Beaded Chandelier Tutorial {Guest Post}


Posted on: November 4th, 2010 by Sandra 16 Comments


I’m excited to share a crazy inventive tutorial for a diy beaded chandelier from  Britt over at A Penny Saved.  This is so cool.

diy-beaded-chandelier

Last week I showed you the beaded chandelier I made for our guest bedroom and promised a tutorial.  As I mentioned in my earlier post, I used the brilliant tutorial here as a starting point, and then added a few changes of my own.  Here’s the skinny on how to make your own beaded chandelier:


Gather your materials: LOTS of beaded necklaces, cut into long strands (the Mardi Gras kind)
Metal hanging garden basket
A spool of thin-gauge wire
Wire cutters
Wire clothes hanger
Pendant light kit (cord & socket)
Metal chain to hang the fixture
Light fixture mounting bracket, bolt & loop
Light fixture ceiling cap

Start with a hanging garden basket.  Go ahead and paint it to blend with your beads (or the finished color of your chandelier if you plan to paint your beads).  I used a ladder to suspend the chandelier while I worked on it.

diy-light-fixture-beginning

Top it off.  Because I wanted to wire this fixture, the metal hook on the basket wasn’t going to cut it.  I needed to be able to add a pedant light cord and a chain somehow.  I ended up wiring a light fixture ceiling bracket to a ring made from a bent clothes hanger.  The loop on top screws onto a hollow bolt that screws into the bracket, which later allowed me to attach a chain.

diy-chandelier-in-progress-

Add a little structure.  I wired on a ring (again, made from a bent hanger) about half way between the top of the chandelier and the lower ring for a little more shape.  This allowed the beaded strands to swag a little without the metal chains showing.

diy-chandelier-structure

Start beading!  After figuring out that my beaded strands were just a tad longer than I needed to go from the top to the bottom of the fixture with a little swag in the middle, I started attaching them around the top ring by looping wire around the top bead of each strand and the metal ring.

diy-beaded-chandelier-in-pr

My chandelier looked a little crooked at this point, but straightened up once we attached the chain and hung it.

Aaaaand bead some more.  This is definitely the most time-consuming part.  Just make sure that you have good coverage all the way around.  I attached all my strands at the top first, then at the middle (the top part of the basket — so they would swag a little), then at the bottom.  In the photo above I had attached the beads at the top and middle and was trying to make sure there weren’t any bare spots before attaching them at the bottom.

Trim away the excess.  If your strands are a little longer than you need, just cut off the extra after attaching at the bottom of the fixture.

Add a chain and ceiling cap.  

Paint it up.  Give the whole thing a coat or two of paint if you want.  I decided to do this because I found that it made the wires and chains blend in better with the beads.  I used this to spray the fixture a custom color.

Hang it.


Admire.  

diy-beaded-chandelier

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Thank you Britt, for the awesome tutorial!  Go check out A Penny Saved to see Britt’s many other creative transformational projects.   
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16 comments on “Beaded Chandelier Tutorial {Guest Post}

  1. Mirna on said:

    You are a genius!!! Thank you so much fore sharing.

  2. hmm gud one

  3. Thanks for sharing. Its very pretty.

  4. Jami on said:

    Where did u get the beads?

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