Outdoor Decorating

Outdoor Christmas decorating

  • Lots of blowmolds

    Too many blowmolds?

    Over the years many of us have seen this question asked over and over in the PlanetChristmas blow mold forum: “How many blow molds do you have?” It’s a funny thing, but it seems that a lot of enthusiasts/displayers/collectors cannot answer this simple question. I know I can’t. Blow molds have a tendency to multiply over time. Ask any enthusiast on the forum. I recently saw a signature line that read “Blow molds are like potato chips, you can’t have just one.” This is so true! Once the plastic bug bites you, it doesn’t like to let go. Before you…

    Read More »
  • Syncing the lights to music with a computer

    Getting into synchronized lighting

    Over-the-top decorators with computerized displays are constantly being asked “How did you do that?” When we answer “I spent three weeks setting up everything in the yard and another three weeks hunched over a computer getting the timing just right…” most people are impressed and intimidated at the same time. More and more budding decorators want to shift from a static display to a dynamic show by adding music and making the lights dance in sequence to the beat. It’s not as tough as you might think but you do need to commit major time to learn the basics on…

    Read More »
  • British flag

    A view from the UK

    For 2009 in the UK there were more Christmas displays than ever. It was estimated that approximately one house in four had some sort of decoration and in some streets it was more like one in two. That may not sound like much but when you realise that in parts of the UK Christmas had been banned for over 400 years then it makes the whole thing all the more remarkable. Christmas banned for four hundred years… It doesn’t seem possible. Yet it is perfectly true. During the reformation in the 16th and 17th centuries, Christmas became an ordinary day…

    Read More »
  • Wires through water is never a good thing

    GFCIs

    We all love to drive around and look at Christmas lights. We compare, critique and gather new ideas (aka: copying someone else’s) while commenting on everyone’s design, but as soon as it rains, what happens? Everything goes dark. What causes it? A protection we electricians call GFCI (Ground-Fault Circuit Interrupters) is a must for your safety when around a Christmas display. A ground-fault occurs when there is a break in the low-resistance grounding path from a tool or electrical system. The electrical current may then take an alternative path to the ground through the user, resulting in serious injuries or…

    Read More »
  • Early cell phone

    Extreme Christmas lighting?

    The immediate thought that comes to my mind concerning the trends in extreme Christmas decorating is that everyone who can scrape together a few more discretionary dollars in 2010 will be grabbing those Washington’s and throwing them into that bottomless money pit previously known as their front yard. We’re going to need more mini-strands, LEDs, lighted wire frames, extension cables, cube taps, controllers, plastic hangers, electrical tape, time in front of a computer (yuk) and endless hours in the front yard assuming positions that man is not intended to assume. As a result, there will be a lot less time…

    Read More »
  • A decorating injury

    Christmas pain

    Stupidity could be broadly defined as being ignorant, refusing to learn from past experiences on account of ego and in an informal sense as not being alert both physically as well as mentally. Why do I give you this definition? Well… I was asked by my friend Tim if I would help him decorate four medium sized trees at the church we both attended. I was done decorating my display so I said “Sure.” We were to meet that night at 7:00. That afternoon, I packed all the Christmas lights and cords in my car. Later, several people came over…

    Read More »
  • Commercial Christmas tree

    Starting a Christmas business

    In the last three editions of PlanetChristmas magazine, I’ve written about sequencing a display for others, planning your own large scale display and a behind the scenes look at two large commercial displays. This month I’d like to take the column in a slightly different direction by sharing with you why I started a Christmas lighting business and how I balance a start-up opportunity with a full time job. Ask twenty owners of small businesses why they started and you are likely to get twenty different answers. Most will say they wanted to control their own fate or they had…

    Read More »
  • Must be time to sequence another tune

    Channel explosion in sequencing

    Every year is the same. You’ve picked out all the new pieces for your display, performed the power calculations, assembled all the new elements into a great design, know exactly how many control channels are being used and then it’s time to sit down and stare at – that big, empty Grid. You know what I’m talking about. It’s where the magic happens of linking the music to the lights. That magic is far from easy. You’ve got hundreds of control channels and points in time during the music where the lights change. That can translate to hundreds of thousands…

    Read More »
  • Christmas trends in 2010

    Christmas decorating trends

    I honestly thought when volunteering for this assignment that finding out what the big Christmas trends for 2010 were going to be would be easy since it was already March and the season was just eight months away. Surely all the merchants had placed their big orders with the manufacturers and knew what they would be pushing hard for the holidays. Boy, was I wrong. If I was a newbie I’d be concerned but experience has taught me no one really wants to say much, at least on the record, because no one has confidence what the real trends are…

    Read More »
  • Blowmolds

    Gone with the wind

    The question comes up time and time again, “How do I keep my blow molds from tipping over?” Securing a blow mold to keep it from falling down, tilting, or spinning in the wind is not difficult but it does take a bit of time. Additionally, a properly secured blow mold will help to reduce the chances of it being damaged when it falls or being stolen by a snatch-and-run thief. Here are some of the methods that I have developed over the years. Depending upon the molds I’m securing, a combination of techniques makes sure they don’t budge in…

    Read More »
Back to top button