These natural-looking flower pot wind
chimes will add a touch of charm to any porch or breezeway.
They are simple to make, and can be left out in all weathers.
Best of all, they cost you nearly nothing!
Wind Chime Materials
Here's all you need:
Five clay flowerpots in varying sizes, none larger than 4 inches diameter (you may already have a few of these lying around the yard!)
Wooden beads (from the crafts store).
For a complete set of chimes, you will need five beads of 3/4 inches diameter, and ten
beads of 5/8 inch diameter.
Two or three plastic salad container covers (from the salad bar).
Five one-inch plastic curtain rings (Bates makes these of Luxite, and a package of 15
sells for about $1.35.)
Two or three plastic salad container covers (from the salad bar).
Stained glass paints in varying colors (optional), also from the crafts store.
Approximately 15 yards of nylon or polypropylene garden twine.
Ready
If your pots have been around the block a few times, you might
need to give them a bath.
Scrub them with hot soapy water and a
stiff brush. After they have dried, check their physical
condition by tapping gently with a fingernail. A clean, dry,
undamaged pot will reward you with a resonant ring.
Now is a good time (while you are waiting for your pots to dry)
to cut your plastic rectangles.
From the salad container covers, cut one each of these sizes:
2" x 6"
2" x 5 1-2"
2" x 5"
2" x 4 1-2"
2" x 4"
Drill a small hole in one short end of each rectangle.
Stain these, if desired, with the glass stain paint, following manufacturer's
directions.
Set
For each chime, set aside:
one flower pot
one 3/4 inch wooden bead (this will serve as the clapper)
two 5/8 inch wooden beads
one curtain ring
one plastic rectangle (matched by size to the pot)
one piece of garden twine,
about 3 yards long
Go - How to Assemble the Wind Chimes
If necessary, separate your piece of
twine into one ply, and tie one end to the plastic curtain ring.
Leave about 10 inches free to allow for later adjustment.
Working from outside to inside, feed the free end through
the 'weep hole' in the bottom of the pot.
Now feed the free
end through one of the 5/8 inch wooden beads. This bead will
rest against the inside bottom of the pot to support the chime
when it hangs. Adjust until the measurement is as you wish, and
mark the string.
Positioning the 5/8 inch bead at your mark,
loop the free end of the twine around the bead and insert it a
second time through the same hole from the top to the bottom.
(Figure
1). Tighten.
Suspend the pot by the curtain ring
and determine the point at which the string meets the rim of the
pot. Mark the string at this point.
Slide the 3/4 inch bead
up the string to the mark you have just made. This bead will
serve as the clapper, and should hit at the rim of the pot.
Now slide the second 5/8 inch bead up the string immediately
beneath the 3/4 inch bead. This bead will hold the 3/4 inch bead
in place on the mark.
Loop the twine up around the 5/8 inch
bead and back down through it (as you did in Step 4 with the
other 5/8 inch bead). Adjust the beads if necessary to ensure
that the larger bead still hits the pot at the rim. (Figure 2).
Now feed the free end of the twine through the hole
you previously created in the plastic rectangle. Adjust length
as desired, and tie.
Repeat the above for each of the other four pots.
You're done! From the eaves of your breezeway or porch,
hang each pot upside down by the curtain ring. Now mix up a
batch of lemonade, and invite the neighbors up on the porch to
enjoy the gentle sound of your beautiful new flower pot wind
chimes!
About the author:
Patricia A. Ziegler owns and operates pazpizzazz, where
you will find useful and decorative items for your home and
garden, as well as gift items for babies and children
Be ahead of your competition. Most wind chime makers just cut the pipes to length - drill holes in them and sell them without giving much thought to the sound they produce.
With the easy to follow information in this book, you can create perfectly tuned chimes every time and it may surprise you to discover just how easy it is to produce them in quantity.
Once you have calculated the pipe lengths only once - you can produce as many sets of chimes as you may need.
The easy to make jig revealed in this book, makes stringing the pipes together a breeze. It only takes a few minutes for each set.
Or create them for your own personal enjoyment. Wind chimes make a great complement to any garden setting - patio - porch way - veranda - barbecue area - sunroom.
It's so relaxing, listening to the gentle breeze improvising music on a perfectly tuned set of wind chimes.