Joanna Gaines and her Christmas home decor.Photo:joannagaines/Instagram (2)

joannagaines/Instagram (2)
Joanna Gainesis sharing the Christmas spirit!
" ‘Twas the night before Christmas," she wrote in the caption.
Joanna Gaines shows off her Christmas decor at home.joannagaines/Instagram

joannagaines/Instagram
Gaines begins her video with a pan of the outside of her house, the roof of which is neatly decorated with white string lights. The clip also shows Christmas trees and a wreath lining the path to the door.

She followed the outdoor clip with videos of the holiday decor inside her house, which included an abundance of wintery cabins, greenery along the banister of her staircase, and a checkerboard with two deer.
Gaines hung stockings on her brick fireplace, decorated with a bundle of greenery and a garland of dried orange slices in Gaines’ videos.
The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now!

The video also shows other decorative items, such as Gaines' DIY red and green gingham wall divider, a Christmas tree covered in elegant mushroom ornaments, and wreath-adorned several doors.
The Magnolia co-founder also shared a video of her holiday eats, including a clip with a countertop covered in flour, a bowl with rising dough, and a cake stand covered with macaroons.
Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Gaines recently spoke with PEOPLEin an exclusive interviewabout hernew design class for MasterClass, in which she said her family’s holiday traditions are changing now that her kids are going off to college.
She and her husbandChip Gaines, 50, have five children: sons Drake, 19, Duke, 16, and Crew, 6, and daughters Ella, 18, and Emmie, 14.
Joanna Gaines and Chip Gaines pose in the press room during night one of the Television Academy’s 2022 Creative Arts Emmy Awards at the Microsoft Theater on Saturday, Sept. 3, 2022, in Los Angeles.Dan Steinberg/Invision for the Television Academy/AP

Dan Steinberg/Invision for the Television Academy/AP
“As they’re getting older, Christmas day looks slower than it used to,” Gaines told PEOPLE. “We stay in our pajamas all day long, and someone usually pulls out a puzzle or board game that we all gather around.”
TheFixer Upperco-host added that the Christmas holiday tends to be more “spontaneous” these days. “We make hot cocoa and drive around town to look at lights with Christmas music playing in the background,” she said.
However, Gaines said her family’s holiday still revolves “around food.”
“The kids know that Christmas morning means mama’s cinnamon rolls and hash brown casserole,” she shared.
source: people.com