1-2 hours
Ages 11+
What Will You Make?
In this tutorial, a follow-up to Haunted House Pt. 1: Intro to Pressure Sensors, our haunted house gets a spooktacular makeover. While it uses the same artwork created in the original, the underlying circuit and resulting special effect are different. Rather than using multiple pressure sensor switches hidden behind the gravestones, the circuit in this tutorial has only one. But, don’t let the simplicity fool you! With a single sustained push of one pressure sensor, the windows in our renovated house will light up one color at a time until the entire house is aglow. As you gradually release the pressure, you’ll notice the lights fade off gently in the reverse order!
Here is a side-by-side comparison of our haunted house lit by two different circuits, to help you visualize the difference between the two. The original circuit is on the right and the one featured in this tutorial is on the left. Notice that the one on the right is very interactive, with multiple touch points, while the one on the left has a single spot to press.
Pressure Sensitive Conductive Plastic creates special fade in and fade out effects in LEDs within a circuit, because its resistance changes in direct relationship to how hard or soft you press on it. As you press down harder, the resistance in your circuit will decrease, causing more current to flow to your LEDs, making them brighten. As you reduce the pressure, the resistance will increase, causing the current flow to your LEDs to decrease, making the LEDs appear to dim.
This material gets more interesting when you have a bunch of different colored LEDs (such as Circuit Stickers, which have built in resistors) in the same circuit. If you use a piece of pressure sensitive plastic to alter the resistance in your circuit, certain LEDs (red, orange, yellow, and green) will usually light up before other LEDs (blue, pink, and white). This will be true whether the LEDs are arranged in the order of the rainbow (ROYGBIV) or placed randomly. Reds will typically light up first, followed by orange, yellow, green, blue, pink, and white, wherever they may be placed upon a circuit!
What Will You Learn?
In this tutorial, we will teach you how to use a pressure sensor to make the same haunted house light up, one color at a time, mimicking the visible light spectrum of a rainbow
Prepare Your Artwork
Step 1
When creating the haunted house in the original tutorial, we cut windows out of a piece of drawing paper and did the same with a piece of cardboard the same size.
To create the illusion of characters coming to life in the windows as they are lit up, we printed artwork on pieces of white vellum paper, slightly larger than the windows, and taped them to the back of a sheet of purple vellum, to give the appearance of a darkened room. We left our circuit accessible, making it easy to remove for repairs and renovations.
Plan & Construct Your Circuit & Switch
Step 2
Using a clean piece of drawing paper and your haunted house drawing, determine where you want each LED to go. Mark each of those spots with a pencil. It might be helpful if you hold your artwork up to a window with the drawing paper positioned behind it to get a more precise sketch of your window locations. Another way to do this is to connect your original circuit to power and ground, position the drawing paper directly on top, and lightly mark the location of the LEDs.
While planning, it’s helpful to think about the order you want your windows to light up and choose your colors accordingly.
There are many ways to construct a circuit. Your circuit doesn’t need to look like mine for the sequential lighting (rainbow effect) to work, as long as your positive and negative traces never touch one another, and all of your LEDs are positioned within the same parallel circuit.
Step 3
I used a piece of washi tape as a bridge when an overlap of the positive and negative traces was needed, to prevent a short circuit. Once my circuit sketch was complete, I chose to press my Circuit Stickers down directly onto the paper where I’d marked locations for the LEDs. Then, I laid my positive and negative traces of copper tape/ conductive fabric tape on top. This helped me to be more precise.
When planning your circuit, it’s helpful to sketch out a positive (+) and a negative (-) trace that spans the length of your sketch. It’s also helpful to draw an “X” where you want to create a switch, an area where you will be adding a pressure sensor to close your circuit to light your LEDs.
Step 4
I went about creating my pressure switch by leaving a small gap in my copper tape circuit that I carefully covered with a flap of Pressure Sensitive Conductive Plastic, adhered on one edge with tape. This “flap pressure sensor” type of switch is the second example featured in the video tutorial Chibitronics: 6 DIY Pressure Sensor Circuits. The flap needs to be able to move freely, in case you later discover that an adjustment needs to be made.
Since the conductive plastic is sensitive to pressure, pressing it down firmly over the switch gap not only closes the switch, but it also alters the resistance in the circuit. As you add pressure to a conductive plastic flap by pushing it down over the switch gap, the resistance in the circuit will (in most cases) visibly decrease, resulting in a noticeable increase in the brightness of the LEDs! Of note, I found that a large gap is not as effective as a narrower one.
Test Your Circuit & Display Your Art
Step 5
Once you’ve laid down your conductive traces and placed a conductive plastic flap over the gap you left in your circuit, connect your circuit to power and ground to ensure that your connections work, the LEDs are placed where you want them, and the pressure sensor switch is working correctly. I added pieces of conductive fabric tape to the ends of my positive and negative leads so that I could easily clip them with alligator clips and power my artwork with a Chibi Chip. If you don’t have a Chibi Chip, but you like the idea of powering your project through USB, you may want to check out the USB Powered Paper Circuits: An Alternative to Coin Batteries tutorial. Alternatively, you can use two 3V coin cell batteries, a couple of magnets, and alligator clips; visit this Variable Power Supply tutorial to learn more.
Step 6
Once you’ve connected your circuit to power and ground, you should be able to press down on the resistive plastic flap and see the LEDs light up in this order (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, pink, and then white). If you are experiencing too much resistance in your blue, pink, and white LEDs, the pressure sensitive plastic that you are using may not be conductive enough. One way to test out this theory is to place a piece of copper tape over the switch gap and see if the lights all turn on at the same time. If they do, then the issue may be that the resistive plastic you are using has too much resistance. If that doesn’t solve the problem, it’s possible that your circuit might need more power; this is more likely to happen if your circuit has been constructed with conductive fabric tape, as it has more resistance than copper tape. Another thing to try is placing a small piece of craft foam under your artwork and over the switch gap, to add more concentrated pressure to the switch site.
When preparing the haunted house for display, I created a taped hinge at the top of my piece rather than adhering the art layer permanently to the circuit layer.
Tips, Tricks & Call-outs
The Pressure Sensitive Conductive Plastic sold by Chibitronics is more conductive than many of the resistive plastic products on the market, because it contains more carbon. When testing my circuit the first time, I discovered that the blue, pink, and white LEDs were encountering too much resistance, resulting in a much dimmer LED effect than I wanted, even with firm pressue. When I swapped out the standard resistive plastic that I had been using, substituting a square of Chibitronics version of the conductive plastic, the LEDs brightened up considerably. I did, however, discover that by sandwiching a piece of the less conductive plastic between the copper tape switch and the more conductive Chibitronics flap that I got a wider range of brightness values (and a more dramatic fading effect) when pressing on the switch than using only the more conductive material. (This effect is similar to what happens in the DIY Pressure Sensor example in Chapter 5 of the Circuit Sticker Sketchbook (Template 5).
Compare the Circuits
The circuit on the left, the one that lights up in a sequence, is a parallel circuit with a single switch, a flap pressure sensor, that interrupts the negative lead in its unpressed state.
The circuit on the right, a more complex parallel circuit, has multiple flap sensors disrupting the negative leads of several different circuit paths. While each switch connects to at least one LED, multiple switches may be triggered at any given time.
What Is Happening Here?
Better Understand How the Rainbow Effect Works
How bright an LED shines depends upon how much electricity, known as current, is running through the light. If the light is off, then no current is running through it. To get current to flow through the LED, there needs to be enough voltage powering the circuit to meet the threshold for your LED, which is known as its forward voltage. If you look at the table below, you will notice that forward voltage is lower for red, orange, yellow, and green LEDs, and higher for blue, pink, and white.
LED Color | Voltage Range |
Red | 2.0 – 2.8 V |
Orange | 2.0 – 2.5 V |
Yellow | 2.0 – 2.5 V |
Green | 2.2 – 4.0 V |
Blue | ~3 V |
Pink | ~3.2 V |
White | ~3.3 V |
Ranges are based upon Lumex.com/led-color-guide.html
One easy way to control the voltage powering your LED is to use a resistor in the circuit. The higher the resistor, the lower the voltage going to your light. Given the same resistor value, circuits using LEDs with a higher forward voltage (blue, pink, and white) will have less total current and be dimmer.
In this project, the pressure sensor is used as a resistor that changes its resistance when pressed. When I press down gently on the conductive plastic, the resistance slowly decreases and the voltage slowly increases. At first, the voltage is so low that none of the lights turn on. As I press harder, the red and orange lights shine first. As I press down even harder, the other colors show up in order of their forward voltage (yellow and green, then blue, pink, and white).
What Is Next?
Get Creative
What other kinds of scenes can you create with this technique? What other ways can you play with light in your circuit?
Looking for inspiration? Try Shadows, Silhouettes, & Layers: Experiments with Paper & Light for lots of exciting ways to make paper and light effects using art and engineering.
Chibitronics Educators Guide
Chibitronics Paper Circuits STEAM Educator’s Guide is a FREE comprehensive guide to STEAM (Science Technology Engineering Art and Math) learning with paper circuits!
This 185-page guide includes:
Overview and history of paper circuits, including materials, techniques and troubleshooting tips
Suggested learning standards
Resources on equitable teaching and collaboration in the classroom
7 detailed lesson sequences based on the Circuit Sticker Sketchbook in Part 1 Lessons
12 detailed lesson sequences based on Love to Code in Part 2 Lessons
6 Featured Projects: cross-curricular adaptable project inspirations
Printable templates for each lesson sequence
Throughout the guide, Chibitronics celebrates artists, educators, art techniques, and projects to showcase inspiring work in action. The arts are interwoven into each activity; STEM becomes a medium to ask and explore big questions about ourselves and the world, and nurture new forms of creativity!
Materials:
- drawing paper
- printer paper
- Pressure Sensitive Conductive Plastic (aka: resistive plastic)
Note: Standard pressure sensitive conductive plastics, sometimes marketed as Velostat and Linqstat, are not as conductive as the product we sell at Chibitronics.) - Circuit Stickers
- copper tape or conductive fabric tape
- 2 X 3V coin cell batteries (OR a 5V power source such as a Chibi Chip and two alligator clips)
- white vellum
- purple vellum
- cardboard
- washi or Scotch tape
- double stick tape
- scissors
- pencil
- black pen
- craft knife
- computer and printer
- adhesive spray
- art supplies of your choice
- (optional) Japanese screw punch