Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Suggested Materials Used For Personalized Wind Chimes

By Esmeralda Cardiel


Personalized wind chimes might be expensive if you purchase them in a shop. Using typical household items that you could have just wound up throwing out anyway; create your own inexpensive and personalized wind chimes. Hang your homemade wind chimes crafts outside to gain attention and compliments from anybody who comes by your home. Here are a few suggested materials:

Clay Flower Pots: Old chipped or cracked clay pots can become personalized wind chimes to hang on your veranda. Wrap wire around four or five large metal washers so it is strong enough to hold the weight of the pot. Paint the miniature clay pots with acrylic paint to reflect your personality. Thread the other end of each metal wire through the drainage hole and wrap it around a wooden dowel rod several times. Wrap duct tape around the metal coil to hold it in place. Create a loop on the wooden dowel rod using a metal coat hanger.

Plastic Milk Jugs: Make use of empty milk jugs to create unusual and personalized wind chimes. Using a craft knife, cut shapes out of the plastic. Poke holes in either end of the plastic shapes and thread metal wire through the holes, using crimping beads to keep them in place. Add beads or shells to the wires for additional decoration. Attach small bells to the bottom of each wire that will make noise as they move in the breeze and collide with each other. Wrap the wires around a wooden dowel rod and create a ring from another piece of wire so you can hang your chime.

Metal Cans: Lids of old aluminum soup cans will make environmentally friendly personalized wind chimes. A lid from a large can serves as the main piece for the chimes. Drill small holes around the rim of the can and two additional holes in the center of the lid. Gather six smaller lids and punch small holes into each rim. Thread metal wire through the hole in the small lid and pinch it in place. Thread the other end of the wire through the larger lid and use a crimping bead to hold the wire. Use another length of wire to form a loop to hang the chime. The breeze will cause the lids to collide.

You may use old or mismatched silverware to create homemade personalized wind chimes as well. Bend the tines of a fork at 110-degree angles in the four cardinal directions. Punch holes with a diamond-tipped bit in the flat metal on top of the tines, the end of the fork's handle and the handles of four spoons. Thread metal wire through the holes in the spoons and carefully wind each one around tines of the fork. Drill a hole in the handle of a knife and thread a wire from this hole to the hole in the flat metal of the fork. Make a loop with metal wire through the hole in the handle and hang up your chimes to hear the melody.




About the Author:



No comments:

Post a Comment