Step 2
Align the glass bowl with where you will want it to sit in the hand upon completion. I placed the bowl open end up when doing this, but either way works fine.
I wanted to glue the finger sections at new angles to make it look like the hand is holding the dish.
Step 3
From there, I just started hot gluing the fingers back on at the angles I wanted.
It’s okay if there are some gaps when placing them.
I used hot glue because of the drying time, but if you have something else that you prefer, go ahead, and try it out.
(Optional) Step 4
Then, I went through the gaps and filled them in with hot glue.
Once it dried, I trimmed down any little strings and pulled off any pieces that dripped down.
Later, I took some beige, white, and gray paint to blend over the top of the hot glue at the joints and down the hand so it looked more cohesive.
It’s not mandatory, just personal preference.
Step 5
Next, start working on the crystal ball.
I wanted to make sure that the paint was more translucent for later when there were lights inside.
This part is up to a personal preference for materials, but I used food coloring and Mod Podge to get my desired effect.
I had initially planned to use alcohol ink but decided to work with what I had on hand.
First, I painted thin layers of Mod Podge around the inside of the glass.
Then, I put a drop of blue food coloring into the glass and slowly rotated it.
Step 6
I then repeated the step with green food coloring. I continued to rotate it until the colors started to cover more of the space.
The glass dried like this.
Step 7
It still wasn’t giving me the exact effect I was after, so I took a small brush with some white and gold acrylic paints and slowly blended them into a swirl around the inside of the bowl.
Step 8
I set the glass aside to dry and painted the small wooden plaque gold.
Step 9
Once both pieces were dry, I prepped my battery-operated lights. I bought these at Hobby Lobby last year, but I’ve seen sets like them in Walmart and the Dollar Tree.
This set has a timer setting which I like as I don’t plan to keep the lights on in this for long periods of time.
Step 10
Then I took a small ball of Poly-fil and wrapped the lights around it. I kept the lights on and adjusted them around until I was happy.
Step 11
Next, I flipped the glass upside down over the end of the lights and hot glued the bottom around the wooden plaque for the base.
Step 12
Then, I positioned the crystal ball into my skeleton hand.
With that, my project was complete.
In the end, I really like how it looks while lit up, but I almost like how the glass looks more without the light.
Is it perfect? No.
But, it was super fun to make.
Plus, when I turn it on in a dark house it scares my fiancé. It’s a win-win.
Happy Hometalking, everyone!