.
2. Add sparkle with outdoor lighting
2. Add sparkle with outdoor lighting
Christmas light ideas for outdoor trees are a spectacular way to make your front porch glow from top to bottom. The first thing to consider are fairy lights – they make a big impact from both inside and outside the house. Lights suitable for outdoor use are widely available, as are energy-saving LEDs. Lights look lovely strung from bare branches, draped over arches or twinkling along the tops of fences or hedging, while rope lights can be coiled around the columns of porches, pergolas, or the trunks of trees. Use tiny plain white lights for the subtlest effect. Pinprick lights over an entrance arch or wound around clipped box or bay trees flanking the front door will welcome you and your guests on the way in and out. Even on a chilly evening, the party may well spill outside, especially if guests are encouraged down pathways by glittering lights around a summerhouse at the end, and have a cup of warm soup or mulled wine in their hands as they go. You could light a chiminea to warm guests while they’re outdoors. Solar-powered lights are another option, but check that they will work when there has been little or no sun during short winter days.
3. Decorate trees to perfection
3. Decorate trees to perfection
There is no reason why your front porch or porch shouldn’t have an outdoor Christmas tree – or even a decorated hedge or bush. It needn’t be a conifer, although the evergreen foliage of bay, box, or yew is a good foil for the decorations. Choose a tree in a prominent place and pick decorations that won’t go soggy in the rain or snow, or get blown over into your neighbors’ gardens by the wind. Be kind to wildlife at the same time by providing some decorations the birds can eat: bundles of nuts and seeds in silver mesh bags tied up with ribbon, or unshelled peanuts strung on wire and shaped into hearts or stars with a red ribbon bow for hanging.
4. Make icy sculptures
4. Make icy sculptures
Some of the loveliest sparkling wintry effects in the front porch are formed by frost and snow, so leave some seedheads where the frost can catch them, transforming grassy plumes and allium spheres into glittering jewels. Or emulate the effect by creating ice sculptures of your own, either by leaving twigs, mistletoe, and holly soaked in water outside on a freezing night or placing them in the freezer. Decorate your porch and front yard once for winter and it will soon become second nature. Even on the dullest, coldest days and evenings when you do not care to venture outside, it will still provide beauty and enjoyment from inside the house – neighbors, and passers-by may well appreciate your efforts, too.
5. Line a pathway
5. Line a pathway
Small lanterns or tealight holders can be positioned in branches or pergolas to great effect, especially if you group them in clusters or in a row. If you love the flicker of tealights, make your own holders from empty jam jars with textured paper wrapped around them, and display them along walls or strung up with bright-colored ribbons. Magnify the effect of outdoor lighting by hanging other reflective items nearby – silver baubles, glass crystals, chandelier drops, and so on. Using silver ribbons will make them show up more and add to the decorative effect.