Our Christmas Eve hamper comes out after dinner.
DD, as the youngest, lights the Christmas candle (an Irish tradition to put in the window - shows there is room available in our home even if none in the Inn) - it goes on the mantle in our house though.
We have a few quiet minutes, where we talk about the good things that have happened in the year, and anyone who has died is remembered. We say a "Hail Mary" too (was a decade of the rosary growing up). We're really not a religious family, but it seems fitting then.
This is followed by getting out the box that is our hamper. New PJs for all 3 of us, my festive slipper socks are in there and new slipper socks for DD, Lush festive bath bombs for DD and I, and naice hot choc (the lumps of choc on a wooden spoon to melt into hot milk) for all of us. Along with DD's stocking and our copy of "The night before Christmas".
DD puts out her stocking, milk, a carrot and a cookie, and then toddles off up for her Santa bath and into bed, where we read the book to her. So it does help to move the evening along and get her to bed at a reasonable hour, and reasonably calmly.
DD is now 9. But over the years, we have acquired a lot of Christmassy stories, which we start reading from early December at bedtime. Twas the night before Christmas is always kept for 24th. We have a good handful of Christmas movies too, which I only take out for December and early January.
We do a lot of different craft things in December - handprint or potato print wrapping paper or cards. A lovely one I saw was a black felt tip wiggly line, with black dots off it periodically, and a fingerprint in coloured paint at each dot making a string of Christmas lights design. Or as DD grew a little, giving her a box of strips of different coloured paper and a roll of sellotape and kiddie scissors (strips of cut tape for littler DCs) to let her make her own paper chain decorations.
We also bake a fair bit. From her very first Christmas (just about to turn 1), she helped make cookies for crèche. Nowadays, she makes them completely herself and I only have to do the oven. We also make sure we have a half a batch of cookie dough in the freezer earlier in December - so on Christmas Eve afternoon we can either make cookies from scratch for Santa, or just slice and bake from the freezer if time or energy levels are not great.
The city where we live, there is a "Live Crib" outside the Lord Mayor's House where the Farmer's Association have various different animals, which is right next to a main shopping street and very close to my office. So DD comes to see that, usually a couple of times as I take a half day for DD to go "shopping" (a few bits she wants to buy, I am buying nothing that day, and a hot choc stop together chatting and peoplewatching, and Crib) and she also comes into my office on Christmas Eve (I have to show up for a couple of hours but everyone brings their DCs) and we meet DH afterwards for a nice lunch and any last bits we want.
I have a fabric advent calendar for DD - I pop in a chocolate figure every day (M&S and Aldi both sell nets of nice ones) and usually a mix of free printable colouring/activity sheets, a couple of small toys (like maybe 2 or 3 in the 24 days) and the odd note about an activity we will do that day. Sometimes the toys are at the end of a treasure hunt around the house, following notes starting in the calendar, which DD loves!!
We love Christmas!