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Votive Candle Holders Made from Glasses

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These easy DIY votive candle holders are made from old glasses – you won’t spend a lot of money for this pretty, vintage inspired home decor.

Votive Candle Holders Made from Glasses

Over at Hammer Like a Girl, we usually try to use materials that have been cast off, scrounged, or salvaged. So when we first were planning this DIY votives project, we thought it would be a great idea to use cut-off bottles.

You’ve all seen the technique online – soak string in acetone, wrap it around a bottle, light it on fire, turn turn turn to get an even burn and when the flame starts to die down, dunk it ice water, and the bottle breaks where the string was, essentially turning a bottle into a glass.

Votive Candle Holders lit up at night with candles

It sounds so cool (and easy). We went out and bought acetone, dug in our recycling bins and went to work. Maybe we were doing something wrong, but for the life of us, we could not get a nice clean break.

The edges were jagged-y, like something you’d see in a bar fight. So with singed arm hair, we went to the Goodwill, where we bought three glasses for $.69/each instead. We decided to use those for these votives!

Here’s some instructions – not how to singe your arm hair – but for making unique decoupage votive candle holders.

DIY Votive Candle Holders

Gather These Supplies

  • Drinking glasses, preferably with straight sides
  • Ephemera of your choice – we used an old poetry book, a fiction magazine, and old postage stamps
  • Antique Matte Mod Podge
  • Brush
  • X-Acto knife
  • Fine sandpaper (220-grit)
  • Bottle for holding the glass while decoupaging

First find some clear drinking glasses – the straighter the sides the better. We lucked out at Goodwill and found a large, a medium, and a small glass, making a perfect little varied size “set”.

Plain Glasses

Select some of your favorite papers to cover your votive holders. Old wrapping paper, books, magazines, craft paper work great.

Ephemera

We used an old poetry book, stamp collection and a literary magazine from 1954 (with a great orange advertisement for whiskey). If you don’t want to use originals, you can use laserjet (no smear!) copies instead and hang onto the originals.

Vintage ephemera stamps for Mod Podge

Cut the paper so it is slightly larger than the glass. The paper should hang over the top and bottom edges.

If the paper is too small to go all the way around the votive candle holders, that’s ok – you can just piece another paper over the top and cover the gap.

WrappingGlass

Spread Mod Podge onto the back of the paper.

ModPodgeBack

Turn the glass on its side, and lay the paper over the top of the glass, letting the excess paper hang off the top/bottom edges.

ModPodge_wrapping

Roll the glass on the table until the paper covers the glass.

ModPodge_wrap2

Smooth the paper onto the glass, working from the center outward to the edges.

ModPodge_smooth

If you have a gap, cut another piece of paper to cover it. Keep the design in mind, here’s a chance to add a little interest.

ClosingGap

Let the decoupage dry thoroughly  – a couple hours should do.

Trim the excess paper off the top by using an X-Acto knife. Gently poke the blade through the paper and using the edge of the glass as a guide, trim off excess paper.

TrimTop

Repeat along the bottom edge.

TrimBottom

If needed, touch up areas along the bottom of the glass (where it curves) with Mod Podge.

TouchUpBottom

Gently press down/in with fingers, working your way around the glass.

PressDownBottom

Let Mod Podge dry thoroughly. If the edges are a little rough, you can take fine sandpaper and gently touch up the edges, sanding in an inward direction.

SandEdges

Place the glass upside-down on a stand of some sort (we used a soda bottle, a glass and bottle of paint) and apply a coat of Mod Podge to the outside.

FinalCoat

Let it dry and repeat with another coat of Mod Podge.

FinalCoatDryingBottles

There you go! A simple project (if you skip the part where you light your arm hair a string on fire) that has some fun effects when you place lit candles inside. You can customize these votive candle holders and use your favorite pattern papers, kids drawings, etc.

DIY votives: vintage candle holders made from glasses
DIY votive candle holders
DIY votives: vintage candle holders made from glasses
How to create pretty vintage votive holders with Mod Podge and old glasses!

If you enjoyed this project, I’d love for you to check out these other recycled craft ideas:

Votive Candle Holders

Votive Candle Holders

Yield: 3 votives
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Active Time: 20 minutes
Dry Time: 30 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour
Difficulty: Easy
Estimated Cost: $2

These easy DIY votive candle holders are made from old glasses – you won’t spend a lot of money for this pretty, vintage inspired home decor.

Materials

  • Drinking glasses, preferably with straight sides
  • Ephemera of your choice – an old poetry book, a fiction magazine, and old postage stamps
  • Antique Matte Mod Podge

Tools

  • Brush
  • X-Acto knife
  • Fine sandpaper (220-grit)
  • Bottle for holding the glasses

Instructions

  1. Wash the glasses inside and out with mild soap and warm water. Let dry.
  2. Select some of your favorite papers to cover your votive holders. Old wrapping paper, books, magazines, craft paper work great.
  3. Cut the paper so it is slightly larger than the glass. The paper should hang over the top and bottom edges.
  4. Spread Mod Podge onto the back of the paper.
  5. Turn the glass on its side, and lay the paper over the top of the glass, letting the excess paper hang off the top/bottom edges.
  6. Roll the glass on the table until the paper covers the glass.
  7. Smooth the paper onto the glass, working from the center outward to the edges.
  8. If you have a gap, cut another piece of paper to cover it. Keep the design in mind; here's a chance to add a little interest. Let dry thoroughly.
  9. Trim the excess paper off the top by using an X-Acto knife. Repeat along the bottom edge.
  10. If needed, touch up areas along the bottom of the glass (where it curves) with Mod Podge.
  11. Let Mod Podge dry thoroughly. If the edges are a little rough, you can take fine sandpaper and gently touch up the edges, sanding in an inward direction.
  12. Place the glass upside-down on a stand of some sort (we used a bottle) and apply a coat of Mod Podge to the outside. Let dry and repeat.
  13. Add tealights - either real or LED. Never leave any real flames unattended.

The post Votive Candle Holders Made from Glasses appeared first on Mod Podge Rocks.


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