The Tabletop Christmas Tree

Tabletop Christmas trees are not a brand new thing. My mom had one years ago. It was a ceramic thing, about 10 - 12" tall and had different colours of mini lights poking out of it's ceramic branches. Nowadays, you can get a tabletop Christmas tree that is far nicer and more realistic. Guess that means that we've made progress and there's a market for mini trees.

Tabletop Christmas Tree Varieties

I was surprised by far the little tabletop tree has come since its early, badly done ceramic days. It is now available in a variety of sizes, materials and stages of decoration. Get one that's 4 1/2 feet tall, bare but pre-lit and ready to decorate or go with a 19" curly tinsel tree or a Thomas Kindcare resin one.

The table Christmas tree is, in my opinion, a great option for those who lack space or have no need/desire for a full-sized one.

Check these out for yourself. There are about 4 pages of various styles to look at. If nothing else, it will catch you up-to-date with mini trees. It might even give you some ideas.

Click on the link below to see samples of the

Tabletop Christmas Tree

Christmas Trees

It's that time again. Hallowe'en is over and the Christmas commercials have started on television. I figured that maybe I'd start this season off with some posts about Christmas Trees. After all, if there's one thing we know about here in Canada, it's evergreens.

I'll probably do individual posts about some of the more popular or newly funky types of trees. When I was growing up, almost everyone had a real Christmas tree. Nowadays, it's a different matter. You can find an artificial Christmas tree in almost any store and a ton of people have them.

Shoppers are not just going for the regular, conventional artificial tree anymore. There are a bunch of specialty types, some that I already knew about and some I had never heard of before this year. Like the black Christmas tree. What? That's new, I think. Not sure why anyone would want their tree in black but perhaps I'll make that one of my posts so I can find out. Maybe it will make some kind of sense to me after a bit of research.

If you're planning on buying an artificial tree this year, or making homemade ornaments, or budgeting for decorations, then now is the time to get started. Santa will be here soon and you'll want to have a nicely decorated Christmas tree for him to leave presents under.

Have Something to Share with Christmas Canada Readers?

Have an interesting Canadian Christmas story to share or an organization that could use a little exposure to help their cause at Christmas time? Maybe you'd like a shot at guest posting. Just send an email to iamannea@yahoo.ca to have your submission considered. All serious inquiries will receive a response.