The holidays tend to spark a lot of nostalgia. Whether watching a favorite holiday movie, making a family recipe, or decorating the treeâmany of us have core holiday memories captured and held closeâand not saved in our phoneâs camera roll. In that vein, we wanted to celebrate some of the special ’90s holiday traditions many of us probably remember from our own childhoods, before anyone felt pulled to create Insta-worthy decorations or capture TikTok-worthy moments. So we’re taking it back to simpler times and celebrating the decade that gave us Kevin McCallister and Mariah Careyâs All I Want for Christmas is You. Here, our editors are sharing some of their favorite childhood ’90s holiday traditions.
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Using Colorful Holiday Decor
âI love an aesthetic Christmas when it comes to my holiday decor. I maintain a color scheme and curate my Christmas decorations to fit with my homeâs existing style. But I canât give up one tradition from my own childhood, even though it doesnât fit my aestheticâcolorful Christmas stockings hand-knit by my mom. I still have my bright green and red stocking with a giant Santa face my mom made for me when I was born. She also knitted one for my husband when we got married and for each of my kids. The stockings donât match any of my holiday decorâor each otherâbut they remind me of being a kid at Christmas, so weâll continue to hang them up year after year.ââKathy, Editor
Other ways to evoke the colorful ’90s Christmas aesthetic? Use colorful Christmas lights, make your garland out of paper rings or popcorn, and deck the tree with handmade ornaments from your kidsâor have a second tree dedicated to the handmade ornaments if you canât quite go all-in.
Taking a Christmas Lights Drive
âI grew up in one of those neighborhoods that went wild with Christmas lights. They held a contest every year for neighbors to vote on the house with the best decor. One year, the winning house spelled out âBah Humbugâ in their windows. My family never competed, but it was a fun ’90s holiday tradition to drive around the neighborhood and pick out our favorite houses, while listening to Christmas music in my mom’s minivan.ââKathy, Editor
Few ’90s holiday traditions are simpler than a driveâor a walkâto take in the Christmas lights. Many communities have streets known for going all-out on Christmas decorations you can seek outâor you can simply enjoy the lights around your neighborhood.
Plus, because it gets dark so early in the winter, itâs easy to pile the kids into the car before bedtime.
Circling Wishlist Items in a Catalog
Growing up, we might have circled items in the Toys ‘R’ Us or Sears catalog. Today, you can find tons of helpful holiday gift guides to make your holiday shopping easier (shop The Everymom’s here!) but for kids, there’s something special about paging through an actual catalog. With Target, Amazon, and other retailers still sending out paper catalogs, our kids can experience a similar excitement.
Reading Vintage Christmas Books
âIn our household, we have many sacred Christmas traditions, but the one that takes the cake is our annual reading of The Night Before Christmas. On Christmas Eve, Grandpa gathers the grandkids on the couch (we donât fit as well as we used to) and gives us his best dramatic reading in the way only a former elementary school teacher can. It includes anecdotes such as âlaying a finger inside of his noseâ and âtore open the shutters and threw up!… the sashâ and, as any good storytime does, ends with a chorus of âand thatâs the truth!â Not only do we look forward to it every year, but we have pictures that document growing up through the lens of storytimes with Grandpa.”âAbi, Social Media Assistant
Some of today’s favorite “vintage” holiday books came out in the 1980s and 1990s like The Polar Express and Christmas in the Big Woods.
Watching ’90s Holiday Movies
âNothing says ’90s holiday traditions to me like cozying up to watch Kevin McCallister and all his shenanigans across Home Alone 1 and 2. Besides prompting an outrageous amount of laughter, quotables noteworthy enough to pop up all year long (need I say, âBuzz, your girlfriend, woof!â?), and reflections on what makes being a family challenging yet irreplaceably lovable. The movies always sparked activities for us, too. My family loved drawing our own versions of colorful maps of our home like Kevinâsâin case we ever needed to booby trap bad guys, or try to set up our own ambushes (with our parentsâ permission, of course). Surely we can thank some of our adult cleverness and resilience to Kevin McCallister!ââKatherine, Editorial Intern
In addition to Home Alone 1 and 2, the decade also gave us these ’90s Christmas movies you can stream now:
- All I Want for Christmas (1991)
- The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992)
- Miracle on 24th Street (1994)
- The Santa Clause (1994)
- While You Were Sleeping (1995)
- Jingle All the Way (1996)
- The Preacherâs Wife (1996)
Wearing “Ugly” Christmas Sweaters
Moms in the ’80s and ’90s had a few holiday wardrobe staples: denim shirts with holiday embroidery, Christmas sweatshirts with iron-on details, and Christmas sweaters. Although ugly Christmas sweater parties have been around for quite a few years, with the â90s aesthetic back in a big way, it feels like the perfect time to wear them as legitimate wardrobe choices for the holidays.
Whether your dad had a striped “Cosby Sweater” or your mom donned a festive 3D knit Christmas sweater, consider giving their vintage pieces a second run this season. Or if youâre looking to start your holiday wardrobe traditions, there are plenty of festive holiday clothing options out there your kids might end up wearing to throwback parties when they grow up.
Capturing Candid Christmas Morning Videos
âMy mom recently had our family home movies converted to digital copies where we discovered a Christmas clip none of us remembered: My 1-year-old brother getting candy cigarettes in his stocking. It doesnât get much more â90s parenting than that!ââKathy, Editor
If you had a parent who set up the camcorder Christmas morning, you likely have some dusty VHS tapes with priceless moments captured on film too. Take a page out of the ’90s parenting playbook and set your phone on a tripod to capture the candid moments on Christmas morning. They may not be perfectly framed, but youâll get to be more present and you might actually make it into some of the family videos.
Attending the Childrenâs Holiday Concert
âOne of my favorite ’90s holiday traditions growing up was going to church with my family on Christmas Eve. The tiny rural church we attended was as picturesque as can beâa proud white building tucked back between pine trees, always covered by a thick blanket of Wisconsin snow this time of year. As a kid, I especially loved that the church would put on a play each Christmas Eve, and one year I even got cast as a sheep! When I wasn’t donning a lamb costume, it was a fun tradition to get dressed up in our holiday best before returning home and cozying up in our PJs. Though we don’t live near that church anymore, I still have the sweet memories we got to make together way back when.ââBrett, Editorial Assistant
If you celebrate the Christian Christmas tradition, few things are more precious than the annual childrenâs Mass, where you can witness sweet little voices singing Christmas carols or adorable little ones dressed up as angels, stable animals, and (if you saw this adorable viral video) even door holders in a live nativity play.
Embracing Your Familyâs Unique Holiday Traditions
Of course, every family has their own unique traditions that may not be tied to any decade, but still evoke nostalgia. Lean into the ones that are uniquely meaningful to your family. Like these holiday traditions from our editors below:
Christmas Tree Traditions
âGrowing up, my family always went to a Christmas tree farm to select and cut down our own tree. My younger sister and I were obsessed with the 1966 How the Grinch Stole Christmas! TV special and started a family tradition where we all joined hands and sang the âFahwho foraze, dahwho dorazeâ song once we found the right tree (despite us never really knowing the correct lyrics). That tradition still lives on today, even though weâre now adultsâwhen my husband and I put up and decorate our artificial tree, we sing the song to ‘welcome Christmas’ and kick-off the holiday season.ââJulia, Senior Managing Editor
The Christmas PJ Fairy
âFor as long as I can remember, my mom has let us open one singular gift on Christmas Eve: a pajama set from the ‘PJ Fairy.’ Sheâd pick out new sets each year, and theyâre always matching (or at least coordinating). We then wear those pajamas to sleep in on Christmas Eve and keep them on for Christmas morning. Even now that my siblings and I are in our 20s and 30s, we still canât wait to see what pajamas the PJ Fairy brings us on Christmas Eve.ââJess, Commerce Editor
Annual Christmas Competitions
âMy familyâs motto for Christmas has always been: Go big or go home. Itâs a yearly tradition for us to dress up according to a specific theme that we vote on a month in advance (last yearâs theme was Western). And after our potluck style feast, thatâs when my favorite Christmas tradition takes place. We split into teams, create team names, and go head to head in an intense series of minute-to-win-it games fighting for first place. While we have the tendency to get a bit rowdy and competitive, it truly is the highlight of my Christmas each year. Regardless of how old weâve all gotten, this Christmas tradition makes me feel like a little kid again. Plus, after every Christmas Eve, weâre left with tons of photos, videos, and memories that will last us a lifetime.ââGianna, Commerce Intern
Celebrating Dia de los Reyes
âDia de los Reyes is a holiday Puerto Ricans (and other Latin countries) celebrate on January 6. Itâs a more religious observance based on the bible story of the Three Wise Kings who visited baby Jesus after his birth and brought gifts. The night of January 5, kids fill a box with âhayâ to feed the camels of the three kings, store it under their beds, and when they wake up, theyâll have a gift from the three kings. For my kids, we simplify it a lot. We talk to them more about the cultural importance of Three Kings Day by reading kids’ books about the tradition and the island itself. They still fill up a box with grass, but we leave it under the tree, and they wake up to a couple of small gifts. But they know mom and dad did the gifting.ââSteph, Branded Content Editor
New Years Eve Good Luck Traditions
âNew Yearâs Eve is a big holiday for Brazilians. We are very superstitious, so any opportunity for traditions that bring good luck, we takeâincluding wearing white on NYE to usher in peace and wearing new underwear at midnight: the color symbolizes what you wish for in the new year (pink means love, yellow for money, blue for friendship, white for peace), jump over seven waves at midnight, and making an offering to IemanjĂĄ.ââRobi, Editor-in-Chief