Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl
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How to Make Giant Lighted Ornament Balls

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

A few years ago we discovered a street in our city that is lit with giant hanging lighted ornament balls. We drove down the street with our low beams on and were truly speechless. It was magical, ethereal and beautiful seeing giant orbs of light suspended in mid-air. Since then I’ve scoured store shelves to find these beautiful lighted spheres. Little did I know that they were truly a DIY project.

This year, our neighborhood decided to hold a workshop to teach anyone who was interested how to make giant lighted ornament balls. You know I was there with bells on ;-). Here’s how to create your own hanging lighted Christmas ornament balls complete with hanging suggestions!

Giant Lighted Ornament Balls Materials Cost breakdown:

  • Chicken Wire: 2′ x 50′ roll (yields about 12 balls) – $24
  • 3 – 100 light strings of outdoor Christmas lights (green wire is best) – $10
  • Twisty tie from the light strands
  • Poly-braided rope or clothes line rope – $10 per 100 ft.
  • Extension cord: $15
  • Small water bottle
  • Gloves
  • Aircraft sheers for cutting wire

Cost: approximately $37 per ball with extension cords and hanging supplies (not including gloves and shears)

Optional: 

  • Three way plug in adapter $5 (to add more balls to one cord),
  • Extra extension cords
  • Timer

 

Giant Lighted Ornament Balls Instructions:

Cut a section of chicken wire 46″ long (using a 24″ width roll). Shape the section into a cylinder.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

Secure the ends of the chicken wire by folding the ends over and securing to the opposing side. Stop about 8″ from each end.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

Overlap the end pieces as shown to create a cone shape at each end. Secure the chicken wire ends like you did above.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

Begin to pleat and fold the ends to form round ends.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

Once the end is fully tucked, thread excess wire or a twisty tie to “stitch” the end closed.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

Grab and mush sections of your chicken wire shape to form a sphere. Bouncing the wire ball on the table can help crush some protruding sections.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

In the end you should have some semblance of a sphere.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

Unwrap your Christmas lights and test them before wrapping.

Start with the female end of the lights. Wrap it through a section of chicken wire and then tie a knot to secure the end.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

Grab your partner and start rapping….errr wrapping to the music.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

Don’t worry if you don’t have a partner, it can be a solo gig, too. (Special thanks to my neighbors Rob, Darlene & Cindy for being models.)

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

At the end of each strand, tie the cord through the chicken wire to secure. After the first strand, plug another strand in and continue wrapping. The optimal glowing occurs from 300 lights per sphere!

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

After wrapping all three strands, test your lighted ball to make sure all the connections are good.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

Hanging the lighted ornament ball:

There have been many suggestions for hanging these balls. Some things to try:

  • Potato Gun
  • Rock tied to a string
  • Baseball with a screw eye attached
  • Bow & Arrow
  • Bean bag

But, what worked best for me was to tie a small 8 oz. water bottle to the rope.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

Then I could swing and release the bottle up and over a branch. The alternative is to wind up cowboy style and release on an upswing. Make sure you have plenty of slack on the rope and don’t stand on the rope (been there, done that.) Frankly, this task takes some patience, but eventually you’ll either make it over a branch or move to a lower branch. LOL.

Once the bottle has cleared the branch, lower it down.

Grab your extension cord and lighted ball. Feed the end of the extension cord through your chicken wire ball and tie it before plugging it into the light strand.

Remove the water bottle from the rope and tie the rope around the ball and extension cord knot.

Hoist the ornament ball and extension cord up into the tree. Tie the excess rope around the tree and the extension cord slack to secure the ball.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

Plug the extension cord into an outlet and wait for night time.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

This ball has two different colored strands (pink & blue).

Soon all your neighbors will join in the fun.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

And then you’ll have a block party of lighted holiday orbs.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

What looks like a normal street during the day becomes a truly magical display at night.

Giant Lighted Christmas Ball Tutorial | Pretty Handy Girl

A neighborhood in Greensboro turns their annual lighted ball workshop into a food drive. Read more about these beautiful ornaments and more instructions here.

Best of luck and hope you have a truly fabulous holiday season!

PHGFancySign

 

Sharing with: Tidy Mom’s I’m Lovin’ It Party

20 replies
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  1. Shelia
    Shelia says:

    These are beautiful! Mother made some for me years ago – but instead of using chicken wire, she used grape vines. The neighbors loved them! Happy holidays!
    Shelia

    Reply
  2. Renee
    Renee says:

    I have used grapevine balls and covered them in lights. They are not quite as large, I don’t think, ( about 10 inches across) but they make a beautiful statement in my Christmas tree! I use white lights, but might switch to colored. They look awesome on the street! Love it!

    Reply

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  1. […] your way out I hope you enjoy the light display on our street! All our neighbors made giant lighted ornament balls and we hang them on either side of the street every year. This picture doesn’t come close to […]

  2. […] How to Make Giant Lighted Ornament Balls […]

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