Santa Claus is normally decked out for the holidays in red and white, but this year may be the first when Santa sported a face shield.
Stores and malls across the Twin Cities are changing the way children visit with Santa as a precaution against the spread of the coronavirus.
Kids can't sit on Santa's lap and whisper their Christmas wish lists. Instead, Santa's workshops have been forced behind plexiglass. For some starry-eyed children, visiting Santa will mean calling in on Zoom to see if they have made old St. Nick's nice list.
At "Santa's Wonderland" inside the Cabela's recreation store in Woodbury, Santa's elves serve as cleaning bodyguards armed with disinfectant, which they spray on an acrylic divider in between each visit, and forehead thermometers used to check children's temperatures before they can get close to the big guy.
"It's a little different," said Shannon Mueller, of Hudson, Wis., who brought her children, 2-year-old Porter and 5-month-old Rylan, last week for a contact-free experience with Santa. "But I think being with Santa never loses its magic for the kids."
Madelyn Moran, who is 6 months old, had her first visit with Santa while separated by plexiglass.
"It will be interesting explaining to her one day why Santa's wearing PPE [personal protective equipment]," said her father, Andy Moran.
"Santa Scott" smiled as he took pictures and waved to kids from his seat behind the barrier. "I'm glad that Santa is able to still be here with the children," he said.