80+ Homemade Wine Bottle Crafts
Crafts made from recyclable and eco-friendly materials always catch the eyes. If you have empty wine bottles laying around your house, why not recycle them by making some easy fun crafts? These wine bottle crafts will surely add a festive style to your home decoration in this holiday season.
25 Creative Wine Bottle Chandelier Ideas
20+ Creative Wine Bottle Centerpieces
Peacock for Christmas
This peacock wine bottle holder with lights is a great Christmas gift. via metalartistforum.com
Giant Bottle Flowers
Blue Wine Bottle Torch
In this DIY project erik turns an everyday bottle into a modern backyard tiki torch. Get the tutorial via designsponge.com
Table Lamp
Using part from the hardware store, you can make a lamp out of an old bottle for about ten bucks. Get the tutorial via instructables.com
Painted Wine Bottles for Valentine’s Day decoration
This painted wine bottles with pipe cleaner letters are perfect for Valentine’s Day decoration. See how via cookinglikelou.com
Hanging Lantern
Put a tea light inside a wine bottle and this hanging lantern is so creative. via homejelly.com
Candle Holder
Cut the wine bottles at different heights to create these cool candle holders. They are perfect for dinner decoration. via designsponge.com
Light
via witandwhistle.com
Recycled Shelving and Tables
Get the tutorial via instructables.com
Hummingbird Feeder
Get the instructions via alliemakes.blogspot.com
Wind Chimes
via delphiglass.com
Wind Chime
These wind chimes can handle a nice gentle to medium breeze and they sound wonderful. via designsbycdchilds.blogspot.com
Bottle Clock
via stanleyclockworks.com
User Designed Table
Wind Chimes
via thinkcrafts.com
Recycled Wind Chime
The melodic tone of the bottle soothes you with every breeze! via recyclart.org
Christmas Tree
via wanderingtastes.com
Christmas Tree
via fatpiginthemarket.com
Christmas Tree
via circlegstudio.wordpress.com
Bottle Tree
Re-Purposed Bottle Tree
Organize the bottles on the tree-shaped shelves and insert a white string light into each bottle mouth. via thisgreenlife.ca
Curtain
Wine Bottle Plant
This craft is a great idea for keeping your plants watered while you are away. via apartmenttherapy.com
Light
DIY Wine Bottle Hanging Planters
via curbly.com
DIY Herb Garden
via shelterness.com
Craft for Wedding
This is a great idea to arrange flowers in hanging glass bottles floated above the buffet for wedding. via eatdrinkchic.com
Colorful Bottle Lantern
Accent Light
Get the tutorial via instructables.com
Wine Bottle Jack-O-Lanterns
Get the tutorial via instructables.com
Wine Bottle Lamps
Christmas Crafts with Wine Bottles
Love Letters
Love Letters
Love Letters
Wine Letters
Christmas Decoration
Lamp
Vases
Cut the wine bottles in half and use the bottle bottoms to make vases. via myjournalkohn.blogspot.com
these bottles are so nice. could you please tell me how to cut them.
thanks
pam
How are thesthese bottles cut? Both horizontal, vertical and center cut out? I Know that you need a special drill bit to make a hole if putting lights inside, but have no idea how to do the other cuts. Thank you!
How did you attach the chain to the glass candle (votive) inside the bottle? Did you drill holes in the glass holder, epoxy it ? I am a bottle sculpturer myself. Also, I did a faux technique on a couple bottles with tissue paper and it turned out cool. Have you tried anything like that? I crinkled up tissue paper (used white) then covered the bottle with elmer’s glue. Gently put the tissue paper over the bottle in small pieces at a time,overlapping some of them. When I got the whole thing covered and allowed it to dry a day or so I painted over the bottle really good. the paint also helps the paper to stay in place better. Then I embelished it. Jacie.
This makes evthieryng so completely painless.
The blue wind chime bottle was cut with a wet saw. Those things can get very expensive, and you can lose part of a finger if you are not careful. And it is really messy.
You can also use a wet saw to cut across the bottle, but that is too much trouble. Remove the label from the bottle in the area you wish to make the cut. Use a glass cutter to make a continuous score around the bottle. This is not something you can do by hand. There are some commercial products that can help, but I chose to make my own jig for high volume work. If you want to see a picture, drop me a note at brozik(at)netzero(dot)net. When the score is made, use boiling water and a measuring cup to heat the area around the score, NOT the entire bottle. Once the scored glass is hot, run some cold tap water on the score. You may have to repeat this procedure a couple times. The heating and cooling propagates a crack through the glass, and the two pieces fall apart. I usually start with 50-75 bottles or so, and I get a success rate around 85%. It is actually rather fun to do. The 15% of the bottles that are lost are due to imperfections in the glass or bad scores that send the crack sideways from the score. (Oh, well, you can’t save them all.) Be sure to wear eye protection, just in case. I have never had a problem of that magnitude, but sometimes a German bottle will shatter in my hands.
You will need to polish the edge. I start with a glass grinder to knock off the big burrs, but then there is about 10-15 minutes of hand work with 60 grit and 120 grit diamond sanding pads. The finish is not drinking glass smooth, but you won’t cut yourself on the rim. (That means you can give them as gifts or sell them at craft fairs.)
As for the votive candle, the technique of drilling the votive is a bit troublesome. I make a chain harness that the votive candle sits in and can be removed from at will; that way it is easy to replace the candle. It just takes some #16 jack chain from Walmart and a couple pair of needle nosed pliers to work the chain links. It is also helpful to have two 1″ steel rings to use as the hanging hardware. Drop me a note, and I’ll send you a picture.
For drilling the hole to put in the lights, you will need a 1/2″ diamond hole saw (12.7mm, not 12mm; Bosch makes a good one). You also need a drill press and a jig to hold the bottle. The jig is easy to build (I can send a picture). The hole must be drilled under water or the glass will overheat and crack. Figure out where you want the hole, and build a dam of plumber’s putty around it to hold in the water. Then use the drill press to make small downward strokes. You have to make sure to lift the bit so that water can get in to cool the glass. Once you are through, a little water and glass dust will fall into the bottle along with the glass plug. Be sure to rinse out the bottle soon thereafter. If you let the water dry, the glass dust acts like cement and leaves a residue in the bottle that is an absolute b!tch to clean out. If you are going to string the lights, you will also need to find a 1/2″ stress relief bushing to prevent them from being pulled out the back.
Have fun!
How are the 3 Christmas decoration bottles made? What was used for the snowflakes and the snow effect on the bottles?
I’d like to know the answer to Serene’s question too. Amazing work!
How are the 3 bottles with the lites inside made? How did you frost them and where did you get the snowflake decals? Thank you for reading this.
I too would like to know the answer to Serenes question…. The snowflake bottles are beautiful !
Just guessing but spray paint (frosted), and a sheet of stickers that you can buy at Hobby Lobby.