Friday, December 7, 2018

Gilded Gold Foil Glass Ball Ornaments




This post has been sponsored by Plaid. I have received product from Plaid, but all opinions are my own. For more information, please see my Disclosure Policy, #ad#plaidcrafts



It's been 20 plus years since the last time I've made these ornaments, and Plaid Mod Podge has been around since then. The classic look of gilded gold balls may withstand another 20 years and still look great on your Christmas tree.

I've used some of my own supplies that I had laying around, but they are still available in a new form. You can take breaks in between drying times and come back later to move on to the next step.

Supplies you'll need (where to buy links included):

Gold Tissue Paper (not plastic gold tissue)
Gold Transfer Foil (Deco Foil)
Gold Ribbon
Foiling Glue (Aleene's doesn't make it anymore)
Foam brushes



You can use Deco Foil sheets and Deco Foil Liquid adhesive for this project. The ornaments should be glass because you'll need to take the caps off the balls and some plastic ones are not removable. I used my own supplies that were still good after all these years and the lifetime supply of gold tissue paper that I saved from the trash at my work place in the 1990's.

Remove all the caps from your glass ball ornaments. I got my ornaments from At Home, and they were cheaper than the ones at the craft stores. I like these ones because the glass under the cap is rolled and melted at the edge instead of cut. (great for safety purposes)

Prepare your gold tissue paper by cutting or tearing it into approximately 1 inch pieces. Torn edges smooth down better when applying. I cut mine into strips and then tore them.

Start by painting a patch of Mod Podge and lay some pieces of paper on it.

Then paint some more Mod Podge on top of the paper smoothing down the edges of the paper while painting. A few wrinkles in the paper are fine, and the foil will highlight them.

Keep adding pieces of paper all the way around the ball and smoothing the edges down as you go. Your fingers will get a little messy while holding on to the ball at the neck. Don't bother applying paper all the way up the neck of the ball. The cap and ribbon will cover most of it. Check for blank spots.

Invert the ball on a chopstick or skewer and stand it up inside a tall glass or push into a foam block. Don't let them touch as they dry. Allow 10-15 minutes to let the Mod Podge dry. By the time you get to your last ball, the first few will already be dry.

Using a separate foam brush and tray, squirt out a small puddle of foiling glue. The purpose of this glue is to remain tacky after it dries. Very lightly add a very thin layer of the foiling glue to the ball. You do not have to cover the entire ball with glue, some missed spots are perfectly fine. You don't want to completely cover the tissue paper layer underneath.

When the foiling glue is dry and no longer white, you're ready to foil. The thin layer of glue will dry faster than what it says on the bottle. Dry time is about 10-15 minutes. It will remain tacky to the touch. Try not to handle the ball too much and take off some of the tackiness with the oils in your hands.

Cut a section of transfer foil off and rub it down, shiny side up, on the surface of your ball. You can use your fingers or the back of a spoon to really burnish the foil on to the surface. Keep using the same piece of foil on the entire surface of the ball to your satisfaction or until all of the foil is used up on your cut piece. It will look like a clear piece of plastic when used up.

Now you have gold on gold texture on your ornament! Time to add the ribbon. Use a ribbon that is approximately the same width as the neck of your ornament ball to cover up the cap and gaps in the tissue paper layer. I cut my ribbon to 8 inches long, tied in a double knot and trimmed the ends. Feel free to use a longer piece to tie a bow.

Thread some gold twine or an ornament hook through the end and hang on your tree. Pink and gold are a very fancy color combination.

I'm making more of these for my neighbors for Christmas! My husband is helping me with the rest of them.

This project is all my own and associated text included. This post is sponsored by #plaidcrafts. Links to other sites are for your convenience. I am not compensated if you click through to them.


About Plaid

Plaid offers so many amazing products and includes lines from lots of well known names including:
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  4. Holiday Cricut Projects
  5. DIY Ribbon Ornaments


3 comments:

  1. These gold ornaments are simply stunning! They look fantastic with that pink tree---great work! Plus, your fingernails look fabulous.

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    Replies
    1. Haha! That's just the one good fingernail. The rest are attacked by winter air. ☺

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  2. These look beautiful! Thanks for choosing our Deco Foil for these pretties!

    ReplyDelete