Kid-Friendly Christmas Tree Made from Paint Chips and Ribbons

That she blows! Or maybe I should say “thar she glows!” Either way, we got her up.

Colorful painted-chip ornaments on a Christmas tree

This year’s decorating theme followed a few simple rules:

  1. Use only free items we already had—no running out to buy anything.
  2. Avoid anything pointy, hard, or breakable for the little one’s safety.
  3. Load it with color—lots of bright, cheerful hues.

With those constraints we gave our full-sized tree a fresh, colorful makeover using leftover supplies from around the house, like stacks of paint chips I’d saved.

Stack of colorful paint chips

I always keep extra paint chips for projects—past uses include simple art pieces and a temporary postcard ledge display from our old office.

Paint chip art

Postcard ledge display

More paint chip arrangements

Colorful swatches displayed

Tree decorated with painted-chip ornaments

To make the ornaments I cut paint chips into narrow strips so each chip yielded two or three pieces. Then I punched a small hole near the top of each strip…

Paint chip strips being punched

…and threaded twine or thin string through the hole to hang them. The finished pieces read like modern, colorful icicles covering the tree, and the best part was that they were all free.

Close-up of colorful paint chip ornaments on tree

Another main decorative element was several spools of ribbon from our gift-wrapping stash. We unrolled each ribbon, found the midpoint, and draped it over the top of the tree so equal lengths hung down each side in an upside-down V. The tree skirt is simply three faux sheepskins from Ikea, which have become a bit of a holiday tradition for us.

Ribbon draped over tree and sheepskin tree skirt

I even tied a small bow from leftover ribbon for the top. It gave the tree a cheerful, slightly feminine look this year.

Tree topped with a ribbon bow

A couple of notes from the photos:

Tree and mantel view

  1. When we first photographed the tree we hadn’t caught up with our advent calendar yet—Clara and I had the urge to snap pictures as soon as the tree was up. Since then we’ve hung twelve advent ornaments on the tree and are back to opening one a day.
  2. We did a quick mantel refresh in the kitchen—here’s a closer look.

Mantel with feather trees and ceramic birds

On the floor by the mantel I placed a few old feather trees and added two white ceramic birds on the mantel to read like Christmas doves. I also included a small thrift-store rocking horse that I painted for Clara and hung our stockings — this year arranged a bit differently just for fun.

Stockings and mantel decor

It might look like only three stockings were displayed, but Burger certainly has one. John and I share a “Mom and Dad” stocking, and there’s a stocking each for Clara and Burger.

Close-up of three stockings

I also tucked a basket of faux gifts into the fireplace to add visual interest and plenty of holiday cheer.

Gift-filled basket in fireplace

One of the nicest outcomes of opening up the doorway between the kitchen and dining room is that the tree is visible from the kitchen now. It peeks around the corner and makes both spaces feel connected and festive.

Tree seen from kitchen doorway

That view wouldn’t be possible if we hadn’t removed the wall a while back—demo was worth it. It’s so nice to have festive touches in multiple rooms: the big tree in the dining room, the mantel in the kitchen, and the tabletop tree in the living room. Christmastime really does brighten the whole house.

Dining room Christmas tree glowing

That’s most of the indoor decorating done for now. I still plan to photograph and share a holiday frame gallery I’m putting together. And for the first time we decorated the exterior as well—lights, stars, a homemade wreath, and red reindeer figures—so I’ll share pictures of the outdoor display as soon as we can get them taken and write it up.

P.S. We’ll be back with a kitchen update soon. Some of the projects are detail-oriented—like resizing an old cabinet to match the rest of the kitchen and to house a built-in microwave—but we’re making steady progress!