Real Estate

Decorating for Christmas while selling a home?

Griswold Christmas Vacation

Should you decorate for Christmas while Selling a Home? While most of us enjoy the festive Christmas time decor, Some professionals have differing opinions. Find the one that works for you.

Personally, I totally understand how Christmas decorations add to the spirit of the season, and like you I would find it hard not to decorate. According to Design & Dwell Homes, for buyers it may prove to be a distraction or even a negative trigger. As an Expert Psychological Stager (EPS), they always advise clients against decorating while selling their home.

EPS Reasons NOT to decorate:

            • Takes the focus away from the architecture of a home.

            • Makes the home feel cluttered and smaller.

            • Could offend some who don’t celebrate making your buyer audience smaller.

Design & Dwell suggest trying to detach your emotions from selling a home can be difficult, but you have to remember, it is about the buyer and what they perceive. Their recommendation is if you do decide to decorate to use these guidelines: Keep it simple & classic, nothing over the top. Depersonalize: Pictures and Christmas cards. No inflatables or manger scenes. Skip the tree. Add fragrances.

On the other hand, HGTV has a different approach. They suggest that the house-hunters who do venture out and brave the holiday havoc are “serious about buying a house and stylish trimmings will make them want to ring in the new year in your home.”

“Holidays can be personal on a lot of levels, but you want to make sure your decor is neutral,” advises Amy Powers, owner of Accent Home Staging & Interiors of Atlanta. “You want to romance your buyer, not invite them to your Christmas party.”

They recommend trying these tips to get buyers in the right spirit:

             •Clean and stage. “Before you decorate, your house needs to be staged,” Powers says. If your living room is already piled high with clutter and tchotchkes, your ceramic reindeer collection is only going to add to the sense of overcrowding.

             •Create a cozy vibe. The less-is-more mantra of home staging may tempt you to forgo holiday cheer this year. But a few subtle touches like a bowl of pinecones, an evergreen wreath, or a pot of cider simmering on the stove can create a warm and festive feeling in your home.

            •Complement your palette. Before you start untangling your tinsel, make sure your holiday collection matches your current decor. If your living room is painted a soothing ocean-blue hue, skip the clashing red garland and opt for white snowflakes or a silver glass-ball wreath. If you’ve got an earthy color scheme, accent with rich tones like cranberries, forest greens and gold.

            •Accentuate the positive. Too many trimmings may distract buyers, but the right accessories can draw attention to your home’s best features. Dangle mistletoe in an arched doorway, or display your menorah on the ledge of a bay window; just don’t block a beautiful view with stick-on snowflake decals or clutter an elegant fireplace with personalized stockings.

            •Go light on lights. Step away from the inflatable snowman, Clark Griswold. One man’s “merry” is another man’s “tacky,” so tone down any garish light displays while your home is on the market. (No, your neighbors didn’t pay us to say that.) Instead, use simple string lighting to play up your home’s architecture or draw attention to the gorgeous fir tree in your front yard.

             •Be an equal-opportunity decorator. Leave the life-sized Nativity scene in storage this year, because overtly religious flourishes may be off-putting to some buyers. “You want to keep neutrality throughout, so you can attract any type of buyer,” Powers says. Not sure what qualifies? Powers adds, “No matter what your religion is, you’re not going to feel offended by a nutcracker.”

              •Mind the tree. A tall Christmas tree can help you show off your two-story great room, but make sure the wide base won’t overwhelm the floor space. If your living area is on the small side, save space with a skinny tree. Swap the gaudy heirloom ornaments and trim your tree in a cohesive theme such as icicle lights and silver tinsel, for example, or blue and gold glass balls.

              •Clear the clutter. A few decorations can stir the holiday spirit, but don’t feel obliged to hang every last ornament. “A lot of people, when they decorate, tend to use all the extra space in their house,” Powers says. “You still want each space to look as spacious as possible.” Limit yourself to a few hints of holiday flair, but stash the rest in the basement for now.

If you start to miss your Santa figurines, just remember that with a little luck, you’ll be celebrating next year’s holidays in a new home. And you can decorate that place any way you please. (HGTV article via 13 Home Staging Secrets | Real Estate Tips | HGTV )

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