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Friday, July 29, 2011

DIY Sensory Swing

This is the sensory swing my husband made.  Ours is in the garage.

- AK

Things you need:
  • Board (We found ours in the scrap pile at Home Depot for $1.  Its is 2.5'x21" - but you can use any size)
  • Rope (also bought from Home Depot)
  • Zip ties
  • bath mat  (I got the cheapest I could find to fit the board at Walmart)
  • staple gun
 Here is a full view of the swing.  The first thing we did was drill the holes in each corner of the board and then we cut out the circle board and drilled the holes in it (this piece keeps the ropes from caving in on the child).


 This is the attachment.  We secured a piece of wood to the garage ceiling and then secured the swing attachment.  We ran two ropes through a ring and bundled it with a zip tie to keep it from slipping.
Click HERE for swing attachment.


 A closer look


 This is the circular piece.  There are zip ties under each hole to keep it from sliding down.



 I used a staple gun to wrap the board with a bath mat, cut slits in the mat, and ran the ropes through.



 Bottom view - the ropes are knotted under the board.

- AK

13 comments:

  1. THANK YOU!! You are the greatest

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  2. What is the chain for? Great job, really nicely done swing!

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  3. @Amy - we have several other "regular" swings and the chains are for those attachments. The sensory swing and our climbing rope are the only two attachments that we use the middle latch for. - AK

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  4. Where did you find or how did you make the swing attachment?

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  5. Thank you for sharing this! My son has vision impairment and developmental delays and this is so much cheaper than purchasing it!

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  6. What is the difference between a "sensory" swing and a "regular" swing?

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    1. There really isn't a difference, but special needs parents will search the web or a catalog using the phrase sensory swing. One example is a net swing. If you saw one you'd say it's just a hammock. But for a child who has special needs. the pressure of a net swing helps regulate their bodies. In addition, the swinging motion of any swing promotes coordination, spatial awareness and has other therapeutic aspects that aren't outwardly apparent.

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  7. Wow, how funny, I wanted my husband to make a platform swing for my daughter with sensory needs, and searched and searched online for someone to give a how-to! Then he just bought some parts last night, and I stumble upon your blog today via pinterest. Thanks for this post!

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    Replies
    1. Everything happens for a reason - happy you found us. AK

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  8. Silly (?) question: I'd like to install ours in our living room (kiddo on spectrum LOVES this kind of swing), but I'm not confident about hanging it. Do you just kind of use a stud finder to locate a beam above the drywall/sheetrock? Thanks so much for the tutorial!

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  9. I just made this swing for my son today and am having a hard time getting it to be level. It'll look level and then nice the rope gives under pressure it's just enough off to throw off your balance. I got on it and even I had a hard time not falling off, I can't even imagine how hard it would be for my two year old to stay on. Any suggestions?

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