Christmastime in the City
By Chuck Fischer
A few years after I moved to New York City as a young mid-western college grad, I invited my family to visit me at Christmas time. I couldn't wait to show them how my newly adopted hometown lived by the same holiday mantra my family did:
"Decorate BigDecorate BrightDecorate Bold."
As if on cue, a light snow started falling as my two sisters and their families, and
my mother and I piled in to two checker cabs we hailed outside my apartment. Destination:
Grand Army Plaza -- Fifth Avenue at Central Park South.
As the liveried doorman opened that taxi door for us outside the fairy-tale-castle
Plaza Hotel, the sights and sounds of Christmas in New York came flooding in. Horns
were honking, stoplights were blinking bright red, yellow and green and horse drawn
carriages were lined up as if waiting for royalty. As we strolled down Fifth Avenue
from the Plaza, the sidewalks were filled with shoppers rushing in and out of stores,
carrying packages that were as beautifully decorated as the shop windows all around
us, and chestnuts were being roasted
not on open fires, but in vendor's carts on
nearly every corner we passed.
Arriving at Fiftieth Street and Fifth Avenue, I took hold of my young nieces'
mitten-covered hands, and asked them to close their eyes until I gave them a signal.
We could hear a brass band playing "Hark the Herald Angels Sing" as we turned the
corner in to the Channel Gardens at Rockefeller Center.
"Three, two, one, open your eyes!"
My nieces started jumping up and down and squealing with delight as they pulled
me toward the shimmering lights of the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree, and at
that moment I felt pure joy.
Every December, for over twenty years, I take that same walk down Fifth Avenue.
Without fail, when I turn into the Channel Gardens and see the towering tree framed
by rows of trumpeting angels I am instantly filled with the spirit of Christmas in
New York.
I hope that whenever you open this book featuring my hometown's best-loved holiday
traditions you'll recall, or experience for the first time, the excitement and wonder
of New York City at Christmastime.
**Chuck Fischer is a New York City artist whose paintings hang in some of the finest
residences in the world. Many of his designs are in the permanent collection of the
Cooper-Hewitt Museum. His latest book pop-up book is
Christmas in New York. He is also the author of two previous pop-up books, The White House
and Great American Houses and Gardens.