Current:Home > MarketsForgot to get solar eclipse glasses? Here's how to DIY a viewer with household items. -TradeBridge
Forgot to get solar eclipse glasses? Here's how to DIY a viewer with household items.
View
Date:2025-04-11 19:50:09
By now, everyone has heard that the rare 2024 total solar eclipse is coming – and it's got people excited.
While cities brace for traffic, schools brace for absences and space enthusiasts are planning parties, the glasses that enable safe viewing of the eclipse have become something of a hot commodity.
Peeking directly at the eclipse before it reaches totality without proper eye protection can cause permanent eye damage, experts have warned, making glasses a necessity for safe viewing. But, as the day approaches, they may become harder to find.
Luckily, people who didn't manage to get their hands on glasses are not completely down and out. There are other safe ways to view the eclipse, say experts, and a lot of them only require a little bit of craftiness and items you can find lying around the house.
Here are a few DIY eclipse viewers you can make at home.
As a reminder, none of these options allow you to look directly at the eclipse: you need special eclipse glasses for that.
Solar eclipse guide:When is the 2024 total solar eclipse? Your guide to glasses, forecast, where to watch.
NASA's DIY cereal box viewer
This NASA project uses components you almost certainly already have at home. Using a cereal box, cardboard, foil, paper, scissors and tape or glue, you can put together this projection eclipse viewer.
As always, NASA advises not to look directly into the sun using this tool.
Steps to make the cereal box eclipse viewer:
- Get an empty, clean cereal box.
- Cut a white piece of cardboard that will fit snuggly in the bottom of the box, or secure it permanently by gluing it in place.
- Cut the top of the cereal box, removing both ends and leaving the center intact.
- Put a piece of tape across the center of the top to securely hold it closed.
- Tape a piece of heavy-duty foil or double a single layer for additional strength, covering one of the openings at the top of the cereal box. The other opening will remain open for viewing.
- Using a small nail (approximately 3mm in diameter) push a hole in the foil.
- Cover the entire box with construction paper, leaving the single-viewing opening and the foil uncovered.
How to use the DIY viewer:
- The finished box should be held with the pin-hole side facing the sun. It may take a little practice pointing the box.
- With your back facing the sun, look through the viewing opening. A small image of the sun, about ½ cm in diameter can be seen projected on the white paper inside the box.
Watch the demo here:
The Planetary Society DIY paper viewer
While the Planetary Society also offers instructions for box or projector viewers that are more "fancy," as they put it, it doesn't get easier than their simple pinhole paper projector.
To make it, you only need two index cards (3-by-5 or A6 or A7 size) or small paper plates for each person and basic pushpins. Simply use the pushpin to punch a small hole close to the middle of one of the cards and you're done.
Another super easy version that requires no crafting? A kitchen colander. An ordinary kitchen colander can easily be used to view a solar eclipse in the same way as other projector viewers; the colander's circular holes project crescent images of the sun onto the ground.
To make the "fancier" version, you'll need 2 index cards (larger, 5-by-7 or A5 cards work better for this) or small paper plates for each person, a pencil, pushpins and a towel, sweatshirt, blanket, flattened corrugated cardboard box, carpet, or other soft substrate to place underneath card during pin pushing.
To make the fancier version:
- Draw a simple design on a card. The lines should not be too close together
- Place the card on top of something soft (blanket, towel, etc)
- Using the push pin, make small holes along your design lines. Not too close together – about 5 millimeters (1/4 inch) apart.
To use it, you'll again want to avoid looking directly at the sun:
- Go to your eclipse observing spot and make sure you can see the shadow of your head and shoulders clearly.
- Hold up the card with the hole on top of your shoulder so that you can see the shadow of the card above the shadow of your shoulder.
- Now hold up the other card and make sure you can see its shadow, too.
- Move the second card and watch how its shadow moves. Keeping the card in front of you, move its shadow until the second card's shadow overlaps the first card's shadow.
- Now look at the second card. You should see a dot on the card for every hole you punched. Those dots are actually images of the sun.
Watch the demo here:
Cardboard or paper tube eclipse viewer
Sticking with the theme of using items you can easily find around the house, tube viewers can be made using cardboard tubes from household items like paper towels or toilet paper rolls. You can also use thick cardstock rolled up and taped to make your own tube.
To make one, you'll need a cardboard tube, white paper, aluminum foil, tape and a pushpin or something else sharp to poke a small hole. According to "Let's Talk Science," you can put this viewer together with these steps:
- Trace the opening of the tube on a piece of white paper. Draw a slightly bigger circle around it. Cut around the bigger circle. Cut small slits to the inner circle.
- Cut an opening near one end of the tube to make a viewing window.
- Tape the paper circle to the end of the tube near the viewing window.
- Cut a piece of aluminum foil that is a bit larger than the opening of the tube.
- Poke a small hole in the center of the aluminum foil.
- Tape the aluminum foil over the other opening of the tube.
How to use the viewer:
- With your back to the sun, hold the tube parallel to the path of the sun. Look through the viewing hole. Move the viewer until a small white circle appears on the paper.
See an example below:
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- See first look at Travis Kelce hosting 'Are You Smarter Than a Celebrity?'
- Fired Philadelphia officer leaves jail to await trial after charges reduced in traffic stop death
- Average rate on a 30-year mortgage falls to 6.47%, lowest level in more than a year
- Trump's 'stop
- Taylor Swift cancels Vienna Eras tour concerts after two arrested in alleged terror plot
- Watch these fabulous feline stories on International Cat Day
- Andrew Young returns to south Georgia city where he first became pastor for exhibit on his life
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Team USA golfer Lilia Vu's amazing family story explains why Olympics mean so much
Ranking
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Ohio woman claims she saw a Virgin Mary statue miracle, local reverend skeptical
- 2024 Olympics: Canadian Pole Vaulter Alysha Newman Twerks After Winning Medal
- NYC driver charged with throwing a lit firework into a utility truck and injuring 2 workers
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- 'Trad wives' controversy continues: TikTok star Nara Smith reacts to 'hateful' criticism
- Georgia school chief says AP African American Studies can be taught after legal opinion
- Man charged in 1977 strangulations of three Southern California women after DNA investigation
Recommendation
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Maine leaders seek national monument for home of Frances Perkins, 1st woman Cabinet member
'Chef Curry' finally finds his shot and ignites USA basketball in slim victory over Serbia
Who is Nick Mead? Rower makes history as Team USA flag bearer at closing ceremony with Katie Ledecky
Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
Tennis Star Rafael Nadal Shares Honest Reason He Won’t Compete at 2024 US Open
Katie Ledecky, Nick Mead to lead US team at closing ceremony in Paris
University of Georgia panel upholds sanctions for 6 students over Israel-Hamas war protest