Kim Kardashian has always gone a bit outside the box when it comes to her Christmas gift-wrapping. Back in 2019, she swathed her entire family's presents in nude-colored velvet fabric in lieu of traditional paper, and while this year's wrap job wasn't as extreme, it was still over-the-top, nonetheless.
On Friday, the reality star shared a peek at a pile of presents under one of her many Christmas trees wrapped in all-white SKIMS T-shirts that retail for $48 a piece. "I just wanted to show you guys that I used Skims cotton fabric for my wrapping this year, and I'm gonna re-use it," she said on a video posted to her Instagram Story.
“When everyone opens it, I’m gonna take the fabric and reuse it on stuff that I make for my family. So I thought it was a really fun, cool way to just have something that you can re-use over and over again," she continued, adding: "I love how much this turned out."
Later, Kim gave a full tour of her Hidden Hills mansion decorated for Christmas with a video reel captioned: "a little bit of my holiday decor this year 🤍🎄." The clip showed her bathroom filled with dozens Christmas trees, her outdoor lights, and, of course, her SKIMS-wrapped presents.
Clearly, Kim was going for winter wonderland theme with her all-white, snow-flocked decorations, but not everyone was a fan. "It still looks like a hospital/mental institution though. Just with lights and trees," wrote one critic, while another commented, "This is the coldest Christmas I’ve ever seen."
A third questioned, "Kim, why don't we like color honey....?"
Christmastime or not, Kim's home has sparked backlash in the past for its minimalist decor. Even her daughter, 10-year-old North, has roasted her for her design style. "Every time I get into some kind of disagreement with my daughter North, she thinks this is a dig to me: She'll say, 'Your house is so ugly, it's all white! Who lives like this?'" Kim said during an appearance on The Ellen DeGenres Show in 2021. "She just thinks it, like, gets to me, and it is kind of mean because I like my house."