Baby’s First Christmas Ideas

By Amy Trowbridge-Yates and Hallmark staff on September 16th, 2022
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Baby’s first Christmas means more fun, more cuteness, more joy…and definitely more wonder as you see the holiday season through their eyes!

When I was a new mom, I wanted to do all the post-worthy moments. I studied Pinterest and ordered 77 things online. I pored over personalized Christmas cards and wanted to perfectly capture her cuteness.

What happened, in actuality, was more real-life than fairy-tale perfection. In an effort to create a photo I’d seen, I dressed her in a tiny Santa suit, wrapped her in lights and sat her in front of a decorated fireplace. When I stepped back to get the perfect shot, she promptly fell over and bonked her head (she was fine but bawled).

Then I worried all night about the bump on her head AND whether she might’ve ingested anything dangerous when chewing on the lights. #FirstTimeMom

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Learn from me and the moms who’ve come before

Focus on memories instead of perfection. Skip the staged stuff and be present for the experience and excitement. Whether you go all in or keep it simple, keep memories, traditions and fun at the forefront. Nothing needs to be picture-perfect to be sweet and memorable.

When you ask many parents how they celebrated their baby’s first Christmas, they’re likely to say something like: “Things were so crazy we didn’t do much!”

Well, yeah.

Adding a baby to the mix means accepting the unexpected. And cherishing those perfectly imperfect moments that come when you’re a mix of excited and sleep-deprived, the baby is being a baby and everything is a first.

So here are some tips for relaxing and relishing (instead of stressing!) in the joy of a baby’s first Christmas.

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Add alllll the cuteness

You’ve got some darling holiday swag coming your way. (Pro tip: Grandparents love to buy “baby’s first” gear, so let them.) Here’s how to make the most of it.

Christmas cards

Nothing says, “EVERYTHING IS DIFFERENT THIS YEAR” like another name and face on your Christmas card.

Put Baby’s sweet face front and centre. To get the adorable result you’re hoping for, check out these tips from Hallmark photographers—and pay special attention to the “10 tips for getting great baby Christmas pictures.”

Or simply use a cute snap from your phone that captures Baby’s everyday adorableness. Either way, your card will showcase the new “gift” in the family this year.

Stockings

It’s time to hang another stocking! Go matching or uniquely yours (bonus points if parents have theirs from childhood). Add one for Baby, even if it’s mostly filled with rash cream and teethers. Check out these cute stocking-stuffers that Baby’s sure to love and/or chew on:

  • Plush rattles
  • Twirly Teacup Playful Penguins Musical Plush With Motion
  • Better Together Plush

Sweet memory-makers

Start filling the scrapbooks and shoe boxes with keepsakes now. They grow so fast, so be sure to capture their teeny-ness with hand-print art (I’m a fan of the classic painted hand-print reindeer). For giftable hand-prints, we recommend:

  • Bless This Mess Tea Towel Hand-print Kit
  • These Hands Hold My Heart Tea Towel Hand-print Kit
  • Our Family Hand-print Picture Frame Kit
  • Blessed Baby Hand-print and Footprint Picture Frame Kit
  • Baby Hand-print Frame Kit
  • And for the baseball fan, a Baseball Hand-print Kit

Snuggle-wear

Bundle up in matching pajamas, slippers and other cute props. Got pets? Don’t leave them out. This is your time to set the bar for adorable (or ridiculous!) for years to come. Bonus: Babies in cute holiday gear (or families in matching holiday gear!) make for instant photo ops. Here’s some cuteness to get you started:

  • Demdaco Baby’s First Bundle with a reindeer headband
  • Disney Baby Winnie the Pooh Rattle and Jumper Set
  • Christmas-themed onesies or sleepers

Time for new traditions

Baby’s first Christmas is the perfect time to start family traditions that last a lifetime! My kids read the same books every year (and we only pull them out at Christmas, to keep them “special”), take turns doing a Christmas countdown, set up the nativity and put out milk and cookies for Santa. Here are a few things we love:

  • Christmas kids books
  • Advent calendars
  • Anything Santa related
  • Kids nativity sets
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Pick out the tree

Babies don’t have opinions on size and fluffiness (yet) but choosing a tree is a big-time family event—so definitely include the littlest member. And remember, you’ve got options:

  • Live trees. Bundle up and pick out an evergreen from a cut-your-own farm, a local organization’s tree sale or an area store. Bonus: Tree farms make super-cute backdrops for casual Christmas pics!
  • Artificial trees. Or release your vintage tree from the attic in all its sparkly silver foil splendour.
  • Tiny trees. Get a teeny tree (real or artificial) for Baby’s room. Soft Christmas lights are lovely when you’re rocking a little one to sleep, and everything is sweeter when it’s teeny-tiny (like these miniature Keepsake Ornaments).

Whatever you choose, you’ll need it for…

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Baby’s first ornaments

Decorating your tree just got 100% more meaningful (and cute!). Don’t know where to start? We’ve got that covered.

  • Whether you choose a beloved Disney character, a classic “baby” icon, a photo holder or the year, you can’t go wrong with any of these Baby’s First Christmas Keepsake Ornaments.
  • Celebrate the newest member with Hallmark Keepsake Family Ornaments (with options for grandparents, too).
  • Remember this first year with Keepsake Ornaments based on characters from favourite bedtime stories or the movies you streamed during late-night feedings. Or, if you have older kiddos, choose characters from the movie they watched 900 times this year.
  • DIY some ornaments for your tree or to give as gifts. Depending on how serious you want to get (and whether or not you want to dig out the hot glue!), there are tons of ideas online to help you create your own. These were a big hit in our house.
  • Pick up ornaments when you travel or go to events as a family. Be sure to commemorate “Baby’s first trip” on the tree!

First Christmas for older kids

For many families, the “new addition” isn’t a baby, but an older child (via foster or adoption). Establishing traditions, creating memories and purchasing keepsakes is just as important no matter the child’s age.

Choose traditions and ornaments that feel special and capture the uniqueness of that year. These can become memorable treasures for years to come and for little ones to hang on their own families’ trees one day.

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Bring your family together

You know who loves babies? Grandparents. (And aunts, uncles, cousins…) Here’s what to consider when it comes to making the rounds during Baby’s first Christmas.

  • Travel plans. So will your loved ones drop by for a visit and a cuddle? Or will you bundle up and make the rounds to see them? Whatever you choose, do what feels right to you. Baby’s first Christmas should be special and fun, not hurried and stressful. If you’re all staying home in jammies and sleepers, so be it!
  • Homebodies. There’s no better excuse to move Christmas to your house than a new baby. If you’ve been hoping to make your home the place…this is your moment. (Pro tip: “I don’t want to mess up her sleep schedule” is a totally acceptable excuse to have laid-back, cozy Christmas at home.)
  • Over the river… Sometimes, of course, the most meaningful memories are made in other people’s homes. The holidays are when you learn that grandparents make the best babysitters and cousins make the best friends. Bonus: They can hold Baby while you take a quick snooze!
  • Family traditions. The calendar fills up fast with family gatherings. Will you go to a candlelight service or midnight Mass with your parents? Say Hanukkah blessings with in-laws? Curl up on the sofa for college bowl games? Check out lights from the warmth of your SUV? Whatever you do, put family and fun first…let anything that feels like too much work be put off for when Baby is older. #SayNoToMomGuilt

Keep it simple

The holiday season has a lot going on even without a new baby in the mix. Try hard not to overextend yourself and stay more chill than frosty (I know, easier said than done!). Put a little “seasonal self-care” into action:

  • Get a sitter and have a date night of shopping and dinner.
  • Do all online shopping and never leave your jammies or couch.
  • Order all pre-made foods and baked goods and skip the dishes.
  • Forgo a few parties or gatherings for a night of Christmas movies and pizza.
  • Whatever calms you at Christmastime, do just that.

After all, “silent nights” are few and far between when you have a baby, so make it a season of peace any way you can!

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All the “Baby’s First” holiday fun

You might find yourself with new “must-dos” this year! These are the “big ones” you might want to consider adding to your list.

  • Meet the big guy. Let’s start with the visit to Santa and the resulting angelic (or red-faced-screaming) snapshot. And don’t stress over the outfit: Fancy or cozy (think Christmas-y sleeper) is totally fine!
  • Sweet stuff. Consider cookie-making—even if Baby’s whole job is to gleefully gum a sugar cookie until face and hands are covered in sprinkles. Feel free to buy pre-made cookies and icing in a can. I won’t tell.
  • Put a bow on it. Your little one might “help” with the gift wrapping—in which case we strongly suggest taking some super-silly pics. (Tip: a big piece of low-tack tape in an older baby’s hands will buy you tons of time!)
  • Snow day. If you live in an area that gets flurries, take a quick sled or snow angel break! Get a picture of your well-bundled baby (what you can see of them, anyway), then let them at it to taste and feel the flakes! (Pro tip: Set your expectations low. Frigid fun is fleeting—just enjoy this quick “first!”)
  • Love out loud. Nothing says Christmas like classic tales and carols. Family story times and sing-alongs (no talent required!) are as traditional and fun as Santa himself. Get Baby babbling with some plush musical friends.

Of course, on Baby’s first Christmas, the memory-making is mostly for the parents. But every family needs sweet traditions that are unique reminders of who they are and where they’ve been. You’ll always remember your baby’s first Christmas: Your heart will recall their eyes seeing sparkling lights for the first time, their toothless grin at a dancing Rudolph or the warm weight of a sweet baby in a Santa sleeper on your chest.

And I’ll let you in on a little secret…every year, it gets better and sweeter.