Inspired by PSE Advent Calendar 2021 (Day 13): A Christmas Hokuro, I challenged myself to create a Christmas tree-shaped puzzle. Unfortunately I had to edit the shape a little bit because... reasons. Hope it still looks close enough.
Rule of LITSO:
Divide the grid into tetrominos so that two identical tetrominos never share an edge (but may touch diagonally).
The following is an example puzzle with its solution.

Now solve the following LITSO puzzle.

You can try this puzzle on Penpa.











If the red pair at bottom-left does not connect to the purple pair right below it, it must extend to the right and then right or down, both of which lead to contradictions. Thus these two pairs are connected:
Now if we put either red border in place, it is easy to see that they force an L to touch the existing L, so the three squares they connect are adjacent. This is easily completed into a second L, leaving a gap that can only be filled by an S; by similar logic we conclude that the bottom-centre purple pair below is connected.
This last purple pair cannot be connected to the yellow pair that is the tree's trunk (L touching L), so the yellow pair is eventually forced to be an I. This also forces a T and an extension of the left-centre pair into a triplet:

Not extending rightwards, on the other hand, forces a T touching T:
Thus:
The purple triplet at left must now extend upwards, leaving a 16-square triangle on top and allowing more forcings:

And the rest is easy to piece together:
