Holiday Tree Lights

 

Holiday Tree Lights

WHAT YOU NEED:

  • 8″ cone template (left + right), 6″ cone template4″ cone template
  • 4 pieces of heavyweight cardstock
  • parchment paper
  • 2 – 12″ lengths of 1/8″ dowel
  • small blade
  • aspic cutter in star shape
  • rolling pin
  • air dry porcelain or modeling clay
  • 4 LED tea lights
  • (not pictured) wet rag or paper towel or tiny sponge
  • (not pictured) glue or tape

DIRECTIONS:

  1. I whipped up a set of cone templates for you to print onto cardstock and glue together to use as guidelines for rolling out your clay and as scaffolding for forming your holiday trees. The large 8″ and medium 6″ cone templates need to be cut out and glued together, while the two smaller 4″ cone templates are already in one piece. These templates should be printed onto 8.5×11″ cardstock and should not be resized to avoid cropping during printing. After you have the flat cone template cut out, wait to glue or tape it into a cone shape until after step three.
  2. Place your parchment paper overtop of the flat cone template and roll out the clay on top of the paper to 1/8″ thickness. The dowels will rest under the rolling pin to keep you from rolling out the clay too thinly. Do not use wax paper for this, because it will stick to the clay. Aluminum foil also isn’t the best choice because it will tint your clay with a grey color. But if foil is all you have, you can always use the tinted side for the inside of your cones, and no one will be the wiser!
  3. After rolling out enough clay to cover the template, remove the template from behind the paper and place it on top of the clay. Trim around it with a blade and put the excess clay away or wrap it in a wet paper towel, so it doesn’t dry out. Now you can finish assembling your cone template so it will be ready to be used as scaffolding for forming your tree in step five.
  4. Using a blade, score the edge of the clay on the side that you want to be on the inside of the cone. Use cross hatching for this technique. Then lay the paper cone onto this edge and wrap the clay around the paper cone. If there isn’t enough clay to wrap around the cone, lay it back onto the paper and roll out only the edges to give you a bit of an overlap when it’s wrapped around the paper cone.
  5. After the clay has been wrapped around the paper cone, cross hatch on the other edge of the clay (facing the outside, not the inside this time) and wet both cross hatched areas with a wet paper towel or small sponge. The cross hatched edge from step four should lay on top of the newly cross hatched edge. This “score and slip” technique will bind together the seam so that it doesn’t break apart when the clay has dried. Hold the cone from the inside while from the outside you smooth together the seam with a wet paper towel.
  6. Holding the cone from the inside, press your finger against the area you want to pierce with the little star shaped aspic cutter. (Aspic is basically just a fancy name for savory jelly.) You’ll need to really press the cutter against the paper cone where your finger is pushing against from the inside, and give it a little wiggle too. When you pull out the cutter, the clay should come out with it. If you mess up one hole, you can always spruce it up with a blade. And if you really butcher the piercing process, you can always just take the clay off the cone, ball it up, and begin all over again!
  7. After all of the holes have been cut into the clay, let your cones sit on the cardstock scaffolding for 6 hours. Then, gently remove the cardstock and let the clay dry out for another 24 hours before handing. You can paint or glaze your trees if you want a more colorful scene, but I love how the little LED tea lights glow inside of the white trees! This would be a great way to decorate a mantle, or you could make some extra trees and create a magical winter tablescape for your holiday parties.

 

Thank you so much, Mandi Johnson for this fun DIY project!

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