3 Simple Ways to
Share What You Make

With Instructables you can share what you make with the world — and tap into an ever-growing community of creative experts.

PhotosPhotos

Share one or more photos of a project, recipe, or whatever you've made, quickly and easily.

Step by StepStep-By-Step

Share your step-by-step photos with text instructions of what you made so others can do it too!

VideoVideo

Share your how-to video. You'll need your embed code from a video site such as YouTube.

Wooden Christmas tree with colour-changing lights

Wooden Christmas tree with colour-changing lights
Here's how we constructed a wooden Christmas tree decoration with colour-changing LED lights.
 
Remove these adsRemove these ads by Signing Up
 

Step 1Required parts and tools

Required parts and tools
You will need the following parts:

- 1 piece of MDF (whatever size you want your tree - ours was about 70cm x 50cm)
- Red, green and brown paint
- Hot glue sticks (lots of them)
- Slow flash colour-changing RGB 5mm LEDs
- - we used 31 for our size of tree
- - we got ours from ebay.co.uk trader "amigoofchina"
- One or two white LEDs
- - ours also obtained from ebay:amigoofchina
- One resistor for each LED, suitable for your chosen supply voltage (our LEDs came with free resistors for use with 12v)
- One 12v _regulated_ mains adapter
- - also from Ebay
- - rated at 1000 milliamps (the tree uses about 600ma, so we're not running it at maximum)
- - we chose a switched-mode adapter, because they don't get so hot, the voltage regulation is good, and it's protected against overload and short-circuit
- One inline power connector (suitable to attach to whatever connector is on your power adapter)
- One inline fuse holder (for 20mm fuse)
- One 20mm fuse (we used a 1 amp fuse, but it depends how many LEDs you're using - they consume ~20 milliamps each)
- Some flexible insulated wire
- Some solid copper wire
- - we stripped some 3-core mains wire to obtain ours
- Maybe some insulation tubing, or insulating tape
- Some thin card and masking tape

Tools required:

- Jig-saw
- Drill
- 5mm wood drill bit
- sandpaper
- pencil
- paintbrush
- soldering iron and solder
- a couple of screwdrivers
- hot glue gun
« Previous StepDownload PDFView All StepsNext Step »
10 comments
Jul 16, 2009. 2:26 PMchristiank says:
i will do it for this xmas
Dec 9, 2008. 4:29 PMemdarcher says:
how much did this cost?
Dec 3, 2006. 2:41 PMhivoltage says:
i'm thinking about making a disco dance floor style wall in my room. would these leds work as the lights? are they bright enough? also, do they all cycle through the colors at the same time, since they all start at the same time?
Dec 5, 2006. 1:59 PMhivoltage says:
i do want them to get out of sync, that would probably make a cool effect. as far as the angle that the light is at, i will either add something to diffuse the light like some fibers or something, or i will just sand/grind the lens off the led. the seller on ebay also carries some 10mm leds that are about twice as bright at 15kmcd, but i was wondering if these might be bright enough by themselves.
Dec 1, 2006. 12:41 PMleahculver says:
very festive! great project!

Pro

Get More Out of Instructables

Already have an Account?

close

All Steps Viewing
View all steps of an Instructable on the same page when you're a Pro Member.

Upgrade to Pro today!
2
Followers
1
Author:Dr Rob