This year, deck
the halls with beautiful ball creations in medleys of rich colours and styles.
Make your own holiday ornaments to add among your cherished oldies and to treasure
for years to come. Decorating the home with impressive ornaments has never been
easier to achieve, utilizing only a handful of basic craft supplies. Glass ball
ornaments with sophistication from eclectic to elegant designs are painted with
brilliant colours and magnificently decorated with copper leafing, rice paper,
beads, tassels and ritzed up with glitz.
Aside
from decorating a traditional Christmas tree, ball ornaments make distinguished
decorations to beautify an entrance, a hallway, or to grace a mantel. Mixtures
of solid colours or striped balls are simply splendid displayed in tall vases,
large bowls or incorporated into a spectacular centerpiece.
If you live in a small space, decorating with ornaments is a fantastic way to
add wonderment to your décor without incorporating a huge tree. Smaller
glass versions are perfect to jazz up tabletop trees and to create stylist floral
arrangements.
Preparing the base of the glass ornaments:
Prepare the glass surface for painting by washing the balls thoroughly with soap
and water and wipe dry.
Attach a decorative string to the metal cap tips that come with the glass balls.
It makes it easier to handle the balls while painting and practical to hang them
for drying on an ornament stand or a coat rack with pegs.
Paint the surfaces of the glass balls with a soft bristle paintbrush using Vitrail
paints in your choice of colours from emerald, red violet to turquoise blues.
I used a rich palette of crimson, brown, and burnt amber. Since these are decorative
items only, I used Vitrail solvent based paints because the colours are brilliant
and they don’t need to be heat set. Once painted hang the balls to air-dry.
They will dry within hours and be ready to decorate within a 48 hour period. Use
a solvent base cleaner to clean your brushes well.
Eclectic paper
collage; Painted glass balls are garlanded with assorted scraps of colourful and
white rice papers. Use paper bits and pieces leftover from other holiday projects.
Apply a coat of Mod Podge over the surface of the ball. Randomly apply and layer
tiny paper pieces around the ball, leaving some areas exposed in order to see
its colour. To secure the paper composition into place, apply a top coat of Mod
Podge and let dry. Once dry apply a coat of sparkle glaze to make them glitter
and glow.
Renaissance:
Apply vertical stripes evenly spaced all around the ball with a fine point paintbrush
using Porcelaine 150, Vermeil gold. For a majestic look apply rhinestones garnishes
over the dried gold stripes using metal glue.
Baroque: Apply
narrow painter’s tape to create two stripes on the bottom half of a glass
ball. Apply adhesive sizing with soft paintbrush to the area between the tape
stripes. Set the ball a side to allow the adhesive to become dry and tacky to
the touch (15-60 minutes). Place and press copper leaf over the adhesive medium
to adhere to the ball. Use a clean soft brush to secure the leafing into place
and to remove excess pieces. Top off with a wire length fastened around the cap,
bead the ends and add a tassel.
Old world: Apply
adhesive sizing randomly around the ball and follow the leafing steps as above.
The leafing will only stick to the areas where the medium was applied. Apply a
length of Terrifically Tacky Tape around the center of the ball. For a gleaming
touch, sprinkle iridescent flakes over the tape and gently pat it.
Glistening swirl:
Simply dab a colour of Vitrail paint around a glass ball using a sea sponge. Once
dry, apply a band of rice paper with a swirl pattern at the center of the ball
with Mod Podge. Apply glitter glaze around the ball. Wrap a piece of coloured
wire around the cap of the ball and decorate the ends with beads.
Beaded Rococo:
Pour assorted metallic Porcelaine 150 paints into applicator bottles, one for
each different colour. Using one colour at a time, squeeze the bottle to release
paint along the sides of the ball, letting some of the colours overlap and some
areas free of drippings. Let it dry and set for 48 hours. Garnish the ball with
a band of colourful micro beads using Terrifically Tacky Tape. For an elaborate
cap finish use fuzzy wool and bead accents.
Give
older ornaments a renewed look by sprucing them up using the same supplies in
order to blend in with your new ornaments. Each year make and add new styles of
ornaments to your collection. Make extra ornaments to give as gifts to friends,
teachers and relatives.
Variations;
Ribbons and fabric remnants make fabulous ornament embellishments. For a dazzling
look use sequins, glitter glues, and old jewellery odds and ends. Modern and minimalist
styles of ornaments can be made utilizing materials such as clay, foils, tinsel,
wire, and mesh. For special effects make basic geometric shapes using textured
or snow paints. For fine details or to inscribe your dinner guests names onto
a personalized ornament use Porcelaine liners or markers by Pébéo.
Copyright MaddyLane
Designs/Miy Decorations © 2008
No portion of this article is to be copied or published without permission.