

Taking the mystery out of RBG holiday lights
I built this site to help folks who are interested in or starting out with animated / RGB holiday lighting.  There’s lots of fragmented information available out on the interweb in various videos and other places, but it can be confusing and/or incomplete.  It feels like a consolidated and simplified source to get going could be valuable to lots of folks.  When I started with this hobby several years ago, it was lots of piecing things together plus lots trial and error and frustration, which causes many to just give up.  This site is my attempt to help others so hopefully they can get up and running more easily.
Not sure where to start?
Choose what best describes your situation:

Starting from scratch: you want the basics without watching 6 hours of YouTube videos
For folks who haven’t yet bought any smart lights (Twinkly, etc) or want to understand what the heck the people in those videos are talking about

Bought Twinkly Lights and want to do more
You bought some Twinkly lights because they are very cool, but want to coordinate them into light shows like you see around the neighborhood or on TV — you want to use them with XLIGHTS!

Bought some “Pixels” and maybe a WLED or other controller, and not sure what to do
Discussion of generic “pixels” and how to control them

Carol of the Bells — December 2025 — approximately 11,000 lights
About Holiday Pixel Zone
As long as I can remember, I always loved the houses that went all out at Christmas with lights and decorations — the ones you would drive around the neighborhood to see. They just make people happy! I always decorated the bushes with lights, but never went all out…until I went down a rabbit hole into the light show hobby.
A few years back, I decided to ditch my “old fashioned” LED Christmas lights that were a mismatch of different brands / shapes that I accumulated as older ones failed. I thought it would be cool to get some “smart lights” that I had seen online and in big box stores — these were Twinkly brand, which really brought the idea of programmable RBG lights (any bulb can be any color) to the regular consumer. So I bought some during an Amazon Prime Day sale and started fooling around with them. They worked great as Twinkly intended with their own app, but I quickly discovered they could be made to do A LOT more if you went outside of the Twinkly ecosystem. For a couple of years my show was 100% Twinkly as I kept buying more of their stuff. Twinkly is great for many things, but there are some limitations if you’ve gone down the rabbit hole of holiday light shows. That led to figuring out generic “pixels” (which is what the pros generally use) and somehow integrating my shows with both Twinkly and Pixels at the same time. Over this time, I’ve figured out a bunch of stuff mostly through reading/watching the internet and trial & error. Hopefully some of the knowledge I’ve earned will help someone on their way to building light shows for everyone to enjoy!