Christmas Trees Guide

Miniature Christmas Tree Section




Miniature Christmas Tree Navigation


|

Merry Christmas Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
History Of The Christmas Tree |
Mail Order Christmas Tree |
Christmas Tree And Lights |
Christmas Tree Storage |
Rockin Around The Christmas Tree |
Christmas Tree Seedlings |
Singing Christmas Tree |
Homemade Christmas Tree Ornaments |
Christmas Tree Artificial |
Christmas Tree Decorations |
Pink Christmas Tree |
Christmas Tree |
Christmas Tree Stand |
The Christmas Tree Shoppes |
Christmas Tree Star Toppers |

List of Christmas-Trees Articles
List of Christmas-Trees Links


Miniature Christmas Tree Best seller

Buy it Now!



Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Christmas-Trees
Email:
First Name:


Main Miniature Christmas Tree sponsors

Miniature Christmas Tree
 

Latest Miniature Christmas Tree link added

...

Submit your link on Miniature Christmas Tree!



 

Welcome to Christmas Trees Guide

   
 
 

Miniature Christmas Tree Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Miniature Christmas Tree. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

Christmas Tree Lights

from:

Everyone likes to see a decorated and brightly lit tree in someone’s window. Christmas happens in the middle of winter and so people like the brightness of Christmas tree lights. Christmas tree lights stem from an old pagan tradition called the festival of lights. What we know as Christmas tree lights are strands of small electric lights that we wind around the branches of the tree. Before the invention of electricity people used candles to light up their trees. The first set of electric Christmas tree lights were invented in New York in 1882. By 1900 businesses across America had Christmas tree lights twinkling in their windows-but they were too expensive for most people and it was 1930 before they really started to take over from candles.

The electric Christmas tree lights had bulbs the size of walnuts; but these became smaller over time until we got the tiny things that we have today. Christmas tree lights were first used outside in San Diego in 1904. Some cities argue about this claiming that they were the first to decorate outdoor evergreen trees with Christmas tree lights-a town called McAdenville in North Carolina, actually made the claim as late as 1956. Certainly ordinary households did not adopt the practice of putting lights outside until the mid nineteen fifties.

After a time Christmas tree lights were not restricted to Christmas trees. Shops had them adorning the edges of their windows, and people soon began to adopt this idea. You will also find the lights around mirrors in people’s houses and sometimes adorning mantelpieces. Some cities have illumination ceremonies and strings of lights will be hung vertically from skyscraper buildings.

Nowadays there are different types of Christmas tree lights. There are incandescent bulbs and battery powered lights. You can now buy artificial trees that have fibre optic lights that come with them. Christmas tree lights come in sets of different sizes; depending on the type of bulb used. Larger ones come in sets of twenty five and sets of incandescent mini-lights can be anything between fifty and a hundred lights on the string. The battery powered lights come in much smaller sets, usually ten to twelve at a time.

In the beginning the Christmas tree light bulbs were often shaped and painted like glass ornaments. Nowadays this type of light can only be obtained from specialist stores or over the internet. Later designs, particularly the mini-set lights sometimes came with attached plastic or glass ornaments. Mini-lights may also have ornaments and sometimes more than one light is attached to an ornament. In the United States it is quite common to see Christmas tree lights used on holidays other than Christmas-typically Halloween. Strings of clear white lights are also used for lighting up patios. Sometimes, seeing the lights at all different times tends to take away some of the magic of Christmas that the lights used to represent.

487 words
??

??

??

??

1




Other Miniature Christmas Tree related Articles

33 Christmas Tree Skirts
32 Christmas Tree Shop
36 Christmas Tree Decorations
31 Christmas Tree
34 Christmas Tree Ornaments

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

Miniature Christmas Tree News

Nickelback still brash at Omaha show - Omaha World-Herald


Nickelback still brash at Omaha show
Omaha World-Herald
Fans dug Nickelback's 90-minute, over-the-top, flame-filled, jet-engine-loud, lit-up-like-a-Christmas-tree concert. The crowd was mostly young folks, many in groups including many families and women on a ladies' night out. The band loved the crowd's ...

and more »

Read more...


Asparagus: A veggie for all ages - The Herald-Mail


Asparagus: A veggie for all ages
The Herald-Mail
Asparagus stalks are the fresh shoots of a plant that, when full grown, resembles a lacy Christmas tree with red berries. Full-grown asparagus is woody and unpalatable, but young stalks, harvested when no more than 10 inches tall, are delicate and mild ...

Read more...


Cirrus (CRUS) Growth Tied to Apple iPhone, iPad - Cabot Wealth Advisory


Cirrus (CRUS) Growth Tied to Apple iPhone, iPad
Cabot Wealth Advisory
So it's no wonder the charts we follow are lit up like a Christmas tree, with all three of our indicators extremely bullish! This is why we're expecting 30% to 50% gains from virtually each of this week's Top Ten trades! Most traders will miss the ...

and more »

Read more...


Poor kids to benefit from race day - Citizen


Poor kids to benefit from race day
Citizen
MORE than 1 000 underprivileged children from a variety of homes across Johannesburg are set to benefit from the annual Phumelela Christmas Tree race day at Turffontein later this year. It is part of Phumelela's commitment to community projects which ...

Read more...


Pets are just fine -- for other people - Roanoke Times


Roanoke Times

Pets are just fine -- for other people
Roanoke Times
Such as the night when he climbed a fully decorated Christmas tree, upsetting its delicate balance, and brought it crashing to the living room floor. He was a mean and ornery cat, worth neither the money nor the grief. My tears were not for him.

Read more...