Otherwise entitled How To Get Awesome Materials for a Tabernacle Story
Worship Woodworks sells a wooden tabernacle set designed for use with the Young Children and Worship book. Church Publishing sells a similar set for use with the Godly Play curriculum. Both are gorgeous wooden sets, and both induce sticker shock.
So instead of buying either of those, I purchased a far cheaper (yet far more detailed) set from The Tabernacle Place.

The picture is how the plastic looks when it has been painted. Being a perfectionist, I spent a weekend painting my pieces until the set looked roughly like the one above. Explaining to myself that we do not live under the law, but under grace, I did do a few things differently than what was described in Exodus.
The fence posts were supposed to be painted bronze, as well as the washbowl. Most of the other items were to be painted gold. I bought a solo can of gold spray paint, and decided no one knows the difference between bronze and gold anyway.
Each fence post should have a silver top. This would mean hand painting every last one. I didn’t.
Twelve separately colored jewels on the breastplate of the high priest? That thing is less than an inch tall!! No. Way.
I wanted to be able to easily remove the tent covering, so I didn’t lace the elastic through the edge or screw in those hooks.
The fence posts stay up just fine without the thread ‘n’ hooks, so I left those off. In my opinion, leaving out the hooks makes the set look less cluttered.
I am especially glad I used the can of textured spray paint for the base, and that I painted the sashes and robes of the priests. Those two things alone changed the look from ordinary to exotic.
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