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'Sparkle balls' light up Fullerton neighborhood all December long
Take a line of string lights, add one clear Solo cup. Then add another, until 50 Solo cups later you are left with a sparkling, shimmering sphere of festive light.
Neighbors in a quiet, suburban neighborhood in Fullerton call them sparkle balls. Hundreds of these sparkling creations hang from trees, attracting thousands of visitors from across Southern California during the month of December.
In its 22nd year, the tradition has expanded to over 160 homes across 10 blocks.
Marie Murillo joined in the fun 10 years ago. She said the tradition is an “exciting time” when the neighbors come out to put on a festive experience for visitors.
“I love watching the kids walk around and being like, ‘Ah, look at the lights,’” she said, stringing lights around her tree. “I can hear it from my living room. And it's the best thing ever. I love it. Best time of the year for us.”
The installation goes live on December 1.
The tradition grows
Shortly after Robert Pillon moved into his Yale Avenue home in 2004, his neighbor invited him over for smores and to discuss a tradition: four homes on the block hung these sparkle balls from the trees in their front yard. The neighbor wanted to know if Pillon would join in the tradition.
He jumped on board. That year, over Monday night football, the four men would come together to make sparkle balls for 22 homes.
“ Our wives teased us and called it our mancraft in the beginning because it was like five guys getting together in the garage, drinking beers and making balls,” Pillon said.
The balls are perfect spheres, with circles of Solo cups welded together and with fairy lights inserted at the bottom of the cup.
”You insert the lights all the way through the sphere and close it up, and then you tie a string to it and we hang them from the trees,” Pillon said.
The cords are not visible at night.
“At night it just looks like they're orbs floating in the middle of the air,” he said.
A neighborhood effort
As the tradition has expanded, so have the logistics. Each block is assigned a leader to manage the making and installation of these sparkle balls.
This year, Pillon created a limited liability company to acquire liability insurance and safety harnesses for the installation process. The neighbors rent boom lifts to install the sparkle balls from trees road by road, with around 100 volunteers working over 10 days to install the balls. Each home contributes $55 which covers the rental costs and fuel to power the boom lift.
Pillon said having the lights up all through December isn’t very expensive.
“Probably somewhere between $30 to $50 an extra for that month that they're up,” he said. Other neighbors have switched to LED lights to keep the costs down.
At the end of the month, neighbors store the sparkle balls in their garage. Some keep them in large plastic crates, others hang them in their garage. The lights last for a long time and the balls themselves are quite sturdy.
Come the week of Thanksgiving, they pull them out of the garage ready to be installed.
Pro tips for visiting the Sparkleball Neighborhood
- Bring a stroller
- Dress warm.
- Be prepared to walk, wear comfortable shoes.
- Park on Berkeley Avenue or at the commercial building on College Place.
- Please use the trash cans and throw away your trash.
- If you bring your dogs, make sure that you pick up after the dogs.
- If you choose to drive, keep your headlights on as there are kids running around the streets.
Sparkle balls led to a tight knit community
”There are some houses that when the new homeowners come, they still have the balls that previous owners left them,” said Sardis Rodriguez. When she moved into the neighborhood in 2019, the previous owners took their sparkle balls. So one of the first things Rodriguez did when she moved in was make three sparkle balls.
When the COVID-19 pandemic hit soon after she moved in, the email lists for the sparkle ball community came in handy. Rodriguez said they used the email list to organize neighborhood happy hours.
“Everyone would go outside their houses, stay socially distanced, but say hi to everyone,” she said. “We really got to know each other during that time a little bit more.”