Baltimore Sun Sunday

Home for the holidays

Design experts suggest the best ways to make your holiday season even more festive.

- By Meredith Newman

In a holiday decoration rut? Want to update your look, but on a budget? Look no further. Two local designers have suggestion­s about the best ways to make your holiday season even more festive.

“The holidays are about celebratin­g, so just have fun with it,” said Erin DeHaas, director of special projects at Homestead Gardens. “Christmas doesn’t have to be red, green or white. It can be blues and golds.”

DeHaas is responsibl­e for decorating scores of themed Christmas trees at Homestead Gardens’ two locations in Davidsonvi­lle and Severna Park in Anne Arundel County.

Decorating the holidays can be as simple as adding festive decoration­s to windows, artwork or lighting fixtures, DeHaas said. No need to take down those Chesapeake- or nautical-themed decoration­s; just add festive ribbons, pine or plastic snowflakes, she said.

To update any fall or Thanksgivi­ng decoration­s left around the house, adding glitter or glass ornaments will instantly give it a winter feel, she said.

When it comes to decorating trees, DeHaas recommende­d determinin­g what the focal point is and then designing around it.

This doesn’t necessaril­y need to the tree-topper, DeHaas said.

It could be an ornament on the tree, or even an angel or large star placed in the middle of the tree.

The trees DeHaas designs at Homestead Gardens include a variety of themes from the whimsical to Santa Claus, and even stuffed animals.

For those who want to experiment with their tree decoration­s, DeHaas said it’s best to use an artificial Christmas tree. When you place decoration­s on artificial trees, they tend to stay from year to year. She recommende­d using wire around real trees to help with stability.

For her own home, DeHaas likes to buy certain decoration­s by the dozen. This way, she can incorporat­e the decoration­s throughout the house and tie design elements together.

“It’s like walking into your home and getting a hug,” she said.

Around the holiday season, most people like to stay traditiona­l with their flowers, said Caroline Leslie, floral designer at The Gateway Florist in Annapolis.

A majority of the arrangemen­ts Leslie puts together include evergreens and poinsettia­s.

But for those interested in mixing it up, Leslie recommends using tropical flowers in the arrangemen­ts. She likes to add orchids, amaryllis and ginger flowers to give it a “little extra flair.”

Leslie found that gold flowers and wreaths were a big trend last year. She discovered a lot of people love gold-sprayed flowers, specifical­ly magnolias, and pairing them with gold ribbons.

Incorporat­ing gold into decoration­s, Leslie said, is a great way to change up home decoration­s, while still remaining the realm of elegant and traditiona­l.

 ?? PAUL W. GILLESPIE/BALTIMORE SUN MEDIA GROUP PHOTOS ?? Erin DeHaas, director of special projects for Homestead Gardens in Anne Arundel County, says those decorating for the holidays should have fun doing it. “The holidays are about celebratin­g,” she says.
PAUL W. GILLESPIE/BALTIMORE SUN MEDIA GROUP PHOTOS Erin DeHaas, director of special projects for Homestead Gardens in Anne Arundel County, says those decorating for the holidays should have fun doing it. “The holidays are about celebratin­g,” she says.
 ??  ?? No need to take down those nautical or Chesapeake decoration­s: Just add some pine or ribbons.
No need to take down those nautical or Chesapeake decoration­s: Just add some pine or ribbons.
 ??  ?? Christmas, DeHaas says, doesn’t have to be green and white. Red, white and blue can do just fine.
Christmas, DeHaas says, doesn’t have to be green and white. Red, white and blue can do just fine.

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