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There are plenty of folk out there ready to ‘Bah Humbug’ decorations creeping into stores what seems to be earlier every year, but it’s hard to deny that there is something truly magical about the tradition of the classic storefront window display that marks the start of festive season.

It would be impossible for even the biggest Scrooge not to get caught up in the Christmas cheer of these 11 festive window displays.

 

Myer, Melbourne, Australia

A Winter Wonderland isn’t quite what you’d expect from an Australian Christmas, but it’s exactly what downtown shoppers will be getting when they venture to Myer in Melbourne this year.

For Myer’s 59th Christmas animated window, a team of more than 40 artisans created a 3D adaption of the children’s book Santa Claus and the Three Bears by Maria Modugno.

The group of skilled workers spent 17,000 hours putting together the scene from a range of materials including 200m glitter jazz fabric, 50kg of snow flock and 25kg of sugar glitter.

For the grand unveiling on November 8, Bourke Street Mall was transformed into a little slice of the North Pole as a blanket of ‘snow’ fell from the Myer rooftop.

 

Selfridges, London, UK

Dedicated to some of the most enchanting tales of all time, from the 300 year old Sleeping Beauty right up to 1978’s The Snowman, Selfridges’ 2014 window display honours 25 classic stories by giving them a contemporary, luxurious twist.

Topping things off is the giant ‘Destination Christmas’ centrepiece made from more than 10,000 lights and complete with Selfridges’ own top-hatted and monocled Golden Goose.

Sticking with the storytelling theme, Selfridges’ in-store cinema will be screen several classic tales like Pinocchio and It’s A Wonderful Life over the Christmas period.

 

Macy’s, New York City, USA

Macy’s was the first department store in NYC to introduce holiday window displays when it debuted an animated Christmas window in the early 1870s.

The team at Macy’s spend an entire year planning out each display and the process begins almost immediately after the previous year’s is taken down.

When it comes to installation, it takes the talented team of 10-12 Macy’s display artists, 5 graphic artists, over 20 sculptural artist and builders, animators, carpenters, electricians and music and sound experts 21 days and nights to complete the mammoth task.

This years’ theme, “Santa’s Journey to the Stars”, will be unveiled on November 20. Shoppers will be treated to a display of custom-made planets, handmade elves and toys lit by the twinkle of thousands of lights.

 

La Maison Ogilvy, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Founded in 1866, Montreal’s La Maison Ogilvy started life as a dry-goods store – a far cry from today’s luxury, boutique department store.

Every year since 1947, the store unveils its much loved holiday window. From November 14 until the first week of January the acclaimed “Mill in the Forest” mechanical display returns to enchant shoppers with its dancing ducks and bears, rabbits, screaming monkeys and the ever popular jumping frogs.

And if you’re wondering why the critters look a little extra stylish this year it’s thanks to team at Harricana by Mariouche who created their eco-friendly outfits.

 

Fortnum & Mason, London, UK

As you’d rightly assume, this year’s window at one of London’s finest food and drink stores is full to bursting with Christmas treats.

Fortnum & Mason have been decorating their shop front since the 1880s and 2014 theme harks back even further to the days of the ‘Frost Fayre’ when a frozen-over River Thames would host markets and carnivals.

 

Galeries Lafayette, Paris, France

Things are getting a little topsy turvy at Paris’s iconic Galeries Lafayette this Noel. For 2014, Galeries Lafayette’s iconic 25m tall Christmas tree will be standing on its head!

Suspended from the store’s famous 100 year old Art Nouveau dome, the brilliantly coloured tree will feature a ‘monstrous’ sound and light display every hour set to dazzle an estimated 150,000 visitors every day.

Bringing a good dose of festive mischief to proceedings, Gustave the Monster and his gang of fuzzy buddies are set to star in the store’s animated window display on Boulevard Haussmann.

 

Smith & Caughey’s, Auckland, New Zealand

Smith & Caughey’s, New Zealand’s leading department store, has been a fixture on the Queen Street shopping strip since the 1880s.

Based on the children’s book A Pirate’s Twelve Days of Christmas by Philip Yates and Sebastia Serra, this year’s theme fits perfectly with Auckland’s maritime history and status as the ‘City of Sails’.

12 cannons blasting, nine mermaids singing, six Jolly Rogers, three black cats and a parrot in a palm tree – your little pirates will love it!

 

Bergdorf Goodman, New York City, USA

Art is the name of the season at Bergdorf Goodman this Christmas.

From November 17, window-shoppers will be treated to a celebration of creativity with each of the store’s five main Fifth Avenue windows dedicated to a different art forms; literature, architecture, theatre, painting and music while the 57th Street windows will highlight dance, sculpture and film.

It took Bergdorf Goodman’s team of display artists 11 months to complete the incredibly detailed ‘Inspired’ theme that includes a needlework of 7 million individual stitches, a custom hand‐painted Dolce and Gabbana gown and a 3D sculpture made entirely from paper.

 

Harvey Nichols, Edinburgh, Manchester, Leeds, Birmingham, Bristol, Dublin & London, UK & Ireland

Mannequins transformed into wonderful woodland creatures posed beneath a canopy of Christmas tree branches, metallic acorns and pinecones – enter another world with Harvey Nichols’ “Enchanted Forest”.

Staff worked around the clock to install the immersive display in stores across the UK and Ireland that includes 27,840m of lights and 6,073m of bespoke pipe cleaners (yes, pipe cleaners) that were used to make 67 hand crafted forest creatures.

In addition to the windows, Harvey Nichols’ flagship Knightbridge branch boasts 210 Christmas trees throughout the store.

 

David Jones, Sydney, Australia

Founded in 1838, David Jones is said to be the oldest continuously run department store in the world and has been bringing Christmas cheer to Sydneyside shoppers for 176 years.

This year David Jones commissioned its very own Christmas story, Reindeer’s Christmas Surprise, and the 2014 display is centred on its titled character, the very aptly named, Reindeer.

Showcased over six windows, the display of hand-crafted puppets and animated scenes are the result of six months’ work and over 5000 man-hours.

 

Bloomingdale’s, New York City, USA

The look of Bloomingdale’s 2014 display is being kept tightly under wraps until November 25, but if last year’s travel-inspired theme is anything to go by, it certainly won’t disappoint.

For 2013, onlookers were treated to windows celebrating holiday shopping around the world including China, France, UK, Italy and the world of Bloomingdale’s in New York City.

This year, Bloomingdale’s is set to take things to a whole new level with an interactive offering.

 

Featured image by Harvey Nichols/Stuart Wilson at Getty Images

About the author

Kara SegedinWriter, traveller, Tweeter, blogger and part-time adventurer. A kiwi living in London off to explore the world! I can never travel enough!

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