With its magical atmosphere and shining lights, Christmas brings us warm and fuzzy feelings. But Christmas comes and goes in the blink of an eye. These Christmas tree shaped design pieces have been created by product designers in the hope that we can live our everyday like a joyful Christmas.
If you observe X-mas Treet by Korean designer Minji Jung, you will be able to come with multiple creative uses.
This ceramic set is comprised of several stacked pieces that can be used in a variety of ways, including decorations, candle holders, and many more – not only during the holiday season but all year long.
The porcelain pieces are designed to serve as candle holders, espresso cups, sauce plates or dipping bowls, cup covers that perfectly fit whatever it is, and of course as festive decoration.
Green Shelf by Koike Atshushi of the Thai brand manufacturer and exporter of outdoor furniture Deesawat is actually a planter that enables you to “borrow Christmas tree” rather than cut it for decoration during the season.
While most Christmas trees only serve during the holidays without any other function, this ingenuous product, which is manufactured using teakwood (Deesawat is known for) and ceramics, serves as an interior/exterior decorative shelf for the rest of the year.
Dreidel is a traditional game of chance, and one of the most well-known symbols of the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah played with a four-sided spinning top. Israeli-born, New York based designer Or Leviteh has created a variant of this ornamental toy that captures the spirit of both Hanukkah and Christmas – the two holidays that are celebrated around the same time of the year.
The patented design celebrates Christmas when upright and Hanukkah when spinning upside down. Like traditional Jewish dreidels, each side of the top features a single letter of the Hebrew alphabet: ‘nun’, ‘gimel’, ‘hey’, and‘shin’, which together form an acronym form a Hebrew phrase that means “A Great Miracle Happened There,” ”there” being the land of Israel. In Christmas Tree driedel, these letters are delineated by the ornamental lights of the tree.