LED Lighting on Group Projects

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John Hawkins

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Mar 24, 2026, 12:03:07 PM (6 days ago) Mar 24
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Hi everyone! 

We're working on a project where 2nd grade students are building prototype signs. Like an exterior business sign. They want to put on LEDs for lettering. Has anyone ever messed around with cuttable LED light strips? How easy are they to use for multiple projects? Like could I buy one roll and a whole class cut and use it?

If so, any recs on the best equipment to get? Looking at like 16 groups.  

Thanks!
John

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John Hawkins
Lower School Science
Oak Hill School



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Justin Schmidt

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Mar 24, 2026, 2:37:07 PM (5 days ago) Mar 24
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In my experience the hard part is usually connecting to the cut ends to wires. I've tried buying clip on connectors which have been fiddly at best. Soldering works well but is challenging for beginners.

What about using cheap string lights instead? You can poke them through cardboard easily with all the wires hidden behind (have students use a sharp pencil to poke the holes if you don't have something like a makedo or other safe pokey tool) or taped flat under another layer of cardboard.

Could using a few LEDs and conductive tape (copper or nylon) work (like paper circuits)?

There's also EL wire that might be worth looking into. I think you can cut them to length easily but I don't think you can easily reconnect the cut parts to a battery.




From: 'John Hawkins' via K-12 Fab Labs and Makerspaces <k-12-f...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, March 24, 2026 10:13:07 AM
To: k-12-f...@googlegroups.com <k-12-f...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [k-12-fablabs] LED Lighting on Group Projects
 
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Sandee Bisson

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Mar 24, 2026, 3:18:33 PM (5 days ago) Mar 24
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John,

We've used this flexible LED filament for a similar project. It's a little pricey so we've made choosing one letter or design flourish to illuminate part of the design criteria. Example collage attached.





Sandee Bisson

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Rob Morrill

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Mar 25, 2026, 10:30:52 AM (5 days ago) Mar 25
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We've had good luck using battery-powered fairy lights. Adafruit also makes a strip of neopixel lights with alligator clips that you can easily attach to a CPX or Micro:bit to program. (My claim to fame is that they made this product at my suggestion about 9 years ago.) Happy to provide same code if you go that route. Here's the link: https://www.adafruit.com/product/3811 

John Hawkins

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Mar 25, 2026, 12:19:27 PM (5 days ago) Mar 25
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Thanks!

Joan Horvath

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Mar 25, 2026, 1:38:20 PM (5 days ago) Mar 25
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Here's a lesson plan with step by step for cuttable lights; 2nd grade might be a bit young though. 
Joan Horvath
See our books and more at nonscriptum.com

On Tuesday, March 24, 2026 at 9:03:07 AM UTC-7 hawk...@oakhillschool.org wrote:

Chris Reina

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Mar 25, 2026, 2:14:29 PM (4 days ago) Mar 25
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Hi John,

+1 for Justin’s idea. I’ve done this myself and it’s cheap, easy and quickly satisfying.

If you want the project to be more like a “flashing neon” sign, you can snip off the battery packs of the string lights.

Then attach these to the business end of a SBC of some sort. (Micro:bit if you have it) No soldering required and simple easy code to flash the lights on and off.

Of course Arduino, RPi W or the like will work as well. These can be powered by cheap USB phone chargers. (Any will do once they output 5V). Not sure about the US, by in Ireland, we have “Euro Shops” that sell cheap stuff…

All materials mentioned can be purchased here (except SBCs) - are reusable for other projects afterwards.


Many thanks!

Chris

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Kim Ducharme

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Mar 26, 2026, 4:35:53 PM (3 days ago) Mar 26
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What a great lesson plan, and others' ideas and resources, as well. Thank you!

Kim 

Designer | Maker | Educator 
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