Friday, October 19, 2018

Simple Vertical Hanging DIsplay

I was struggling to find a good way to display headbands for sale, and Pinterest was not particularly helpful. I saw something that was interesting, but also posed its own problem: it needed to hang, itself. But the shape of it made me think of something else: tomato cages.

So that night I ran to the hardware store and got a galvanized steel tomato cage (it was about $5, and sturdier than the usual dark green ones) that had 4 rings. It will sit on the 4th ring as my base, leaving 3 rings to use for display, and the 4 exposed wires at the top (that I trimmed, using a pipe cutting tool) would then be stuck into a styrofoam head to finish the display.

I used a can of spray paint I had from another project to paint it. Some of the wires were welded unevenly into the top ring, and it was going to tear up any table covering I set it on, so I bought some thick batting as a remnant and some clearance ribbon. I cut the batting into strips about 2 inches wide (I only needed 2 strips), and wrapped it around the top (soon to be bottom) ring. Then I wrapped the ribbon around that, securing it with hot glue. It's 2 1/2 inch ribbon, 5 yards, and I used the whole spool. (I did fold the ends over a few times to enclose the raw edges.)

Painted tomato cage, wrapped tier.
The styrofoam head was one that I had, I découpaged it with tissue paper and paper napkins that had a pattern I liked, then painted on a face to give her some personality. After carefully skewering the head onto the wires (it's uneven – that's kind of the nature of styrofoam sometimes, especially when the wires are at angles, as mine were), I put hot glue into the holes to help anchor it in place.

Meet Ophelia
For the display part of it, I ordered wire clips from Amazon. Unlike clothespins, these won't break apart if they're twisted. Plus, I can permanently attach them to my display by bending open one of the loops and closing it back again around the ring of my display. (Clips don't get lost, and I can control the number of items displayed per section, preventing overcrowding.)

Wire clips, pliers wrapped with duct tape (so it didn't mar the coating on the clips).
The clip loops are easily bent with pliers, but I did put some tape on the pliers so the PVC coating on the clips didn't get marred. Once I figured the best number of items per section, I was able to put that number on each section and add the headbands when I was done.

Figuring the best number /section.
The finished display is a little over 4 feet high (50.5", 1.28m), but it's not a floor display – it's intended for a tabletop. On a 30" table, Ophelia will stand 6'8.5" (2m), and the top tier is conveniently at eye-level for most people. The bottom tier I am reserving for kids' headbands.

Filled with inventory.
I suppose my next project could be to find or make a lazy susan sort of thing so the whole thing can rotate, but I have concerns that would make it tippy if someone tried to spin it too fast. Unless I am prepared to anchor it to the spinner (making it less portable), I think I'll leave it as-is, and put it on a corner of a table.

Ophelia, modelling.
The open space under her neck will be used to hang signage with pricing. It will be at eye level for most people and done with the same typeface that I use for business cards and other booth signage. I have some acid-green tulle that I'll use to hang it with.

I'm hugely pleased with the way this turned out, and I hope this serves as inspiration for you, if you have vertical display issues for small items.

No comments: