Toronto Star

Deck your halls

Three essential elements of holiday decorating

- MARY CAROL GARRITY

Whether you want to fill your home top to bottom with holiday cheer or add a few festive touches here and there, my advice is the same: Start with a fabulous base. Amazing greenery and show-stealing ribbon are the essential bedrocks of a sensationa­l holiday treatment.

I was working with a customer this week who was starting fresh with her holiday decor. After taking in all the Christmas pageantry at Nell Hill’s, she asked me where to start to get the most from her budget. Simple! I advised her to invest in garland, picks and ribbon, then add all the rest, like ornaments, in the future. You can decorate with these three alone and your home will look beautiful.

Garland

For years, I was a greenery snob. You would never, ever catch me using faux fir in my holiday decor. Back then, the fakes looked, well, fake. I started to lose my love for real pine boughs about the time it started to destroy my wood furniture, one sap drip at a time. And all those dry needles all over the floor — ugh! Now the faux greenery we carry looks so real you have to touch it to tell — you can’t believe your eyes.

You can use garland all over your home. One of my favourites is looping it up a banister.

You can snake some garland down the centre of your dining table. Cut a 6-foot garland in half and use it to decorate your buffet, or thread it through the arms of your dining room chandelier. How do you keep all these strands of garland in place? Cinch them up with zip ties. We go through thousands of zip ties every year. You can find them at any hardware store. Look for the biggest size you can, then trim the unused edges.

Picks

Picks come in all shapes and sizes, and feature all types of faux greens, berries, flowers and nuts. They have a finished end, with the other end left unfinished so you can tuck them into a vase, behind a piece of art, into a Christmas tree or any other spot you can imagine.

The key to making picks or garland look lifelike is to fluff them out, spreading the branches or needles or berries so they take on the form or patterns they would follow in nature.

Ribbon

I love ribbon. Absolutely and completely. I can’t imagine my home dressed for the holidays without using spools and spools. Ribbon adds so much texture and softness. We have so many different types of holiday ribbon this year, from traditiona­l (a spool of our black watch plaid ribbon is going home with me this year) to whimsical to glamorous.

 ?? MARY CAROL GARRITY PHOTOS TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Left: Greenery and ribbon are the essential bedrocks of a holiday treatment. Top: Faux greenery can look very real.
MARY CAROL GARRITY PHOTOS TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Left: Greenery and ribbon are the essential bedrocks of a holiday treatment. Top: Faux greenery can look very real.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada