Quick takeaways
- A balloon decorating strip is a perforated plastic tape that holds each balloon's tied neck in place for an even, gap-free garland.
- Inflate balloons to different sizes (roughly 5 to 12 inches) so the finished arch looks organic instead of uniform.
- Alternate which holes you use and which way each balloon faces to fill both the front and the sides of the strip.
- One 16-foot strip holds about 90 to 120 five-inch balloons; plan your counts before you start tying.
- No helium and no special skills required for an air-filled garland on a strip.
What a balloon decorating strip actually is
A balloon decorating strip is a thin, flexible plastic tape printed with a row of small punched holes, usually spaced about an inch apart. You tuck the tied neck of each balloon through a hole, and the plastic grips it. Do that a hundred-odd times and you have a dense, sculptural balloon garland with no glue, no knots-tying-to-other-knots, and no frame.
It is the secret behind nearly every organic balloon arch you have seen on a backdrop or a dessert table. Before strips existed, people knotted balloons into four-packs and twisted them onto fishing line, which is slow and leaves obvious clusters. The strip lets you place balloons one at a time, in any order and any direction, so the seams disappear. It is sold in rolls (commonly 16 feet, sometimes cut to length) and costs only a few dollars.
What you'll need before you start
Gather everything first so you are not hunting for a pump mid-build with a hundred limp balloons waiting. None of this requires helium; the strip method is for air-filled latex, which holds its shape for days.
- Your balloons, in 2 to 4 colors plus a neutral (white, sand, or blush reads beautifully on camera)
- A balloon decorating strip cut to your planned length
- An electric or hand pump (your lungs will quit before balloon 30)
- Glue dots, for tucking small 'filler' balloons into gaps later
- Command hooks or fishing line to hang the finished garland
- A clear stretch of floor or a table to lay the strip out flat
How to use a balloon decorating strip, step by step
Work in sections of about three feet at a time so the strip stays manageable. The whole process for a 6-foot garland takes most people 45 to 60 minutes the first time, and closer to 30 once you have the rhythm.
- Inflate your balloons to mixed sizes, roughly 5, 8, 10 and 12 inches across, and tie each one off. Varied sizing is what makes an arch look organic instead of like a uniform tube.
- Push the tied neck of your first balloon through the first hole from front to back, then loop it back and hook the knot so it locks. Give it a gentle tug to confirm it's seated.
- Add a second balloon to the very next hole, but face it the opposite direction. Alternating front-and-back fills the depth of the garland.
- Continue down the strip, varying color and size as you go. Avoid placing two of the same color side by side; scatter them like confetti instead.
- Every few balloons, flip the strip over and check the back. You want balloons poking out on both sides so there are no flat spots.
- Once the strip is full, hang it, then use glue dots to press small 4- and 5-inch 'filler' balloons into any visible gaps along the front.
How many balloons you actually need
Undershooting your balloon count is the number one reason a DIY garland looks sparse. As a rule of thumb, plan for roughly 6 to 8 balloons per linear foot when you mix sizes, plus a handful of fillers per foot to close gaps. Buy 10 to 15 percent extra to cover pops.
Here is a quick planning guide by finished length. A 5-foot welcome garland runs about 35 to 50 balloons; a 6-foot backdrop accent needs 50 to 70; a 10-foot half-arch wants 90 to 130; and a dramatic 20-foot statement piece climbs past 200. If you would rather skip the inflating and the math entirely, our Shop the Boxes arches arrive hand-packaged, pre-sorted, and photoshoot-ready, so the strip work is already done for you.
Pro tips for a magazine-worthy finish
Little habits separate a strip garland that looks homemade from one that looks styled. These are the same moves our stylists use on every build.
- Build a color palette, not a rainbow: three tones plus a neutral almost always photographs better than five competing brights.
- Cluster sizes in a natural taper, with the biggest balloons at the focal point and smaller ones trailing toward the ends.
- Stuff a few clear or pearl balloons into the mix to catch light and add depth.
- Hang the garland before you add filler balloons, so you fill the gaps that actually show at eye level.
- Add greenery, dried palms, or a foil number last, tucked in with glue dots, to make the piece feel custom.
Common mistakes (and how to dodge them)
Almost every strip garland that goes sideways fails for the same handful of reasons. The fix is usually a small adjustment, not starting over.
Inflating every balloon to the same size gives you a stiff, tube-like look; mix four sizes instead. Forgetting to alternate direction leaves a flat back and a thin profile; check both sides as you go. Skipping fillers leaves daylight peeking through; that final 10 percent of small balloons is what reads as 'professional.' And overstuffing a single hole stresses the plastic and tears it; one balloon per hole, every time. If a perfect, repeatable result matters more than the craft project, you can also design your own arch in our builder and have it shipped ready to hang.