Seasonal & Holidays

These Are Some Of The Best Holiday Lights Displays Across CT As Picked By You

Patch asked readers in Connecticut to send in photos of their favorite neighborhood displays, and you did not disappoint.

In Connecticut, we've got this end-of-year holiday house lighting thing down to an art *​and* ​a science.
In Connecticut, we've got this end-of-year holiday house lighting thing down to an art *​and* ​a science. (Militza Rosa)

CONNECTICUT — For thousands of years, humans have beaten back the longest and darkest nights of the year by lighting our own fires. For most of that time, we used candles, or bonfires.

In 2024, however you may celebrate the holidays around the winter solstice, one thing is certain: the annual ritual now involves a lot of electricity.

In Connecticut, we've got this end-of-year holiday house lighting thing down to an art and a science. Patch asked readers to send in photos of their favorite neighborhood displays, and you did not disappoint.

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Here's 104 Chimney Hill Road in Wallingford. Now, you may have a cool display of inflatables in your front yard, but is it Snowman-With-A-Candy-Cane-Sax cool? We'll guess, "no."

Credit: Chris Jakubiec

Another neat achievement in holiday light design: 1801 Whitney Avenue in the Spring Glen section of Hamden looks just as good unlit during the day…

Find out what's happening in Across Connecticutfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Credit: Debra Browne

…as it does lit up at night — maybe even better:

Credit: Debra Browne

The family at 55 Sugar Hill Road in North Haven had a lot of space to fill. Now their driveway is tricked out like a runway at Bradley — very convenient for the reindeer nearby about to take off:

Credit: "Diana"
The residents of 22 Bryant Place in Stratford have figured out how to light up the garage door without getting the wires tangled or bulbs busted every time it opens: Use colored lasers!
Credit: Maurice Scioletti

Igor Drugov also put lasers to good work on 14 Hollow Drive in Brookfield, building upon his celebrated work from last year:

Credit: Igor Drugov

The lights on this house at 17 Sherwood Circle in Manchester extend to the detached garage:

Credit: Patty Files

The extra touches in this already over-the-top display at 74 Nutmeg Hill Road in Hamden include "Naughty" and "Nice" lists with the names of the children and grandchildren of the residents of the neighborhood:

Credit: Robert Percopo

It's a smaller footprint, as Connecticut Holiday Lights Tour homes go, but 17 Pasco Street in Meriden still packs a wallop:

Credit: Travis Eairheart

We're not sure what the homeowners used to get that sparkly ground effect at 90 Milici Circle in Meriden — fairy dust? flying reindeer poop? Still, Fido appears unimpressed.

Credit: Joseph Mansi

For Tor Blackstad and his neighbors on Wilbar Avenue in Milford, decorating the house with holiday lights is not a solo quest, but an adventure best shared:

Credit: Tor Blackstad

It's not true that every time the family at 154 Stagecoach Circle in Milford turns on their display, the lights dim throughout the rest of the neighborhood. Really, it's not…

Credit: M.Pelleg

At 84 Ledge Road in New London, it may seem like it's just a short walk for the three wise men from Santa's Castle to Christ's manager in Bethlehem, but that's just a trick of the lights…

Credit: Militza Rosa

When it comes to the holiday lights display at 7 Bernardino Ave in Enfield, it's the quirky bits that fascinate: The reflection off the basketball back board… the snowbunny… the mailbox…

Credit: Debbie Sapoznik

Who says you have to just light up the front of the house during the holidays? The family at 29 Alden Drive in Guilford obviously gets plenty of use out of their backyard fire pit during the cold months, so that's where most of the lighting love went.

Credit: Sharon Pomeroy

So what's your local municipality do to call back the sun, string a couple of electric snowflakes together outside Town Hall and call it a season? Then you don't live in Guilford, where civic pride borders on being a contact sport during the holidays. Guilford Parks & Rec Director Pamela Gery told Patch, "We think our lights at the Guilford Community Center are GORGEOUS this year!!" And we'd have to agree:

Credit: Pamela Gery

The problem with most municipal holiday displays is that politics will prevent them from including Santa in a helicopter, Olaf the Snowman, or even the Baby Jesus. The residents of 157 Bennett Street in Fairfield were not so constrained:

Credit: Robert Hansen

And if there's no Olaf, you can be certain there are no sharks, or Baby Yoda. That'd be a non-starter for the folks living at 94 Seaside Avenue in Milford:

Credit: Robert Hansen

It's clear that when it comes to holiday house lights in Connecticut, white and gold are the new red and green. We received some absolutely stunning photographs of displays that didn't just lean into monochrome, but embraced it.

167 Sturges Ridge Rd. Wilton:

Credit: Tara McLaughlin

7 Evelyn Drive, Shelton:

Credit: Diana Lia

Tide Mill Terrace, Fairfield:

Credit: Joseph Bogardus

53 Sunflower Avenue, Stratford:

Credit: Joseph Cusano

Is it just the camera angle, but are the dog and the Grinch in the last row really taller than the house at 80 Rolling Meadow Road in Madison?

Credit: Nichole Boucino

The Patch reader who submitted the photo of the display at 25 Peddler Drive in Windsor described it as "awesome," and it's tough to argue:

Credit: Wendy Bailey

There's a time and place for Griswoldian excess, and a time for the poetic minimalism of a tree in a canoe. This one is anchored in Palmer Cover near The Fisherman at Long Point in Groton.

Credit: Rush Hambleton

Happy Holidays from Connecticut Patch!

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