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        1. Le Scoop
        2. Kid Activities
        3. Holiday Activities
        girl with long hair and many hair bows in her hair in front of a patterned backdrop

        Make It Holiday!

        This Christmas, Put a Bow on It

        After a low-key Christmas last year, we're turning up the dial on drama and embracing the idea that more is more when it comes to this holiday mainstay. Here are our favorite places to put a bow on it–and how to tie the perfect specimen.

        Written By
        Katie Covington

        No longer relegated to wrapping presents, we've spotted bows in favorite corners of the internet and on set at our recent Maison Me holiday shoot. While a bow for Christmas might not feel groundbreaking, what makes this season's microtrend unexpected is piling on multiple bows in a riot of colors, scales, and textures so it's more lived-in and less precious than the giant red velvet bows you might typically see this time of year. 

        Make It Monochrome

        For an easy update on tradition, play with the scale–here we used lots of small bows in tonal shades instead of one giant bow. We tied each bow in varying sizes and shapes for this wreath, adding them with a bit of floral wire. The rich wheat color blends in with the evergreen branches, just peeking out here and there. Hang the wreath with a matching section of velvet ribbon.

        bow wreathbow wreath

        For Their Hair

        Stylist Elissa Velluto piled on the bows this holiday during our Maison Me holiday shoot. For a look that works at Grandma's house or a visit to Santa, our creative team suggests "two small matching bows on each side of the hair or even three similar mix-and-match bows with hair pulled back to one side.

        girl with short natural hair and many bows in front of a patterned backgroundgirl with short natural hair and many bows in front of a patterned background

        Top the Tree

        Katy Elliott, a blogger and interiors editor, turned last year's gift wrap ribbon into this year's Christmas decorations at her home in Marblehead, Massachusetts. The unpredicted mix of ribbon keeps it from feeling stuffy or overdone.
        Christmas trees with bowsChristmas trees with bows

        Decorate the Front Door

        Katy paired her evergreen garland with long, skinny ribbons and old-school Christmas lights to bring a pop of color to her front door. We love how it looks with the clamshell wreath, a nod to her town's fishing history.

        bows tied to a garland on a front door at the beachbows tied to a garland on a front door at the beach

        Add to Ornaments

        While you can tie a bow directly on the end of branches why not also hide all those weird little wires with a perky velvet bow? Tie a bow, slip the wire through the center and hang the ornament from the tree.

        bows on ornamentsbows on ornaments

        How To Tie the Perfect Bow

        bows tied in velvetbows tied in velvetChristmas bows tied in veletChristmas bows tied in velet

        Before we start, it's totally normal to *not care* about tying perfect bows, in which case, stop reading now, pull out whatever random ribbon you have around the house, and go to town on your tree or wreath or even your (willing) child. 

        But if you want to go for it, think about editing rather than a new magical way to tie a bow. First, tie the bow however you usually would. Then adjust it, loosening and pulling the loops and tails where you want them, twisting the ribbon as you go to show its "good" side. You can have a heavy hand–it won't break!  

        If you're still stumped, try this florist trick: Cut a length of ribbon and fold it into thirds. Then, use wire or a small piece of ribbon to cinch the center of the ribbon together, pull the tails down, and fluff the loops. 

        There are a few elements you can switch up to get different looks:

        The Shape: Smaller bows tend to have loops that go in opposite directions, diagonally across from each other. Larger, heavier bows typically have loops on top with ribbon tails hanging below. 

        The Material: Velvet and cotton will create a stiff perky bow, while silk and satin make softer, looser bows. 

        The Ends: Trim the ends with a clean diagonal cut or fold the ribbon in half and cut at a 45-degree angle from the fold to the outer edges to create two points at the end. 

        You've tied The Perfect Bow.

        Hero photograph was shot by Johnson Lui and styled by Elissa Velluto

        Tree and garland photographs by Katy Elliot.