I got the idea for the Ice Bulb from the frozen water balloon instructable. My mind wants to put LEDs inside everything these days :)

The Ice Bulb is very cheap and simple to make and the result looks amazing. This instructable will be to basic for a lot of people here, but surely someone will find it a fun project.

Parts:
Balloon
LED
Wires
Battery
Tape



View the video

About the pictures: My camera is not able to replicate all the light from the LED. Therefore you will see some large patches of solid white. This is not how it looks in real life. Trust me, it looks a lot better.
 
Remove these adsRemove these ads by Signing Up

Step 1: Attach wires to LED with tape and stuff it inside the balloon.

still32.jpeg
still33.jpeg
I did this the quick and dirty (and very effective) way by twisting the wires together and taping them. If you have the equipment you may want to solder the wires to the LED.

Stuff the LED inside the balloon but keep the wires on the outside.

Now is a good time to test that the LED actually works. You do not want to find out that it is faulty after it is frozen inside the ice...
1-40 of 308Next »
AussieAnglerGal says: Sep 2, 2012. 4:00 AM
thats cool!
aidanjarosgrilli says: Aug 1, 2011. 5:56 PM
in the summer of 1986 all the neighborhood children were playing with water bombs. No-one forgot Little Timmy or the new rule: do not put your water bombs in the freezer.
The nerdling in reply to aidanjarosgrilliMay 2, 2012. 12:32 AM
oi, that was on one of my birthday cards >:(
gizmokid97 says: Apr 13, 2012. 9:17 AM
Awesome stuff, dude!!!! they look SOOOOOO COOL!!!
sciencerules01 says: Mar 25, 2012. 1:28 PM
what can i put for problem and resluts im doing a science project on this
cutecat13 says: Oct 18, 2007. 8:09 AM
Hello, I am thining about doing this for my science fair project.... What would the Hypothesis, purpose be?
ddeherrera in reply to cutecat13Mar 1, 2012. 3:35 PM
ya i would like a hypothesis will you help me
markodeano in reply to cutecat13Oct 23, 2007. 2:39 AM
Perhaps to show how light can be distributed through ice?
heartart says: Feb 5, 2012. 12:04 AM
They would be beautiful in a large crystal bowl, for center pieces at a wedding reception, or other party. Not all the ice balls would have lights in them, so it would be sort of random light and so gorgeous! Great idea Sir. : )
instructables is cool says: Jan 20, 2012. 12:38 PM
it looks like a wizard's ball.
bdavis30 says: Nov 10, 2011. 6:16 PM
MORE FACTS
oart says: Nov 1, 2011. 4:06 PM
my son (12) made an UFO ice sculpture using blinking LEDs of different colors and different sized dishes... then he built a car using a cake mold and he put the headlights and blinkers out of leds with and extension to click on and off. I love them both they are still on my fridge after all these months
justin.jackson says: Oct 2, 2011. 7:14 PM
just thinking that even without wiring up leds, but rather using those little flickering led tealights in a hollow cavity would be a great effect, especially with halloween coming up. you could even put some food coloring in the water before freezing for green or red lights. awesome idea!!
Think with portals says: Jul 27, 2011. 1:31 PM
I stuffed 5 LED's in it.
Chirpoff says: Jul 27, 2011. 10:42 AM
That looks AWEsome! Great job! :)
vishalapr says: Jul 5, 2011. 10:27 AM
The close ups look as if the thing was a huge crystal!Amazing I am definitely going to make one.....right now!Bye!!!!
gossumx says: Jun 10, 2011. 11:47 AM
If you wanted to make the balloon a slightly more perfect sphere, you could put it inside a pot (or any properly sized, water-tight container) that is filled with salt-saturated water.

In theory, the salt water would act as a support for the balloon, preventing the flat-side that is inevitable when putting it directly on a plate.

If the salt content is high enough, the average freezer won't get cold enough to turn it to ice, but the plain water inside the balloon will.

Just don't let your hands dabble in the sub-zero salt water for too long or I would imagine it to have unhealthy consequences.

As an added bonus, in the rare case that you may want to make many of these, if the salt water is put in the freezer in advance, or just left in from the previous balloon, it would freeze the balloon *much* faster, seeing as how cold water leeches heat ~25 times faster than cold air does.
C_Maconroe says: May 26, 2011. 7:40 PM
After discovering that this sweet item has a short life span (silly me, of course it will melt) I was quite sad. But, maybe getting a hollow plastic ball (ice blue) and then filling it with a styrofoam ball with LED's throughout would be cool?
MadBricoleur says: May 24, 2011. 10:12 PM
wow, very creative... snow fort lighting, anyone?
twighahn says: Apr 21, 2011. 2:03 PM
kewl
Roxy 143 says: Sep 2, 2010. 1:39 PM
Awesome
popcorn4lunch in reply to Roxy 143Mar 7, 2011. 8:22 AM
ditto
abran5 says: Dec 2, 2010. 5:44 PM
i wish i can use something else than ice like plastic
ownemall in reply to abran5Jan 23, 2011. 9:00 PM
you could use an acrylic or liquid silicone but it would be hard to keep it from squiting out everywhere
briansparks0211 says: Oct 1, 2010. 1:04 PM
It looks like you have a good idea by using the glob of glue for diffusion! I noticed you used some kind of tape. I would recommend heat shrink tubing around the power carrying wires to prevent shorts for that clean appearance many seek on a final project. But don't just use anything, make sure you use stuff like this with high PFA standards like fluorotherm's; specs here, http://fluorotherm.com/Properties-PFA.asp.
yggdrazil says: Aug 10, 2009. 3:26 PM
so cool! Would it be safe to put in a bowl of punch for a party?
scott! in reply to yggdrazilDec 16, 2009. 3:49 PM
 it'd probably be easier and safer just to get a clear bottomed bowl and put the LED under neath it
yggdrazil in reply to scott!Jan 11, 2010. 2:50 PM
a cool good idea..or mabye two identical clear bowls with the LEDs on the inner "layer". hmmm.....
geoslim13 in reply to yggdrazilNov 2, 2009. 3:29 PM
if you put a few layers of heat shrink tubing over the whole led lead
XOIIO in reply to yggdrazilAug 20, 2009. 3:20 AM
i most likely wouldnt. even if you use lead free solder there is still the wires, led and possibly flux that would get in the punch when the ice melts, plus i dont think people would like punch with wires coming out of it.
grizzly g says: Apr 8, 2009. 10:16 PM
hey what type of wire did you use? thank you
EnigmaMax in reply to grizzly gJul 16, 2009. 3:33 PM
most likely copper.
bigfootduck says: Mar 5, 2009. 8:54 PM
AWESOME! i would SO try this, except that i dont have any LEDs. where can i get some? and how much are they?
nrepak in reply to bigfootduckMar 23, 2009. 6:59 PM
I get my LEDs at RadioShack for about $1.00 each (good ones) or a pack of cheap ones for $2.00(not all may work)
cutecat13 says: Oct 18, 2007. 5:51 PM
Anyone?
felicity in reply to cutecat13Oct 31, 2007. 4:38 AM
I think the point of your science fair would be that you actually think about your science fair project yourself, rather than taking a project from instructables.com and then asking people to tell you what your hypothesis and purpose could be. The comments policy tells me that I should be constructive. Here is my constructive comment: this is not suitable for a science fair project. There isn't really any interesting physics behind this project. This project is a cool idea and it looks really great, but I can't say that there is a lot of science involved. Perhaps you could extend the project in some way and investigate light and how it propagates through different materials. Then you could see if some other materials make some cool effects, and the physics behind those effects.
mandrake (author) in reply to felicityOct 31, 2007. 5:15 AM
I agree with felicity. You would be better off coming up with you own hypothesis. Anyway... You could talk about why the circuit is not broken even if it is in direct contact with water. Most people would not think it possible for the Ice Bulb to work.
Mr Williams in reply to mandrakeApr 28, 2008. 4:18 PM
you covered it in duct tape. is duct tape waterproof? Anyway, if anyone DID solder the thing, did the circuit break? If it didnt, plaese alert me to destroy this RE. Oh, does this melt?
hybridracers in reply to Mr WilliamsJan 30, 2009. 6:45 PM
no its simply following the path of least resistance which is the wire to the battery
tiredmomof3 says: Jan 14, 2009. 8:25 AM
what kind of wires are these? Please respond asap! needed for 4th grade science project!!! Great idea thanks!
1-40 of 308Next »
Pro

Get More Out of Instructables

Already have an Account?

close

PDF Downloads
As a Pro member, you will gain access to download any Instructable in the PDF format. You also have the ability to customize your PDF download.

Upgrade to Pro today!