How to Hang Outdoor String Lights: 10 Expert Tips
- Pete Ortiz
- Last updated:
Hanging string lights can elevate any outdoor setting and create a completely unique ambiance. But while there’s no denying the outstanding results, sometimes hanging them up can become a massive headache.
We’ve been there, so we understand. Take it from us: if you want to install your outdoor string lights with as few headaches as possible, there are some tips you’ll want to check out and follow below.
The 10 Tips for Hanging Outdoor String Lights
1. Measure Your Space
Cost | Free |
Ease of Completion | Easy |
Before you start hanging up string lights, do yourself a favor and measure out the space you want to hang them. Then, consider how you’re hanging them.
If you’re wrapping them around a post, it’s going to require far more lights than if you’re pulling them tight. Measure it all out, then give yourself a little extra leeway to ensure you have enough lights when you’re hanging them up. In the end, it’s better to have extra lights than not enough.
2. Plan in Advance
Cost | Free |
Ease of Completion | Easy |
If you want a great final look, you need to think it through. Do yourself a favor and envision the final product. Think through all the details and plan it out. It takes a little more upfront, but if you have a plan, you can make it happen.
Planning in advance ensures everything meshes in the end and helps you get everything you need to put it together before you start trying to hang the lights up.
3. Get the Right Lights
Cost | Free |
Ease of Completion | Moderate |
While you might think all hanging outdoor lights are the same, that’s not the case. There are different sizes and styles, and while you can try and make the wrong kind work for your project, it’s better to get exactly what you want.
Not only is it important to get the right aesthetic style, but it’s also important to note the kind of power they use. Don’t get hardwired hanging lights if you plan on plugging them in, and if you’re going with solar-powered hanging lights, ensure they have access to sunlight throughout the day.
4. Use Your Environment
Cost | Free |
Ease of Completion | Easy |
When you’re looking at how to hang your outdoor lights, use what’s available. While you can put up hooks, poles, and supports if you need to, you can still make the existing environment work for you.
5. Use Hooks
Cost | Low |
Ease of Completion | Easy |
Often, there’s just no way to hang the lights the way you want with what’s there. This is when a few hooks can go a long way. Hooks don’t make a noticeable impact on the overall décor, but it gives you an area to attach each strand.
Don’t overdo it, but it’s better to put a few extra hooks up than to not have enough and watch everything fall down halfway through the event.
6. Get the Right Color Bulbs
Cost | Moderate |
Ease of Completion | Easy |
We sometimes forget about the ambiance created by the color of a bulb. The last thing you want is to think you’re getting a clear or yellow bulb only to end up with a completely different color.
Take a look at the color of the bulbs before you start hanging them up. That way, you don’t end up wasting a bunch of time or money.
7. Consider Poles
Cost | Moderate |
Ease of Completion | Moderate |
Hanging supports are great, but if you have nowhere to put the supports, it can be a problem. If there’s a large gap between the two areas, you might need to add some poles to help.
If you’re planning on using poles as a support system, pick out ones that won’t conflict with the rest of the décor and ensure that guests can see them at night.
8. Consider Support Cables
Cost | Moderate |
Ease of Completion | Easy |
If there’s a lot of space between two posts, you should consider some sort of hanging support to help keep the bulbs up. Not only will this help with the overall look, but it’ll help keep the bulbs from sagging down further as the night goes on.
Furthermore, hanging supports will help ensure nothing falls down, and it’ll help keep the lights from hanging too low where people can accidentally step into them.
9. Hang the Wire First
Cost | Free |
Ease of Completion | Easy |
If you’re using hanging lights with bigger bulbs, you should consider installing the bulbs after you hang them up. It doesn’t take much to break a bulb, and when you’re wrapping them around everything you can easily break a few.
Moreover, if you’re trying to navigate the wire through a tighter space, it’s a lot easier if you don’t have any bulbs on the wire already.
10. Keep the Box
Cost | Free |
Ease of Completion | Easy |
If you’re keeping your string lights up forever, this isn’t a step you need to follow, but if you’re only putting up seasonal outdoor string lights, you’ll want to keep the box. This gives you somewhere to put the lights when in between uses, which will help prevent damaging the bulbs.
Not only that but storing them in the box will help keep them from knotting up, which will make it far easier to hang them up the next time.
Conclusion
With a little patience and guidance, there’s no reason you can’t get your hanging string lights up with ease. Plan it out, take your time, and be ready for some hiccups. With that mindset, you should be able to get your hanging string lights up without wanting to rip your hair out!
Featured Image Credit: JumpStory
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