They had had them in a black-white-silver combination that I figured, "Hey, I'll try something with them. And if it doesn't work, I'm only out $7.50!" They are the plastic kind, so I wasn't worried about them breaking.
You've seen those wreaths made out of Christmas balls, right? I know those of you on Pinterest have! They were all the craze a couple weeks ago. You know, like this:
![]() |
| Pretty in Pink from the blog In His Grip |
![]() |
| Multi-Colored from Eddie Ross |
So right now you're probably thinking, "I thought this was a wedding blog, not a home decor one." Well, you're right. a wreath just wouldn't fit with our wedding. But I thought if you could bend the hanger into a circle, maybe I could bend it into a B and use it as wedding decor! So, I went and got 3 wire hangers (from Jason's closet... I just have color-coded plastic hangers). I started trying to bend them into a B-shape. Bending them was pretty easy... but attaching them to each other wasn't. There was a lot of excess wire that kinda stuck out. And cutting a steel hanger is near impossible.
Plan B: I had some left over wire from my first attempt at making the name hanger. It's green, but I figured it would be covered up. So the first step was to make the B out of wire:
I used a twistie-tie to hold it together for now. I started stringing the balls on and quickly learned I had made a mistake. All of the online tutorials for the wreaths had said to hot glue the tops onto the balls. I figured since mine were plastic, I could skip that step. WRONG! They kept popping off like crazy. I'd be lying if I said I kept my cool, but a
So, I decided to take a much needed break, then gule the tops on. I just put a little glue around the top of the ball, then stuck the cap back on:
It really didn't take that long... but it was frustrating to have to start over again!
Well, I started stringing them on again. I tried to do it randomly at first, but it didn't look very good. It was all un-even and drove me crazy, so I decided to go with the pattern:
| I got the idea from the package, actually. |
Jason had been making all of the Walmart trips with me, and was getting a little frustrated at this point. What had started out as $8 project was now $30. I decided that I didn't want to make the B smaller, and that I needed another package of balls. I might have brought them inside while Jason just happened to be taking Oss-Man on a walk. :o) (Side Note: He noticed them a couple minutes after returning. Don't worry, he's not mad!)
The hardest part was working around the curves and the connection points. The sets I bought also came with some small silver and black balls that worked great to fill some of the spots. It was a lot of trial-and-error to find out how they all fit together best. I ended up just wrapping the wire around itself and cutting off the extra.
Here's the finished product:
| Don't judge... yes, we STILL have our tree up! |
I still need to figure out a way to make it sturdier. I used a lighter wire so I could actually cut it. Unfortunately, that means it's not as strong to stand up on it's own. I'm thinking I might hot glue the balls together.
A couple of hints for anyone wanting to try this on their own:
- Twistie-ties are your best friend. I started with the straight part of the B and the balls kept sliding down onto the curve. Once I put a twistie on, it held them so I could just focus on stringing the new ones on!
- Just hot glue the tops on from the beginning and save yourself the stress.
- Trial and error works best to see what kind of pattern/arrangement you want.



Very cute!!
ReplyDelete