Milan Historical Museum

10 Edison Drive
PO Box 308
Milan, OH 44846 USA
419-499-2968
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Milan was named a
National Trust
Distinctive Destination in 2002.

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CREATE A STAINED GLASS WINDOW!

Create a Stained Glass Window

Add a little color to the cold, gray winter with this stained glass window. It’s easy to make, and it looks beautiful when light shines through it.

What you’ll need:

  • Colored tissue paper
  • Colored cellophane
  • Construction paper or poster board
  • Glue stick
  • Scissors

**Arts and crafts stores like Pat Catan’s, Holcombs or Michael’s should carry all these
materials.

Optional:

  • Foils (florist foils with patterns) or aluminum foil
  • Gift wrap
  • Colored pencils to decorate the frame (silver and gold work best)
  • A small suction cup and hook OR a hole punch and yarn or string to attach the finished piece to a window

A few things to know before we begin:

Translucent means you can see light through it. Colored tissue paper is translucent.
Transparent means you can see through it clearly. Cellophane is transparent.
Opaque means you cannot see through it. Foil and wrapping paper are opaque. When you place translucent and transparent materials over each other, they create other colors.

What you need to do:

  1. Cut up the cellophane, colored tissue, wrapping paper and foils into small squares, rectangles and triangles. Make each about 2 to 4 inches wide.
  2. Play around with the different shapes and colors. Overlap them by their corners or sides and decide which combinations you like most. You might want to try making a picture in your stained glass window, like a star or a house.
  3. Use a glue stick to attach the different papers together.
  4. Make a frame for your stained glass window by cutting ½ inch strips of poster board or construction paper. The cut strips are the skeleton or support structure fro your window.
  5. Lay the cut strips of construction paper or poster board over the top of your stained glass window. You can either let the colored papers overlap the border or you can trim off the extra paper. Also, don’t just put the strips along the sides; it looks nice to have them criss-crossed in the middle too.
  6. Glue the strips onto the window with your glue stick. Now turn the piece over and place strips the match the other side. Gluing the strips to this side reinforces the ones on the other side.
  7. Get your finished project ready to hang. If you want you can just use tape to attach it to the window or you can punch a hole at the top and then attach a string or suction cup.
  8. Show off your new creation!

 

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  Copyright 2007 Milan Historical Museum Created and Maintained by WSI