Ayesha Curry Shares What She's Most Excited to Experience with Baby No. 4 During the Holidays: 'I'm Sure I'll Cry' (Exclusive)

The chef is getting ready to celebrate the holidays for the first time as a family of six

Mark Andrew for Command Brand Ayesha Curry for Command

Mark Andrew for Command Brand

Ayesha Curry for Command

Ayesha Curry can't wait to experience the holidays with her newly minted family of six.

The chef, 35, spoke with PEOPLE about her new partnership with Command, chatting about what she's most looking forward to this holiday season after welcoming her baby son Caius with her NBA star husband Stephen Curry, 36, this past summer.

"We just had his stocking made. Never thought we'd be making another stocking, and yet here we are," Ayesha tells PEOPLE. "And so I think it's going to be a big deal in a couple of weeks when we go to hang up that extra stocking that we didn't know we needed but now couldn't have it any other way."

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Mark Andrew for Command Brand Ayesha Curry for Command

Mark Andrew for Command Brand

Ayesha Curry for Command

Related: Ayesha Curry Shares First Photo of Her and Husband Stephen's 'Little Family' of 6: 'So Grateful'

"I think that's going to be really, really exciting and nostalgic. And I'm such a crier, I'm sure I'll cry, but I think that's great. He's still little, so he's not going to know what the heck's going on, but I think the other kids will be able to build those memories."

Ayesha, who shares her four kids — sons Caius and Canon, 6, as well as daughters Ryan, 9, and Riley, 12 — with Stephen, says that even though there's a big age difference between her kids, everyone in the family is obsessed with baby Caius.

"Everybody loves him. He's wonderful," she affirms. "He's just the best thing ever. And so we're experiencing everything all over again and it's magical."

As her family gets ready for the holiday season, Ayesha — who is a self-proclaimed DIYer — has been leaning on Command to help her decorate their house.

"I love working on different projects around the home and trying to figure out how to make things a little more organized, a little more at peace," she says. "So for me, the partnership just made perfect sense."

"Command helps me with everything, whether it's organizing my kids' different sports bags for all the activities they have or being able to mindlessly put up a hook or a strip and not have to worry about damaging the walls or having to repaint anything is great," the mom of four continues. "And so being able to mindlessly DIY my space and then be able to change it at any given second without damaging something I think is perfect."

Mark Andrew for Command Brand Ayesha Curry for Command

Mark Andrew for Command Brand

Ayesha Curry for Command

Luckily, Ayesha is able to count on her kids to help get the house in the Christmas spirit.

"We're definitely Christmas people," she says. "The day after Thanksgiving, all the decorations go up."

"And they definitely have a hand in putting the ornaments on the tree and things like that," Ayesha says of her older kids. "But I'd really say with their own space, especially my older two, my 12 and my 9-year-old, they have bunk beds and they've gotten really into making that space their own."

"They actually have used a lot of Command products to hang string lights and cute little leaves and things like that all over the place. It's just great."

Even though her older kids are hitting an age where they're able to do things on their own, Ayesha says she's still learning how to inspire them to lend a hand.

"The last thing that I learned is that even when in the nature of the holiday spirit, I have a preteen, and so even when that ennui is rearing its head and they act like they're not into the nostalgia and into the holiday spirit or want to help decorate or any of those things, they actually do, and a little nudging is okay to get them involved," she says.

"For me, I often find that that's when we're actually building our core memories within that little bit of nudging to get them to do the things that they think they're not going to like."