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Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights

lanterns - 12
lanterns - 11 lanterns - 13

For a late night summer party, we wanted to deploy an array of maybe 20 or so little LED garden lights along the periphery of our back yard. And since it was for a one-time event, there wasn't much sense in buying (or building) a set of nice looking permanent solar lights. So here is an alternative: make your own ultra-low cost temporary garden lights using LEDs, lithium coin cells, and mason jars.



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To start with, we need LEDs and CR2032 lithium coin cells. One each per jar. The best kind of LED for this design is an ultrabright LED with a diffused lens so that the light cast by the LED chip goes in *every direction,* not just in the direction that the LED points (which is what you get with LEDs that have clear lenses). Having easy access, we opted for the 10 mm diffused white LEDs from here, but you can get similar LEDs elsewhere as well.

For batteries, a very good option is Digi-Key. You *may* be able to do better from various eBay sellers and so forth, but we've gotten burned (figuratively, not literally) by bad sets of lithium coin cells, so beware! One thing to keep in mind: there are strict restrictions on shipping lithium coin cells by air, so if at all possible, allow time for ground shipment of batteries. (And, if you have leftover coin cells, you can always use them to make BristleBots!)


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Next, you'll need some jars.

Mason jars are available by the dozen in your local supermarket, in the canning/pickling section (which seems to actually still exist!), but are also available online of course. The "other" way is to start with a set of recycled jars, of course. If you eat a lot of pasta sauce from jars, you can build up a collection pretty quickly. And even if you don't eat food that comes in jars, you can usually find good jars at thrift stores-- so you really don't need to spend a lot on this. But even if you're buying brand new jars, you should be able to get all of your parts for a grand total of about $1-$1.50 per light jar.

(If you want to get a bit fancier, there is also plenty of room for that. I like this set of instructions for making frosted glass jars for LEDs-- those would work well for this project too.)


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Now we hook up the LED to the battery as though we were making LED Throwies. *

Connect an LED directly across the terminals of the lithium coin cell. The long lead goes to the '+' side of the battery. Wrap it once with tape-- just about any kind-- to keep the LED leads touching the battery cell. (We had blue masking tape handy so we used that-- it seemed to work just fine.)


*Important safety tip: do not throw the completed LED jar lights.


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Now the tricky step: Bend the LED 90 degrees from the battery cell using a half-twist, so that (1) it can bend that that way and (2) you don't touch the two leads of the LED to each other.


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Place the LED assembly inside one of your jar lids and tape it down in place. (Optionally, you can do a better job of centering the LED than shown here!)


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Finally, screw the jar onto the lid, and it's done.


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With a little practice, you can make a few of these per minute.


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And, after dark, they start to come alive.

We think that these could be potentially interesting for a number of different types of outdoor events-- making quick cheap lighting when and where it's needed. They are relatively scaleable, in the sense that hundreds of them are much more affordable than regular solar garden lights. The difference is that like traditional luminarias, these jar lights are temporary. However unlike luminarias, LED jar lights are waterproof, won't blow out or catch on fire, and will stay safely lit-- unattended-- for several days up to a week. And, if you don't need them for a week at a time, you can always easily disassemble them and save the batteries for next time.

Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights | 43 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
Simple Switch?
From: Anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2008 @ 04:56 AM PST
I wonder if a simple switch could be integrated into this design. Perhaps something that would turn the light off if you flip the jar upside down...
  • Simple Switch? - From: Anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2008 @ 10:58 AM PST
  • Simple Switch? - From: Anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2008 @ 12:49 PM PST
  • Simple Switch? - From: Anonymous on Sunday, November 16 2008 @ 05:47 AM PST
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2008 @ 05:52 AM PST
neat idea, and I've made my share of throwies, but I stopped making them when I realized the environmental issues. You can get the same effect (bit more money at about $5 per piece) just using the solar lights for driveways. But they last MUCH longer, and are reusable.
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2008 @ 07:22 AM PST
One could perhaps add some interest and color by loosely crumpling up some saran wrap of different colors in the jars. I know they make a rosy color and a teal sort of color. Should diffuse the light a little, but in an interesting sort of way.
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2008 @ 09:44 AM PST
How would you integrate a photo sensor into the setup so that the lights would come on only at dark? Thoughts? I am a novice at this stuff.
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2008 @ 09:54 AM PST
THIS I could actually DO!
And I think I will....how darn cool is this idea?

Thanks!
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2008 @ 10:50 AM PST
Wow! A project I can actually DO (although it is always possible I'll screw up the taping step :)

Please can you tell me where to get the LEDs? (a link / Online is best, so I don't have to embarrass myself at an electronics store when the clerk asks me an 'obvious' question I can't even parse).

Thanks!

PS: My cat may enjoy batting one of these about as well.
integrated switch?
From: Anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2008 @ 03:05 PM PST
Hmm - I wonder if there's a way you can incorporate the metal lid of the jar as one of the contacts in a simple switch - so you can give the lid a quarter turn to switch the light on or off. A patch of foil on the rim of the jar, maybe?

Of course, they would take more than 30 seconds to build this way, but would last a lot longer too. Anything to reduce the "disposability" of the battery (lithium batteries aren't really disposable, they're just cheap enough to throw away, which isn't the same thing).
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2008 @ 03:19 PM PST
Wouldn't it have been cheaper to buy tiny solar cells rather than buying expensive, disposable lithium batteries?
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2008 @ 05:49 PM PST
Man, if you are going to do a throwie-inspired project right now, you could at least give a shout out to GRL co-founder James Powderly who is somewhere detained in China.
Photocells
From: Anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2008 @ 09:43 PM PST
Better yet, why not buy a cheap photocell for each one? That way you won't waste valuable energy during the day, etc. Or to combine several ideas, a solar battery and a photocell for each LED. :) It might cost a bit more (maybe? I'm too lazy to look up the parts on digikey), but it'd be a far more effective and sustainable solution.
Missing the point
From: Anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2008 @ 09:53 PM PST
I think everyone's missing the point. Make a quick, simple, cheap lantern thing. The ideas about timers and switches and solar cells are all great...for another project. Instead of making a comment and walking away, write your own blog post with instructions on how to make your wonderful inventions. Then link it here.
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Kricket on Thursday, August 21 2008 @ 05:24 AM PST
Hey, this will be perfect for me when I get home to New Mexico. We moved from Albuquerque to a house outside town where fire danger (mountain woods = kindling) makes the traditional Christmas luminaria candle+sand+paper bag a BIG nono. If the fire doesn't kill you, the neighborhood association lynch mob will.

I may whip up a dozen of these to lay out on our walkway, but I'll put them in brown paper bags. Should make nice warm Christmas light. Thanks!
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Anonymous on Thursday, August 21 2008 @ 07:34 AM PST
May I suggest an ecologically better solution?

Instead of batteries, use a CITRIC FRUIT, like a lemon (or a potato), and two electrodes:
- copper, the +
- zinc, the -

insert these two wires into a lemon, connect the LED's longer lead to the copper electrode.

And you're on. Feel free to experiment using two fruits, serially connected.

The best thing these batteries are fully disposable and environment safe

http://www.sciencebuddies.org/science-fair-projects/project_ideas/Elec_p029.shtml?from=Home

http://www.madsci.org/experiments/archive/889917606.Ch.html
http://www.madsci.org/cgi-bin/search?query=potato+battery

:)
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Shadyman on Saturday, August 23 2008 @ 07:05 AM PST
*Important safety tip: do not throw the completed LED jar lights.

ROFL!
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Anonymous on Monday, August 25 2008 @ 01:06 PM PST
The solar lights use batteries as well. Need somewhere to store all that energy. The cheaper lights use batteries and lights that are environmentally suspect. This project allows you to re-use many of the components.
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Anonymous on Tuesday, August 26 2008 @ 11:03 AM PST
Before anybody tries this, it's important that you know the forward voltage of the LEDs and their current ratings as well as the voltage of the batteries. The example shows a white LED (typical forward voltage equals about 3.2 V) with 3V lithium batteries, which is probably okay. But replacing the LED with a red LED (typical forward voltage equals about 1.8V) and using the same battery, you'll end up with a burned out LED or battery and burned fingers (and in the worst case, a small fire). Put a resistor in series with the LED to avoid that fate. Use Ohm's Law to figure out the resistor value you'll need. The equation is

resistance = (supply voltage - LED forward voltage) / (LED max forward current)
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Anonymous on Tuesday, August 26 2008 @ 01:39 PM PST
I have been looking around to try to find cheap lithium coin cells but everywhere seems to be really expensive. Do you know what strength of battery is needed and where to find them? Preferrably not an expensive version because i will need over 50 of them.
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Anonymous on Tuesday, August 26 2008 @ 04:26 PM PST
What if you hot glued the battery and one lead to the inside of the lid, then taped the exposed lead to the other? This way you could pull the tape off to turn it off, and vice versa, thus expanding the battery life.
great idea!
From: Anonymous on Wednesday, August 27 2008 @ 12:59 PM PST
this is a great, cheap idea! one question: how long do the batteries last? if you're using them for an entire evening, do they last the whole time? ~Am~ Lu-n-Am Blog
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Anonymous on Saturday, August 30 2008 @ 01:36 AM PST
I'm making blackberry jam this weekend. Can I have the jars please, if you've finished with them?
Quick, easy, temporary, and beautiful LED garden lights
From: Anonymous on Wednesday, September 03 2008 @ 08:55 AM PST
Actually, I had just had a similar idea... I plan to hack apart some rechargeable LED outdoor lights and incorporate them into Ball jars. These lights flicker like a candle and will emulate a "firefly in a jar" feeling.