DIY Christmas Decorations You Can Make Inexpensively
36 ideas to make your own DIY Christmas decorations repurposing items commonly found in thrift stores or your own home, plus free homemade holiday decor solutions.
The other day, I was randomly looking around our house counting up all of the thrift store Christmas decor projects we have hanging around. There have been a lot of them over the years.
I can bet, if you keep an eye out when thrift shopping or have a different perspective while walking around your own home, you’ll find ways to repurpose items inexpensively to make your own Christmas decorations.
Some of our decor is made up of thrift finds, some is made up of just inexpensive little touches from repurposed items, but all of it is super easy to do.
Making your own Christmas decor can save a lot of money, but that doesn’t mean those homemade decorations have to look cheap.
Many of these homemade and repurposed ideas are in this year’s Better Homes and Gardens Christmas Ideas magazine that the team photographed in our house last Christmas.
A handful of these DIY Christmas decoration ideas are close to 10 years old and some are newer, but because Christmas is so nostalgic and cozy, they’re all great to recreate regardless of trends.
So just in case you want some cheap Christmas decoration ideas for this season or next year, here are 36 to get you started.
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How to Make DIY Christmas Decor Inexpensively with Repurposing
Repurpose luggage tags or lanyard badge holders as stocking tags. These were less than $1 each and safety pinning them to Target stockings made them look high end.
You can get the printable labels for them here too, if you don’t want to design your own. Try using Canva to personalize name tags from scratch.
I found a book of Christmas sheet music at the thrift store for $1 and decided to rip the pages out to frame on our existing living room gallery wall. A whole wall of subtle but festive art for $1? Sign me up!
I discovered that jingle bells can become place card holders totally by accident, but it works!
You can find free public domain images all over the internet (basically antique prints that don’t have a copyright). You can get this snow cabin printable art here.
Stick to ones with a winter theme rather than Christmas-specific so that you can leave them on display until spring. Work smarter, not harder. 😉
Dry Oranges and Leaves to Vintage Style DIY Christmas Trimmings
Drying oranges and preserving leaves like magnolias and boxwoods is so easy to do and look beautiful tucked into garlands, wreaths, tree branches, and centerpieces. Doing this can pave the way for so many homemade Christmas decorations all round your house.
I found this soup tureen for $5 at Goodwill and immediately thought up a million different ways to use it in decor year-round.
Growing up, my mom always put a big bowl of ornaments on my dining room table at Christmas as an easy centerpiece, so it just seemed right.
I love how ribbon can create a whole new look on your existing decor for just the price of 2-3 spools. This blackwatch tartan plaid is my fave.
Make Christmas Wall Decor With Scrap Wood
We repurposed some scrap plywood we had to make this winter landscape art using an engineered print. You can get the free printable landscape art here to make it yourself.
Make Orange Pomanders
This one isn’t really thrifted, but it’s a great grocery store Christmas craft you can do while snuggled up watching a movie by the fire.
Puncture holes in the skin of an orange with a toothpick or push pin, and press whole cloves into the openings. Make interesting patterns with the cloves to display in bowls on tabletops or scattered in centerpieces. Plus, it smells amazing!
Ours usually last 4-5 days at room temperature, so it’s best to wait until the week of Christmas to make them.
Twist Evergreen Stems Around Napkins for DIY Napkin Holders
If you have any leftover garland remnants, this one is so easy to do.
These fairy lights are my favorite because they’re battery powered, can be set to a timer, and work in so many different places- on miniature Christmas trees, woven into garland, or like in our kitchen, underneath a cake dome or an old thrifted clock dome.
I bought these ice skates in the middle of summer in the sporting goods section of the thrift store, but I knew they’d eventually make a great Christmas decoration. It pays to look for Christmas finds in the off-season.
Make Your Own Garland
Using dried oranges, you can string them together with twine to make DIY orange garland. I love adding miniature bells to mine.
Or string up ornaments on ribbon to display across your mantel. I tied these wooden snowflake ornaments we already had to some pink ribbon to use in our girls’ playroom.
Reuse Wreaths as Candle Rings
I’ve had these mini boxwood wreaths for years hung up on the backs of dining chairs or placed on a wall or on mirrors. But Christmas wreaths are great at repurposing with candles into easy tabletop accents too.
Force Paperwhite Bulbs
Growing paperwhite narcissus flowers is perfect to do in the winter months and makes for beautiful decor that can last on into January.
I love displaying them in thrifted bowls.
Print an Advent Calendar as a Candle Label
I printed this little calendar on card stock to stick on a votive candle I had, and it’s a great, simple way to countdown until the big day. It’s as cheap as printing 1 sheet of paper from your own computer.
Dig Into the Fake Flower Bin for Christmas Tree Ornaments
Who says Christmas tree ornaments have to be glass balls or even an item hanging on a hook? Check your fake flower bin in storage or the clearance section of the craft store (because summer blooms are often super discounted in December).
Stick flowers between your Christmas tree branches to fill up space and create a unique look. Tuck them into a wreath on your front door or mini trees on your front porch for an extra pop too.
Recycle “Tree Lot Trash”
Pick up discarded trimmings from Christmas tree lots to use on tabletops and mantels or make fresh DIY holiday garland. Attach them to your banisters with pipe cleaners and ribbon. And if you want to keep it looking fresh, you can spritz it all with some Wilt Pruf.
I see these ceramic village sets in the thrift store all the time. Paint them white (or any color you want) to make them new again.
I love sprinkling a table with fresh rosemary and cranberries. Bonus: it smells amazing too. And if you happen to keep rosemary growing in an herb garden year-round, it’s even cheaper.
At our old house, we didn’t have a ton of extra money leftover for Christmas ornaments, so I printed some favorite photos, hole punch them with some twine, and hung them on my tree.
Putting them on the branches was a sweet little trip down memory lane… and cost next to nothing!
Use Pinecones as Bowl Filler
Gather pinecones out of the yard to display them in bowls or clear vases. But first, be sure to bake them on a cookie sheet at at 250 degrees F for 30 minutes to get rid of any bugs hiding inside.
I inherited this collection of milk glass bud vases from my grandfather after he passed away. He had a huge rose garden and loved giving roses to friends and family as gifts using those milk glass bud vases.
I love having them as a way to remember him, so I repurposed them into candle holders as a simple centerpiece.
I love doing this advent calendar idea for our kids. Place Christmas storybooks inside of an old suitcase (this one was my grandmother’s over 50 years ago) and let them read one per night at bedtime as a countdown to Christmas.
See our family’s favorite Christmas storybooks here.
Use a planter from the garden department for a tree stand holder. There are so many pretty ones, but this barrel planter was my favorite of the bunch.
During the warm months, we stored them upside-down around our fire pit as makeshift outdoor cocktail tables.
If you love the old fashioned look of stringing up gingerbread for decor, this one is a lot of fun to make and the perfect Christmas craft to do with the kids.
Get our cinnamon salt dough recipe here.
Transform an Old Gum Ball Machine Into a Snow Globe
I found this gum ball machine in the kids’ toy section of the thrift store and spray painted it a pretty ballet pink for Olivia’s room.
Fill it with some fluffed cotton balls and a little house ornament, and you’ve got yourself a snow globe.
I love making these DIY Christmas candles to add a vintage flair to the usual plastic kind. All you need is metal candle clips and hot glue.
Utilize a Thrifted Typewriter to Display Messages to Santa
I was so excited when I found this typewriter at the thrift store for $9 years ago! It’s perfect for printing out funny letters to Santa as whimsical decor.
If you don’t have luck at thrift stores, you can sometimes find them on Etsy and eBay for not too pricey.
Decoupage Sheet Music Onto Cheap Ornaments to Look Vintage
I made these ornaments from cheap Walmart ball ornaments years ago using old sheet music I ripped up and decoupaged with Mod Podge. So sweet and pretty and a craft that’s hard to mess up.
Incorporate Family Heirlooms
My grandmother’s side of the family is Swedish, and I remember always playing with this Dala horse on her shelf as a kid.
Now I find a place to use her Dala horse every year in my Christmas decor.
If you have a little leftover ribbon, use a styrofoam cone and a glue gun to make these mini ribbon trees! You can change the style depending on what type and color of ribbon you use. Or use a foam wreath form to make a ribbon wreath instead and add pom poms as “berries”.
These little boots were Olivia’s when she was born, and every year we nestle them onto a branch to remember that sweet baby phase.
You don’t have to get a store-bought “Baby’s First Christmas” ornament to document a sweet memory.
Turn an Old Sweater Into a Pillow Cover
I see old cable knit sweaters in thrift stores all the time! Snatch them up, wash them when you get home, and rework them into cozy pillow covers. This tutorial can take you step by step.
I found this old Coca-Cola crate years ago at the thrift store, and we bust it out for centerpieces, coffee table trays, and festive cocoa bars throughout the year when we want a whimsical punch of red.
Use is as a cocoa station tray to hold toppings like chocolate chips, marshmallows, and crushed candy canes.
You can snag this hot cocoa bar sign here to go with it too.
Repurpose Thrifted Silver Servingware for Christmas Party Decorations
I see silver trays and coffee/tea sets at the thrift store almost every time I stop in. Maybe because people just don’t use them much these days. But they make gorgeous table decor for entertaining at Christmastime.
Do you have any thrifted items you love using in your Christmas decor every year? Share them in the comments below so we can gather more ideas! Because you can honestly never have enough.
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