Last year we made some wooden stars with led lights in them, and as we try to make some kind of decoration for Christmas we decided to make some more stars using the same method.
Here are the ones we made last year -
Here are the ones we made last year -
They survived the loft I'm pleased to report. |
Here's a link to the blog post I wrote about those - Wooden star decorations. (opens in new window)
We used the same method to make this years star decorations, only this time we've made a load of smaller stars so that we could make some garland type decorations, and my daughter also wanted to make a star to hang in her room, so a lot of the pictures in this post are of my daughter making her star, she made a few to decorate in different ways.
This really is a simple make, and even with out power tools it's really easy to do, my daughter is quite young and apart from me cutting the parts out with my bandsaw all of the other work was done by her, at least on the larger stars anyway, I made the fourteen smaller stars for the garlands.
So using a template we made last year she marked out the five parts of the star -
Templates make life easier. |
All the stars we made are made from pallet wood, so basically these were free to make.
I cut out the segments roughly with my bandsaw, and my daughter then sanded each segment to the lines she'd made.
Sanding using a bench sander -
Handy things to have. |
I made sure she wore a dust mask whilst sanding the stars, I also wore one and she also wore a set of goggles to stop dust going in her eyes.
Almost done, nearly ready to glue it all together -
Good fit on each segment. |
Sanding off the feathering -
Nearly ready for some glue. |
Time to glue it all together -
I highly recommend gorilla wood glue. |
Left alone for the glue to dry -
Looks good. |
Once the glue was dry it was on to sanding the stars off so they could be decorated.
She used the smallest sander I have, the larger ones are bit heavy she said, and quite noisy, but this little one works well.
Sanding -
Ready for some decoration. |
She decided that she'd stain one of the stars with a purple wood stain, this one now hangs above her bed, and the other ones will be decorated in something festive (probably involving glitter....shudders) the wood stain is water based and was mixed especially for the star and for another Christmas decoration project.
Applying the stain -
It looks black, but it really is purple honest. |
Stain drying, it did dry a lot lighter than in the picture -
Phone camera didn't really do the colour justice. |
And here are the other three large stars we made, ready for something glittery (shudders) -
Nice wood considering it used to be a pallet. |
We (mainly me for this one) made a load of smaller stars to hang from the ceiling, they were made in the same way, just on a smaller scale and to hang them we drilled a small hole through one of the points and then threaded a bit of natural string through, this allows the stars to hang from another long length of string which we pinned to the ceiling.
Like so -
Easy peasy. |
We made two garlands, each with seven stars, and in total each garland is about nine feet long, that allows for a gap of about a foot between each star with about a foot extra each end.
Here's one hanging from the ceiling -
It was difficult to get a good angle, but you get the idea. |
And that was it, not much too it, yes it was a little repetitive cutting out each star segment and then sanding and gluing, but it's worth it in the end as they look good, well we like them, and like the larger stars these were also made from pallet wood so cheap as chips.
My wife has also made garlands before and this year she's put a simple how to on her blog on how to make some excellent pine cone garlands, you can read her how to here - Pine cone garland. (opens in new window)
Thanks for reading.
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