if you are "very much a novice", then you should probably not be designing or building any mains-powered devices. If it's not done well-enough, it could electrocute you, or someone else, or start a fire. As a Scottish pipe-maker I knew once said, "Electricity is nice but don't get any on you.".
What are the requirements for the 5 VDC? i.e. What are the upper and lower acceptable voltage limits, and the maximum current that could be needed?
Typically, if doing it "from scratch", you could use a small transformer to get something a little higher than five volts peak, and then rectify the transformer's output to make it unipolar, then feed that to a reservoir capacitance, then optionally feed that through a three-terminal voltage regulator, then to your load (your circuit). The required reservoir capacitance would depend on the maximum load current and the minimum allowable voltage.
If you can discover the maximum current requirement for the 5-volt supply, then you could either buy a 5-Volt "wall wart" supply rated for at least that much current, or, if regulation is needed, buy a 9-Volt wall wart and have a 5-Volt regulator circuit where the power enters the board.