Canadian Thanksgiving lands in October — and in Alberta, that means your dinner guests arrive in the dark. By the second week of October, Calgary's sun is down before 7pm and falling fast. Fall is the season your outdoor lighting stops being decoration and starts earning its keep.

Here's the good news: if you have permanent LED lighting, fall might be the best-looking season of your whole year. Harvest colours — amber, burnt orange, warm gold, deep red — flatter every style of home, photograph beautifully, and make a cold October evening feel like a lit fireplace from the street.

No ladders. No cords. No bin of orange lights in the garage. Just a saved scene called "Fall" and one tap.

Canadian Thanksgiving Timing Thanksgiving falls on the second Monday of October — October 12 in 2026. Most hosting happens across the long weekend, with dinner guests typically arriving between 4 and 6pm. In Calgary, that's right around sunset. Your house makes its first impression in the dark.

The harvest colour recipes

Fall lighting lives and dies on colour temperature. The palette is narrow — everything warm, nothing cool — but within it there's real range. These are the four recipes we set up most often:

1. Amber & Warm Gold — The Classic Fall Glow

Amber #FFB300 Warm Gold #E8A33D

The definitive fall look. Alternating amber and warm gold across the full roofline reads as one continuous band of warm light with just enough variation to feel intentional. It's welcoming rather than showy — the lighting equivalent of a wreath on the door. Works from the first week of September straight through to Halloween.

App: Alternate → Amber (#FFB300) / Warm Gold (#E8A33D) → Static → Brightness: 70%

2. Burnt Orange & Deep Red — The Thanksgiving Statement

Burnt Orange #CC5500 Deep Red #990000

Richer, deeper, unmistakably autumn. Burnt orange carries the maple-leaf warmth while deep red adds the depth that makes the combination read as harvest rather than Halloween. This is the scene for Thanksgiving weekend itself — bold enough to notice from down the block, warm enough to feel like dinner is waiting inside.

App: Alternate → Burnt Orange (#CC5500) / Deep Red (#990000) → Static → Brightness: 80%

3. Maple Fade — The Whole Season in One Scene

A slow fade cycling through amber, burnt orange, and deep red — the full colour arc of a maple tree turning, played out across your roofline over a couple of minutes. The motion is subtle enough that it catches the eye without ever flashing. This is the one guests comment on.

App: Fade → Amber / Burnt Orange / Deep Red → Speed: Slowest → Brightness: 75%

4. Candlelight — The Quiet Option

Warm Gold #E8A33D

One colour, low brightness, no animation. At 40–50%, warm gold doesn't read as "holiday lights" at all — it reads as architectural lighting, the kind you'd expect on a home twice the price. If your street is quiet and you'd rather glow than shout, this is your September-to-November default.

App: Single Colour → Warm Gold (#E8A33D) → Static → Brightness: 45%

The September transition: how to leave summer behind

There's an awkward two-week window at the end of every summer. The Canada Day reds are long retired, the bright summer scenes suddenly feel out of place, and it's nowhere near time for Halloween. A lot of homeowners just turn everything off and wait.

Don't. September is exactly when the transition matters:

With saved scenes, that whole progression is four taps spread across five weeks.

Sunset before 7pm: why fall lighting matters more in Alberta

Here's the part nobody warns you about: Alberta daylight doesn't fade politely in the fall — it falls off a cliff. Calgary loses close to half an hour of daylight every week through September. By early October, the sun sets before 7pm. By Halloween, you're eating dinner in the dark.

That early darkness changes what outdoor lighting is for. In July, your lights are an accent you notice at 10:30pm. In October, they're the difference between a warm, alive-looking home at 6:45pm and a black outline against a grey sky. Warm light fights the gloom — and it's not just your house that benefits. One softly lit home genuinely changes how a whole dark street feels.

The schedule does the work. Set your fall scene to come on at sunset and off at midnight, and the system handles the shrinking days for you. You come home to a glowing house every single evening without touching your phone. (More scheduling tricks in our app features guide.)

Thanksgiving dinner curb appeal

If you're hosting Thanksgiving, your house greets your guests before you do. They park, walk up the driveway in the dark, and form a first impression in about four seconds. Here's how to win those four seconds:

Subtle vs statement: pick your lane

Fall lighting has two honest lanes, and both are correct — it depends on your street, your home's style, and how much attention you want.

SubtleStatement
ColoursWarm gold or amber onlyFull harvest palette: amber, burnt orange, deep red
Brightness40–60%75–90%
MotionNone — staticSlow fade or gentle alternate
Reads asHigh-end architectural lightingSeasonal showpiece
Best forQuiet streets, understated homes, every nightThanksgiving weekend, hosting, corner lots

Plenty of homeowners run both: Candlelight on weeknights, Maple Fade for the long weekend. That's the advantage of saved scenes — you're never locked into one personality.

One system, three seasons

The fall scene isn't a standalone purchase — it's the opening act of the busiest stretch in the lighting calendar. The same diodes doing amber and gold in September carry you through:

Three seasons, one system, zero ladders — and every switch is a tap, not a Saturday. For the whole year mapped out holiday by holiday, see our Alberta holiday lighting calendar.

And the hardware doesn't care that it's fall. Starise runs on 24V with IP65/IP68-rated components rated from -40°C to +60°C — the October cold snaps and Chinook freeze-thaw swings that kill cheap strip lights sit comfortably inside its normal operating range. If you're weighing the investment, our cost guide breaks down what Calgary homeowners actually pay.

Frequently asked questions

When should I switch my outdoor lights to fall colours?
Most Alberta homeowners make the switch in early-to-mid September, once summer scenes start feeling out of season. A warm amber or gold look works from the first week of September right through to Halloween — then you shift to orange and purple with one tap.
What colours work best for Thanksgiving lights on a house?
Stick to the harvest palette: amber, burnt orange, warm gold, and deep red. Amber and gold read as warm and welcoming; burnt orange and deep red add autumn depth. Avoid cool whites and blues in October — they fight the season instead of matching it.
Can the same lights do fall, Halloween, and Christmas?
Yes — that's the whole point of a permanent system. Save a scene for each season and switch between them in seconds. Fall harvest colours in September, orange and purple on October 31st, red and green or classic white by December. Nothing goes up, nothing comes down.
Do permanent lights help with Alberta's early sunsets?
Absolutely. By early October the sun sets before 7pm in Calgary, and it keeps dropping from there. Schedule your lights to come on at sunset automatically and your house glows warm every evening without you thinking about it.
What if I want something subtle, not a light show?
Run warm white or soft amber at 40–60% brightness with no animation. It reads as architectural lighting, not decoration — most neighbours will assume it's high-end soffit lighting. You can always save a bolder scene for Thanksgiving weekend itself.

Make this the warmest fall your house has ever had

Get a free quote and see what harvest colour looks like on your home. Quotes are always free, and booking takes just a flat $300 deposit.

Get a Free Quote →