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I already had the glass balls (purchased at Michael’s) and we always have epson salt on hand (99 cent store).
Took out one of the kids glue sticks and glued about 3/4 of the ornament leaving a little bit of a swirl design on top.
Dipped it into the salt.
Let dry and you are done, it doesn’t get much easier.

What you’ll need:

  • clear ornaments (i used both orb and “hockey puck” shaped ornaments)
  • glitter spray paint (i used krylon glitter)
  • faux evergreen garland (one that you don’t mind taking a few branches off of)
  • styrofoam blocks (or fake snow)
  • glue dots ( i used zots) or a hot glue gun
  • scissors
  • tweezers
  • funnel (rolled up paper also works)
  • white spray paint (optional)
  • tinsel glitter (optional)
  • puffy paint (optional)

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Step 1: Create Mini Trees

Clip off a few branches of a faux evergreen garland—


Cut the branches to fit inside your ornament and trim until it resembles a tree—


for reference, this tree is 2.5 inches tall. for a cypress look, it is trimmed with the needles pointing up.


for a christmas tree shape, trim it with the needles pointing down.

Flock your trees using white & glitter spray paint—


for the same effect, you can also sponge on white acrylic & glitter paint.

Set aside the trees to dry.

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Step 2: Prepare the Snow

Rub together two blocks of styrofoam—


instant snow!

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Step 3: Assemble the Ornaments

Using short blasts, lightly spray the inside of the ornament with glitter spray and let dry—

Using a glue dot or your hot glue gun, put a dot of glue on the base of the tree—

Use tweezers to “plant” the tree in the ornament—


it may take a little finagling to get the tree positioned correctly, so the glue dot is much more forgiving than hot glue. push down until the tree is firmly in place.

Using a funnel, add foam snow/and or glitter to the ornament and give a little shake—


through the magic of static cling, some of the snow will stick to the sides of the ornament. btw, this effect doesn’t work without the glitter spray… i tried.

Ta-Da! A Winter Wonderland Snow Globe Ornament!

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But that’s not all! There’s definitely room to experiment.

For some ornaments I used glitter spray paint & foam snow—


the best part? no water needed to create a snow globe effect!

Some I used white spray paint & foam snow—


use short blasts of white spray paint (or primer) to get a snowy effect. let dry before adding trees and snow.

This one has just tinsel glitter—


give a little shake and the tinsel glitter will stick to the sides of the ornament.

And this one has foam snow inside—


the “snowcap” on top of the ornament is white puffy paint and a sprinkle of foam snow.

Tools and Materials

Needle-nose pliers or wire cutters
16-gauge copper wire, or 22-gauge green floral wire, cut to 9-inch lengths
72 buttons for each wreath
Scissors
Satin ribbon, 1/8 inch wide and 6 inches long
Seam binding for decorative bow

Button Wreath Ornament How-To

1. Using pliers, make a small loop at one end of the wire.

2. Thread buttons onto the wire until you have enough to form the size of the wreath you want. Our wreaths are 2 1/2 inches in diameter.

3. Using pliers, bend the plain end of the wire around the looped end. This will form the wreath.

4. Use the satin ribbon to make a loop for hanging the wreath; tie the ribbon in a knot about 3 inches above the wreath.

5. Tie a bow of seam binding to decorate the wreath.

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Step 1: Take all the “hanger” pieces off the ornaments. Then, I glued the biggest ornaments on first in an even pattern around the Styrofoam wreath.
Step 2: Glue the next size down ornaments on.
Step 3: It’s starting to fill in now. I just continued gluing on the smaller ones.
Step 4: This is the finishing stage where you fill in all the extra space with the smallest ornaments you have. Not all the balls are connected to the wreath either. You just glue them all on to one another. You just fill in anywhere you can still see the wreath.

Materials:

  • 1/2” diameter jingle bell
  • 2 colorful felt balls, 3/4” (2 cm) in diameter (my fave places to buy felt balls are Ornamentea and Feltorama.)
  • 2 1/4” circle of tan or brown felt, cut with pinking shears
  • Embroidery floss
  • 16” length of 1/8” wide ribbon
  • Crafts glue
  • Needle and thread
  • Straight pin

1) Thread needle with 3 strands of embroidery floss and sew a running stitch around the perimeter of the felt circle, 1/8” from the edge. Tie off end of floss with a knot and trim excess.

2) Roll circle into a cone shape (keeping knots from your stitching on the inside of the cone) with a point at one end and about a 3/4” diameter opening at the other end. Apply glue between the overlap and hold with a pin until dry.

3) Thread a 10” length of ribbon through the metal bell loop and knot to create the ornament hanger. With needle and thread sew one felt ball on top of the other by stitching up through the center of each ball. Sew the jingle bell on top of the stacked felt balls. Stitch through balls and bell several times to secure.

4) Apply glue around the inside opening of the top of the cone. Place felt ball “scoops” inside the opening of the cone, press into the glue.

5) Tie a 6” length of ribbon into a tiny bow and trim excess. Glue to the center front of the cone at the top of the overlap.

 I cut it into quarter inch strips.  It cut apart pretty accurately without having to snip extra off, and I was able to pull off the key details in the slices. 

 I rolled it around a pen.  The invitation was pretty thick, but it turned out OK. 

 I then took a glass ornament, and I inserted the curled strips into the ornament.  I love that the times, names, locations etc can be glimpsed throughout the ornament. 

 I grabbed a charm that went along with the beach wedding.  I thought about doing the wedding colors, but I decided to just stick with the cream.  I don’t know if her tree has a particular color theme, but I figured cream was safest.  This could easily done with birth announcements etc as a time capsule of sorts. 

The Supplies

Christmas Tree Ornament Mobile

  • a 17″ steamer rack from a restaurant supply store
  • about 5 feet of lightweight jack chain
  • a small carabiner
  • 100 basic ornament hooks
  • one roll, 500 feet, monofilament jewelry string (not the stretchy sort)
  • 200 jewelry crimp beads or tubes
  • jewelry crimping tool
  • 100 lanyard hooks
  • 100 ornaments

Note: In the photo above I show earring wire instead of ornament hooks. I changed that later as I found ornament hooks made it far easier to move ornaments around after they’d been hung. Also, my supplies are based on a 4 foot tall mobile using almost 100 ornaments, you’ll need to adjust amounts if you make one larger or smaller.

Creating the Mobile Frame

Creating the frame for my ornament tree mobile turned out to be fairly simple. I used a lot of hooks to allow for easy adjustment and additions as the mobile was being assembled. I gathered materials from a restaurant supply store, a hardware store and the jewelry section of a craft store.

Christmas Tree Ornament Mobile

For the top of the mobile I needed something that would allow me to easily secure a lot of hanging points without them sliding around too much. The perfect thing turned out to be a 17-inch steamer rack bought for about $6 from a restaurant supply store (I found mine at Encore Restaurant Equipment in the SODO neighborhood of Seattle). The rack comes with folding feet attached that were easy to pop out with a little bending.

Christmas Tree Ornament Mobile

Turn the rack upside down and the spots where the legs were secured neatly become four hanging points.

Christmas Tree Ornament Mobile

I bought some inexpensive jack chain to use for hanging. You can open and close the links in the chain with needle nose pliers so there isn’t any need for heavy duty wire cutters. I separated four lengths of chain, attached them to the points using lanyard hooks found in the jewelry supply section of a craft store.

Christmas Tree Ornament Mobile

I joined the chains using another lanyard hook, and put that on a little carabiner which hung from the hook in the ceiling.

Christmas Tree Ornament Mobile

Notes: Why so many hooks and bits? Because it makes it is simple to adjust and shorten the chain and can later be disassembled and reassembled with very little effort and without needing tools. I kept the same thing in mind when creating the lines that the ornaments were suspended from. This added a bit of visual clutter but made the entire thing mobile easy to adjust and reuse in another year.

Suspending the Ornaments

Christmas Tree Ornament Mobile

I used jewelry monofilament secured with crimp tubes to hold the ornaments. I simply created loops at both ends. I made a bunch of different lengths (details on that below). I secured each line to points in the rack grid using lanyard hooks, and hung a basic wire ornament hook at the bottom ends. The lanyard hooks at the top are strong enough to hold heavier ornaments, and because they close they won’t fall off if the mobile is bumped. The basic ornament hooks allow one to easily move ornaments around from one spot to another. My tip to you: Keep the lines as separate as possible while you’re working with them. I spent more time untangling clear threads than doing anything else on this project. It was maddening. After I discovered just how maddening I started hanging them in groups by length from a curtain rod and weighing them down with an ornament to keep them separated, doing this made the hanging of the ornaments go quickly.

Notes: The use of ornament hooks allows for ornaments to easily be moved around. It does add visual clutter, though. If you want to create a mobile that would only be used once securing the monofilament line directly to the ornaments would look much tidier. I initially planned to use earring wire hooks that closed to hang the ornaments but quickly found that they were frustrating to fiddle with every time I wanted to move an ornament from one spot to another. They were prettier, though, and because those close as well would hold ornaments more securely if the mobile is moved around. (Which I don’t suggest as it tangles the lines horribly. So horribly.) Crimp tools come in three sizes Micro, Regular and Mighty (large). I used the regular size. I did try to use nylon sewing thread but found that the crimps didn’t secure it well enough. I did consider using nylon sewing thread with micro crimp beads and the micro crimping tool but think one would need a lot of patience and really great lighting to get all that done. The monofilament jewelry string is pretty stiff and easy to work with.

Determining Placement and Lengths

Christmas Tree Ornament Mobile

Figuring out where to put the hanging points on the rack involved a bit of math, most all of which I abandoned. I’ll do my best to describe what I did.

I decided to create rings on the rack, with the longer threads hanging on the outside rings to create the cone tree shape. Actually it creates tiers, think a tall skinny wedding cake. I figured that my ornaments were usually about 2 or 3 inches in diameter so I needed to space the rings a little more than 1 inch apart so that the ornaments would have room to hang without being crowded by the longer threads around them. I spaced the rings about 1.5 inches apart. This gave me a center point and 6 rings to work with, with the last ring being the outer edge of the rack, like so:

Christmas Tree Ornament Mobile

I determined I wanted my tree to be about four feet in total height from the top ornament to the bottom. I made the first ornament, the center point, hang 3.5 inches, and added length from there. For my needs, each set of string needed to be 1.75 inches longer than the last. Each ring on the hanging rack held for different lengths of string. I added 2 inches to the length of string I actually cut to allow for the loops.

To figure out how many ornaments per ring I, well, completely made it up. I decided the first ring should hold seven ornaments and went up by four from there. So the number of ornaments went: 1, 7, 11, 15, 19, 23, 27. I divided the four lengths of string between those, giving the longest length more ornaments to help the triangle effect. Whew. So I cut this many at these lengths for these rings:

  • For the Center Point: 5.5″
  • For Ring 1: one at 7.25″, one at 9.0″, two at 10.75″, three at 12.5″
  • For Ring 2: two at 14.25″, two at 16.0″, three at 17.75″, four at 19.5″
  • For Ring 3: three at 21.25″, three at 23.0″, four at 24.75″, five at 26.5″
  • For Ring 4: four at 28.25″, four at 30.0″, five at 31.75″, six at 33.5″
  • For Ring 5: five at 35.25″, five at 37.0″, six at 38.75″, seven at 40.5″
  • For Ring 6: six at 42.25″, six at 44.0″, seven at 45.75″, eight at 47.5″

Christmas Tree Ornament Mobile

In order to make the measuring a cutting go as quickly as possible I taped a cloth measuring tape to a tabletop and marked each length with the number I needed to cut with sticky notes. So all it took was to stretch some string out and clip at the needed point. Keep these in groups at this point forward, it will make it far easier later. I looped and crimped the ends, then hung them in groups on a curtain rod weighted down by an ornament.

Christmas Tree Ornament Mobile

To figure out where my rings would fall on the rack I tied a cotton string to my center point and marked it at 1.5 inch intervals. Then I swung the string around and put as many hooks as I needed on each given ring. I usually put them on the X and Y axis first, then filled in the quadrants. It went faster than it sounds, promise. I spaced the hooks, aka the hanging points, like so:

Christmas Tree Ornament Mobile

Looking up at the mobile from below you can sort of see the rings emerging:

Christmas Tree Ornament Mobile

And after this I attached a hook into my ceiling and hung the rack. I found the best way to hang everything is to work from the center out, hang each set of lengths of monofilament string spacing it around it’s designated ring as evenly as possible, then hang ornaments before moving on to the next set of lengths of string. By weighing the strings down as you go along it will help them from getting tangled as you work. You can add or move string, and move ornaments around if needed. I didn’t worry too much about getting everything just perfect and I think it worked to my advantage, the slightly controlled randomness gives it a nicely organic look. At least I hope so.

Christmas Tree Ornament Mobile

If I were to do it again I would make my tree taller and more dramatic. I think I would try to squeeze in one more ring and stagger the ornaments with even more lengths of string, maybe in increments by the inch. As it was I found that there are lots of spots where two of the same length are side by side. If I had more money to devote I would buy glass ornaments that don’t have a metal cap, just a glass loop at the top, and would skip the ornament hooks to make it look tidier.

Supplies Needed:

A mix of round Christmas ornaments in 4 different sizes –for one tree you will need about 20 balls.  At least 4 of each size.

Knitting Needle – 14 inches long (tall tree)  Spray paint the needles if needed to match your ornaments.

Optional: Christmas tree peak topper or a star ornament, ribbon spool, spray paint, scrapbook paper, glue, spray paint, paper cutter

Supplies-Needed to make an ornament Christmas Tree

To make the ribbon spool tree stand: Spray the spool with spray paint to coordinate with your ornaments.  Cut scrapbook paper the width of the spool. You could use ribbon, but I like the more finished look of the paper on the spool.

Decorating for Christmas

Attach the paper with glue. I used Aleene’s Tacky Line Roll Adhesive.

Holiday decorating ideas for Christmas

Attach to the spool.

Ribbon-and-Scrap-paper-stri

Thread the knitting needle up through the bottom of the spool.

Needles-in-Spools

If the spool has a large hole – you can stuff it with pieces of STYROFOAM to make sure the needle stays straight.

Spools-and-Needles

String four large Christmas ball ornaments (about 4” diameter) onto the needle, slipping the metal loops on the balls over the point of the needle. These four balls will form the base of the tree.  If you do not want to use the spool tree stand  and want to make the basic tree – the four balls when placed  squarely on a table will hold the needle upright.

Tabletop Knitting Needle Ornament Tree instructions and tutorial

Next string onto the needle four balls of a slightly smaller size. Each one will fit between two of the larger ones.  Then string on another four, slightly smaller, and finally four more again, slightly smaller, so that your tree has sixteen Christmas ball ornaments in all.  You can add more or less depending on the size of your balls.

How to make a ornament tree using a knitting needle

The tip will look like this.

Ideas for Chistmas decorating

On top of the needle place a Christmas star ornament.  I found this one at Michaels.  It had a “spring” style attachment that I removed.  I used that existing hole to place the star on the top of the knitting needle.  I used an awl to make the hole a bit larger so it fit over the tip of the needle.

Decorating for Christmas

These are super easy to make! Supplies you’ll need include:

  • 3/4 cup flour (I used Great Value)
  • 3 Tablespoons Light Corn syrup (Great Value again)
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 4 cups Pennington Wild Bird Food
  • Halloween Cookie Cutters
  • Yarn
  • 1 Straw cut up into 5 or 6 pieces

DIRECTIONS

Lay out a sheet of wax paper down to work on.  You can either roll out the birdseed “dough” or fill your cookie cutters.  We spooned ours in.  It’s also highly recommended that you spray your cutters with nonstick spray so they slide right out after they have had time to dry.

Mix the first 4 ingredients together and fill your cookie cutters.

After you’ve filled your cookie cutter, stick a piece of the straw where you’d like your hole for it to hang. Let them dry for 4-6 hours (we did overnight), and push them out of cutters.

Thread your birdseed ornament with the yarn and hang from a tree!  That’s it y’all!