Home Decor
Find A Contractor
 
 

How soon do you want to begin this project?

Do you own your home?

Zip Code

Decor & Home Living
Home
Plumbing
Electrical
Heating and Cooling
Draperies & Curtains
Doors and Windows
Kitchens
Bathrooms
Outdoors
Walls & Floors
Decor & Home Living
Factory Direct Drapes
Household Appliances
Seasonal
Trouble Shooting Guide
House Cleaning and Organizing
Satellites
Color and Style
Pest Control
Home Decor Tips
How To
How to Sand Wood Furniture
How to Strip Paint
How to Reupholster Furniture
How to Make a Lantern
How to Build a Shelf
How to Decorate Your Walls
How to Make a Clock
How To Mosaic Furniture
How To Arrange Pictures
How to Make Wind Chimes
How to Distress Wood
How to Make a Wall Border
How To Make a Slipcover
How to Knit
How to Sew
How to Sew Repairs
How to Bead
How to Make a Planter
Tools & Materials
Building & Home Improvement
Buying A Home
Forums:
Public Forum
Contact Us
Advertise With Us
Contractors
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
Washington DC
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming

How To Make a Wind Chime


Want to add a little pizzazz to your patio or deck? Why not think about bringing some style and music into your backyard with a handmade wind chime! Unique wind chimes are easy to make and they can be hung from trees, fences, and even backyard lampposts! Just let your imagination run wild!

What Materials Can You Use?
Wind chimes can be made out of almost any material. Whatever pleases the eye and makes a wonderful noise can be hung up and enjoyed! Glass wind chimes and metal wind chimes are particular favorites. Or, when creating your own wind chimes, try using some of these materials:

  • seashells
  • bamboo
  • wood
  • stones
  • keys
  • tools

Silverware Chime

This chime makes use of all those odd bits of cutlery that you have accumulated over the years. And it makes a perfect gift for that person who loves to cook!

Materials You Will Need

  • 4 spoons
  • 2 forks (with some spares, just in case)
  • drill
  • 1/16th inch drill bit
  • fishing line
  • safety goggles

Preparing the Cutlery
This chime features four spoons suspended from a hanging fork. There is also a base fork, which the spoons will chime against.

  • Put on your safety goggles. Drill a hole in each of the four spoon handles, approximately 1/8th of an inch from the top. Sand holes down with metal file, so that there are no sharp edges.
  • Choose one fork to be the hanging fork from which the spoons will be suspended. Drill a hole in the flat part of this fork, just above the tines.
  • Using your needle-nosed pliers, carefully bend the tines of the fork to a 90° angle.
  • Bend the two inside tines of the fork so that they are pointing north and south. Bend each of the two outside tines so that they are pointing east and west. Be sure to have backup forks, in case any of the tines break.
  • Using the tip of your pliers, carefully twist the ends of each of the tines into a loop.
  • Bend the handle of the fork over to make a hook to hang the chime with.
  • Drill a hole in your base fork. This hole should be about 1/8th of an inch from the top of the handle.

Hanging the Chime
This chime will be suspended using thin fishing line. This line is strong enough to hold up in the wind and rain.

  • Tie a piece of fishing line from the hole in the hanging fork to the hole in the base fork. The base fork should hang about six inches down.
  • Tie fishing line through each of the holes created by the tines of the hanging fork. Tie the other end of each piece of string to the hole in each spoon. The bowl of each spoon should hit the stem of the base fork.
  • Hang on a tree, and get ready for some music!

Copper Pipe Wind Chime

This elegant copper pipe wind chime will add a touch of style and hint of music to any garden or patio.

What You Will Need

  • copper tubing
  • metal crimper
  • drill
  • safety goggles
  • roll of string
  • three feet of nylon rope
  • two round pieces of wood (small, and large)

How To Make the Wind Chime
This wind chime uses a round piece of wood from which the copper pipes are suspended. The smaller piece of wood is then hung in between the copper chimes. When the wind blows, the chimes knock against the wood, creating sound.

  • Cut six separate pipes from the copper tubing. These tubes should vary in length by two inches, with the smallest tube measuring 18 inches and the largest tube measuring 28 inches.
  • Mark these measurements on the tubing and, using your metal crimper, cut the six pipes.
  • Wearing your goggles, drill a ¼ inch hole in the top of each pipe. This hole should be about a ½ inch from the top of each pipe.
  • Drill a ½ inch hole in the center of the large and small pieces of wood.
  • Drill six ¼ inch holes around the perimeter of the large piece of wood. These holes should be equidistant from one another. This piece of wood will act as the platform for the chimes.
  • Using your string, thread each pipe through each of the six holes on the large piece of wood. The pipes should hang a couple of inches from the base of the wood platform.
  • Using your nylon rope, create a loop from which to hang the chime. Thread the end of this loop through the center of the wood platform. To the base of this handle, tie the small piece of wood. The pipes will knock against this wood to create sound.
  • Hang and enjoy!



Beehive Content Works © 2008
About Us | Advertise With Us | Contact Us | Newsroom | Privacy Policy | Add Your Link | Our Links | CA Privacy Rights