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Burnt Orange Christmas Tree Ideas That’ll Make Your Holiday Decor Absolutely Stunning
Contents
- Burnt Orange Christmas Tree Ideas That’ll Make Your Holiday Decor Absolutely Stunning
- Why Burnt Orange Is the Color Your Christmas Tree Needs
- The Foundation: Choosing Your Burnt Orange Ornaments
- Color Combinations That Actually Work
- Ornament Placement Strategy (Because Chaos Isn’t a Design Plan)
- Beyond Ornaments: Completing the Look
Burnt orange Christmas tree decorations are having a moment, and I’m here to tell you why this warm, sophisticated color might be exactly what your holiday decor has been missing.
Look, I get it. You’ve probably decorated a million Christmas trees with the same old red and green combo. You’re scrolling through Pinterest at 11 PM wondering how to make your tree look different this year without going full-on crazy.
I’ve been there too.
Why Burnt Orange Is the Color Your Christmas Tree Needs
Here’s the thing about burnt orange: it’s warm without being aggressive, sophisticated without being stuffy, and festive without screaming “I raided the clearance aisle in 2003.”
When I first experimented with burnt orange on my tree three years ago, my mother-in-law raised an eyebrow. By the end of Christmas dinner, she was asking where I got my ornaments.
That’s the power of this color.
The Foundation: Choosing Your Burnt Orange Ornaments
Let’s start with the basics. You need ornaments, obviously.
But not just any ornaments.
Glass Ornaments for That Classic Shine
Glass ball ornaments in burnt orange are your foundation. They catch the light beautifully. They photograph like a dream. They make your tree look expensive even if you’re decorating on a Target budget.
I layer three different finishes:
- Glossy: For maximum light reflection
- Matte: For depth and visual interest
- Mercury glass: For that vintage, slightly weathered look
Velvet and Flocked Options for Texture
Here’s where things get interesting.
Velvet flocked ornaments add a luxurious texture that glass alone can’t achieve. They’re also shatterproof, which matters if you have kids, cats, or clumsy relatives (or all three).
The velvet finish absorbs light differently than glass. This creates visual layers that make your tree look professionally designed rather than just “decorated.”
Color Combinations That Actually Work
Burnt orange doesn’t live in isolation. You need supporting colors.
The Earthy Palette: Burnt Orange + Green
This combination feels organic and grounded. Think autumn transitioning into winter.
I use:
- Deep forest green ornaments
- Burnt orange as the dominant color
- Natural wood elements like wooden bead garland
- Touches of cream or ivory
The green and orange combo isn’t your grandmother’s Christmas. It’s earthier, more botanical, more “I shop at boutiques and drink oat milk lattes.”
The Metallic Touch: Adding Gold and Copper
Metallics make burnt orange sing.
I’m talking:
- Copper wire lights instead of traditional gold
- Gold ornaments as accent pieces (not as the main event)
- Rose gold ribbon
- Bronze jingle bells
The warm metallic tones amplify the richness of burnt orange without competing with it.
The Neutral Approach: Burnt Orange + Cream + Natural Wood
This is my personal favorite. It’s sophisticated, calming, and doesn’t assault your eyeballs.
Start with burnt orange as your color anchor. Add cream or ivory ornaments (about 30% of your total). Incorporate natural elements like dried orange slices, cinnamon sticks, and pinecones. Finish with burlap or linen ribbon.
It’s like if a Scandinavian minimalist and a cozy autumn afternoon had a baby.
Ornament Placement Strategy (Because Chaos Isn’t a Design Plan)
Let me save you from the biggest mistake people make: random ornament placement.
Your eye needs a journey. Your tree needs depth.
The Three-Layer Approach
Back layer (closest to trunk): Place your largest burnt orange ornaments here. Yes, even though people barely see them. They create depth and fill visual gaps.
Middle layer: This is prime real estate. Mix your burnt orange glass balls with velvet pieces. Vary the sizes. Create little clusters rather than spacing everything evenly.
Outer layer: Your smallest, most detailed ornaments go here. This is where special pieces get noticed. This is where your personality shows.
The Triangle Trick
Professional decorators use this technique. Place similar ornaments in triangular patterns across the tree.
Not obvious triangles. Subtle ones.
Your eye will follow these patterns naturally, creating visual harmony without you consciously noticing why the tree looks “right.”
Beyond Ornaments: Completing the Look
Ornaments alone don’t make a tree.
Ribbon and Garland
Forget those tight, structured ribbon spirals. They look dated.
Instead, weave ribbon loosely through the branches. Let it cascade and drape naturally. Use sheer burnt orange ribbon mixed with burlap for texture contrast.
Lighting Matters More Than You Think
Warm white lights are non-negotiable with burnt orange. Cool white lights will make your carefully chosen color palette look muddy and confused.
I use double the amount of lights I think I need. Then I add a few more strands.
The result? Magical.
The Tree Topper Decision
Your burnt orange tree doesn’t need a traditional star or angel.












