There is strength in unity. Power comes from strength. These two principles can help you transform your Christmas light display from standard to extraordinary.
Regrettably, not many Christmas Aficionados incorporate this concept into their lighting designs.
The Usual and the Mundane
We've observed a recent trend. It appears that the preferred color scheme many Christmas Aficionados choose is merely a mix of multicolored Christmas lights.
Take a look at the decorations appearing in your neighborhood right now, and you'll probably see what we've observed. Most Christmas light displays use numerous mixed-color light strands, where each string contains a variety of colors. These same multicolored strands are often used to decorate every feature of a property: the house, trees and shrubs, pathways and driveways, etc.
The inclination to do so is understandable. After all, Christmas is one of the most colorful holidays. So more colors in each string should mean more festivity. Right?
Perhaps not…
The Impact of Color Consolidation
We are not advising against using a variety of colors in your Christmas lighting display. Instead, we suggest that you explore a different approach to incorporating those colors: color consolidation. This method embraces the “strength in unity, power comes from strength” philosophy.
Here's the process:
As you plan your Christmas light display for this year, consider using solid blocks of color rather than strings of multicolored lights. Use these solid blocks to highlight individual features – a tree, a roofline, or a driveway border, for instance.
Multicolored lights will still be a part of your display, but the colors will be concentrated rather than scattered randomly. Each strand will have a single color, and each decorative element will focus on one color.
So perhaps one tree will be entirely red, while another will be completely purple. The roofline might be all green; the walkway border could be all white. And so forth.
These zones of uniform color create a powerful visual effect by grouping many bulbs of the same color together. The outcome is a very distinctive appearance.
Yet you'll maintain the beautiful variety of colors associated with Christmas. But now, each color's visual impact will be enhanced rather than diminished.
The Strength of LED Color Consolidation
You can amplify the effect of color consolidation by using all-LED lights in your Christmas display. LED bulbs produce bolder and more vivid colors compared to traditional incandescent bulbs.
The reason for this is straightforward: LEDs generate true color; incandescents do not.
All incandescent bulbs are fundamentally the same color: the bright white light generated by electricity passing through the filament. Different colors are achieved by tinting the white light with a colored bulb.
LEDs, on the other hand, produce color differently. Each diode within an LED bulb emits the true color of the bulb. If it's a red bulb, the diodes emit light in the red wavelength of the spectrum.
Comparing two bulbs of the same color – one LED and one incandescent – you will notice a significant difference in color purity and intensity.
Imagine this intensity and color purity across thousands of bulbs in a Christmas display. It creates a noticeable difference.
A Way to Be Unique…
It's undeniable that many Christmas displays resemble each other nowadays. Cookie-cutter.
Not that these cookie-cutter displays are inadequate. But they don't stand out. They lack originality or individual flair. If you've seen one such display, you've essentially seen them all.
If you wish to distinguish your Christmas display from the rest, consider harnessing the power of color consolidation. It's an excellent method to make your decorations stand out.
Isn't that the ultimate goal?