Read more : Automotive Powder Coating Prices
With summer here and many folks spending quality time with family and friends on decks and in backyards, it’s a great time to think about spicing up your outdoor decor. With a few smart design and layout tricks and features, you can create an outdoor space with indoor-level comfort. One of these design features is the tasteful use of outdoor string lights to transform your deck or yard into a space exuding modern elegance.
Does setting up string lights in your outdoor space sound complicated? It doesn’t have to be. Here we review and explain a popular TikTok post showing how to elegantly light up your deck or yard without investing much time or trouble. The best part? It’s renter-friendly!
You are watching: Illuminate Your Outdoor Space Easily With These DIY String Light Poles
How to Set Up String Light Poles
What You’ll Need
- A set of string light poles or 10-foot lengths of 1 1/2-inch PVC pipe
- Screw hooks (if not using factory-made string light poles)
- Enough shatter-proof LED bulb string lights to light the area you’re decorating
- One large, heavy-duty plastic planter for each pole you’re setting up
- Quick-set cement and water
- Portable concrete mixer (optional)
- Trowel/small shovel (if not using a portable mixer)
- 6-inch magnetic level
- 8-foot long strips of 2×2-inch wood (optional)
- Quick grip clamps (optional)
- Painter’s ladder
- River rock or pebbles
Directions
- Decide where you’d like to set up your string lights (i.e. across your deck, yard, or patio)
- Place a heavy-duty plastic planter and string light pole in each spot where you intend the pole to be set up. Alternatively, you can use 10-foot lengths of 1 1/2-inch PVC pipe, or 10-foot 4×4 wooden posts, as long as they’re pressure treated to prevent rot. Keep in mind that metal poles may be a lightning risk.
- Mix some quick-set cement in the first planter. Make enough to fill the planter three-quarters full.
- Stick the light pole (or PVC or wooden post) into the cement until the bottom end contacts the bottom of your planter. Tip: dedicated string light poles often come with spikes on the ends to stick into the ground. Use these as intended if you like, or consider them extra anchoring material as you set them into the cement.
- Use a 6-inch magnetic level to ensure the pole or post is perfectly plumb as the cement begins to set. You can use some temporary 2×2 wooden braces clamped diagonally to your pole or post, and pressed into the ground to keep the arrangement plumb without having to hold it.
- Repeat the process with more poles/posts and planters until you have enough set up across your yard or deck to support all the string lights you want.
- Follow the instructions on the quick-dry cement packaging concerning wait time for things to fully harden.
- Use a painter’s ladder to string the lights along the top of the poles or posts. These factory-designed poles have metal loops on top meant for holding string lights. If you’re using PVC or wood, secure the lights with screw hooks.
- Cover the exposed cement on the tops of your planters with decorative river rock.
Source: https://gardencourte.com
Categories: Outdoor