Outdoors Magazine

Merry Red & Green to All!

Posted on the 25 December 2023 by Hollis

Merry Red & Green to All!

Red Baneberry, Actaea rubra, Wyoming.

How did red and green become our Christmas colors? Maybe you're thinking, as I did, "From holly, of course!" But recently I learned otherwise. Though holly has long played a role in winter celebrations, dating back to solstice gatherings of our pagan ancestors, it wasn't until 1931 that red and green became THE colors of Christmas. No longer could Santa wear blue, purple or whatever. He had to dress in red, specifically Coca-Cola red.

Merry Red & Green to All!

Haddon Sundblom's 1931 Santa in Coca-Cola red (Miel Van Opstal, Flickr)

This wasn't the first time Coca-Cola hired an artist to create a Santa Claus. But this particular one "solidified in our collective imagination the red of Santa's robes [which matched the Coke logo] with the green of fir trees and holly and poinsettia that we already had in our minds." (More here.)

I'm fully part of that collective imagination—red and green are my Christmas colors.

Merry Red & Green to All!

Big Leaf Maple, Acer macrophyllum, California.

Merry Red & Green to All!

Sugar Maple, Acer saccharum, Sica Hollow, South Dakota.

Merry Red & Green to All!

Paintbrush parasitic on Sagebrush, Wyoming.

Merry Red & Green to All!

Cobra Lily, Chasmanthe, from Ronn in California.

Merry Red & Green to All!

Planta Claus brings lots of carbs and oxygen ... to those who've been good of course.

Merry Red & Green to All!

See you next year! Hollis & Emmie



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