How To Use a Shoebox To Make a Solar Eclipse Viewer
Looking directly at the sun can injure your eyes, but if you want to watch the eclipse, you can safely view it indirectly with this shoebox solar viewer.
Don’t have a shoebox on hand? Make this cereal box eclipse viewer instead!
This type of viewer is also known as a pinhole projection because the image of the eclipse is projected through the pinhole onto the viewing surface. You will be looking at a projection of the eclipse instead of looking directly at the sun.
WHAT YOU’LL NEED TO MAKE A SOLAR ECLIPSE VIEWER
- Small box with a lid (A shoebox is perfect.)
- Small piece of aluminum foil
- Small sheet of white paper
- Utility knife or hobby knife
- Tape
- Needle or sharpened pencil
JOIN US APRIL 8 FOR ECLIPSE LIVE!
Join us at noon Central time April 8 for an eclipse party! We’ll have solar eclipse-themed crafts, special guests and astronomical fun as we watch this historic event sweep the nation.
Watch the show on the Scout Life Facebook page and YouTube channel.
WHAT YOU’LL DO TO MAKE A SOLAR ECLIPSE VIEWER
Step 1: Cut a 1-inch square hole in the lower right corner of your shoebox.
Step 2: Tape the foil over the square.
Step 3: Poke a pinhole in the center of the foil. The pinhole is where the sun will shine through.
Step 4: Tape a small piece of white paper inside of the box directly across from the foil-covered square. This is the projection screen where the image will appear.
Step 5: On the same side as the foil-covered square, cut another 1-inch square in the opposite corner. This is the viewing hole. You will be able to see the white paper through this hole.
Step 6: With the lid closed, stand with your back to the sun and look through the viewing hole. Focus the sunlight through the pinhole and onto the white paper.
Step 7: Personalize your solar eclipse viewer using wrapping paper, markers, paint and more before using it.
SAFETY FIRST: DO NOT LOOK DIRECTLY AT THE SUN
Looking directly at the sun is like using a magnifying glass to burn a piece of paper. The sunlight is focused onto the back of your eye. The film in the back of your eye is called the retina, and it can easily be damaged without your knowledge. The retina of your eye does not have pain receptors, so you won’t even feel the damage being done. You might not know that you have damaged your vision until much later.
PHOTOS OF COMPLETED PROJECT
Check out these photos of the completed project sent to us by Scout Life readers. If you have a photos of a SL Workshop project, please use the form below to send them to us.
Does it matter if it’s the lower right or lower left for the square with the foil as long as I put the white paper on the opposite side and viewing square on the same side?
Is it safe to take the lid off the shoe top and look through there? I remember being young when there was a partial eclipse and we made viewers like this in school. And I thought we removed the lid.
If you remove the lid, then you will flood the box with outside light. You will be unable to see the Solar Eclipse if you remove the lid. I recommend not removing the lid. Have a nice weekend, and I hope this helps.
TROTTER – It does not matter which side… i am putting all holes and papers on the left instead of right because my box already has a 1 inch hole on the lower left of box. It’s just a pinhole and image.
Thank you!! I was not able to find the glasses.
It’s okay to do so. You may have a better image with lid on less outside light inerference. Only look at the projection sheet of course.
its safe however the light coming in from the top of the box will make it harder to see the image of the sun
Shoeboxes cause cancer.
What? How do you even come to that conclusion?
I think that was supposed to be funny. Which it was!
haha good one
Thanks for the instructions. We will be taking our high school students or on the first day of school to see the partial e eclipse and now I can actually view it.
Funny.
Thank you for sharing this. I can’t wait ’til the 21st to try it out!
You don’t need to wait, just test it with a regular sun.
Just made two. Checked it with lamp. Very easy. Thanks for the info
Thank you– getting ton’s of people wanting to use the “glasses”– still not sure I’d trust my kid’s vision to them. Glad to have this low-tech answer
According to these instructions it seems you need to stand with the sun at your side not at your back. Hmmmm….
I am unable to go see the eclipse, so I appreciate the instructions on the eclipse viewer. Much nicer than the “pinhole in the paper” from years ago!😀 my grandson is in troop 945😉 thank you!
Graworth