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Ball-Chain Plant Hangers
Snap one together to fit any pot!
- Author: Sean Michael Ragan
- Time required: 15 minutes
- Difficulty: Easy
Most people are familiar with the common ball chain "straight coupling" that lets you join one end of a chain to another.
There's also a less-familiar "eye" coupling, however, that lets you join the end of a ball chain to the middle of another. You crimp the terminating chain's last ball into the coupling and pass the continuous chain through the eye, the opening of which is just large enough to pass the spherical links. It is not, however, large enough to pass the diameter of a straight coupling. So if you sandwich an eye coupling between two straight couplings, you can make a fixed three-way joint. And believe me, the fixed joints are necessary if you're going to make complex constructions. If you leave them free to slide, things rapidly become very tangled.
A simple three-way joint constructed from ball-chain fittings is the core of the project. It opens up the possibility for pretty much any netted ball-chain webbing you can imagine. This project just covers the most basic, utilitarian design of a simple plant hanger, but once you know how to make these joints, you can pretty much make a ball-chain webbing to fit any object.
Sections
Tools
Relevant parts
- Ball chain (60"), #10 You could certainly use smaller- or larger-diameter ball chain, and of course the total length you need will be determined by the size of the pot you want to hang, and how low you want to hang it.
Relevant parts (continued)
- Coupling ball chain straight (8), To match ball chain diameter You can get the kind with or without the side opening.
- Coupling ball chain eye (4), To match ball chain diameter
- View:
- Paginated
- Full width

Edit Step 1
— Construct joints
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Use side-cutting pliers to cut four two-ball lengths of chain.
Build four three-way joints as follows:
Attach a straight coupling to one link of a two-ball chain.
Slip the eye of an eye coupling over the free ball until it butts up against the straight coupling.
Attach another straight coupling to the free ball. This will trap the eye coupling between the two straight couplings.

Edit Step 2
— Measure diameter of pot
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Wrap a length of ball chain around the pot, snugly, at the level you want the pot to sit. On a common terracotta flower pot like mine, just beneath the protruding rim makes the most sense.
Note the point at which the chain just doubles back on itself. Then count the chain two links shorter for each joint in the loop. There are three joints in this loop, so shorten it by six links.
Make the cut.

Edit Step 5 ¶
Cut the hanging chains
Guesstimate how long you want the hangers to be. Or, if you're compulsive, you can figure it out exactly with some trigonometry. Mine are about 14" long apiece.
Cut one length of chain to serve as a prototype.
Cut two lengths of chain that are each two links shorter than the prototype. Now you've got one long chain and two short chains.
This guide has been completed 2 times.
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