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Homes & Gardens
Homes & Gardens
Sophia Pouget de St Victor

This Year, I’m Decorating with the Most Un-Christmas Christmas Decor, Designed for Slow, Sustainable, and Beautifully Layered Living –Thanks to The White Company

Christmas side table.

Across the United Kingdom, a quieter and more thoughtful idea of Christmas is taking root. After years shaped by glittering spectacle and theatrical display, many households are seeking a gentler season that feels attuned to the shifting colours and subtle textures of the British landscape. This emerging mood favours calm interiors, soft illumination and a palette inspired by the subtleties of British winter, from muted greens and bronzed grasses to the silvery stillness of bare branches. It is a slower Christmas that looks outward to the hedgerows, the woodlands and the coastal edges rather than inward to commercial excess.

This shift is transforming Christmas decorating into an exercise in restraint, longevity and sensory calm. Homeowners are seeking pieces that endure and reject disposable novelty in favour of items that acquire character over time. The look is built around natural materials such as unvarnished wood, winter foliage, beeswax candles and linen textiles that age handsomely.

Together, these influences set the scene for an elegant and deeply British way of styling the festive season. The idea is not to strip the home of joy but to create an atmosphere that feels restorative and connected to place. Embracing this approach can present a challenge, since thoughtful and sustainable festive pieces are not always easy to find. The reward, however, is a collection that grows more beautiful with every passing December.

Investing in well-made decorations from The White Company can be particularly valuable since their timeless materials and elegant palette offer the promise of many years of use. Here, I explore how a slower, nature-led Christmas can feel richer and more resonant, and how deliberate choices now can create a tradition that endures throughout a lifetime of celebrations.

(Image credit: The White Company)

'It’s still all about layering but just with more restraint,' explains Cotswolds-based interior designer Sean Symington. 'You can absolutely create atmosphere while keeping the palette tight. Using two or three classic tones, like golds and greens, still gives you that festive charm without overwhelming the room. I’d always recommend leaning into traditional decorations: beautifully crafted baubles, warm twinkling lights, and pieces that feel nostalgic. It creates richness without excess.'

Styling a Calm, Nature-Inspired Festive Interior

When I finish decorating, I always look to the hedgerows and woodlands around me for inspiration. Using natural materials gives a homegrown wreath or garland a depth and character that shop-bought decorations rarely achieve. I like to include moss to soften and anchor arrangements, seed heads such as teasels and thistles for texture, and berries like rosehips and rowan to add seasonal colour.

Hellebores bring subtle, muted blooms that last well indoors, giving a sense of life even in the heart of winter. My advice is to gather these elements in layers, mixing textures and tones so each piece feels effortless and informal. Dotting tealights through your displays highlights the natural shapes and colours, and arranging them with a light, unforced hand ensures the focus stays on the materials themselves. By combining what you can forage with a few enduring, high-quality ornaments, you create a personal space, rooted in the UK landscape, and timelessly beautiful.

'Invest in pieces you genuinely love,' Sean adds. 'Quality brings longevity, which means your decorations become part of your Christmas story rather than something replaced year after year. Avoid chasing outdated Christmas trends: instead, follow the designers, styles, and craftsmanship that speak to you. When you make choices from a place of connection and quality, you naturally create a festive scheme that lasts and starts to become more sustainable.'

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