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Posts with tag gift-box

Another resourceful wrapping idea - The cereal box

cereal gift boxI just packaged up some gifts to send my in-laws and couldn't find a shoe box. We usually keep shoe boxes handy for packages, but without one I tore apart the house looking for a suitable alternative. Finally I decided to use a cereal box. Our little gifts slid inside perfectly, I wrapped it up and sent it off. Using the cereal box made me think of all the other things in the recycling bin or garbage that could be re-purposed as wrapping material.

I found these instructions for making a gift box out of a cereal box. Along with the gift and box, you'll need a cutting mat, craft knife, straight edge, large spoon, pencil and glue. You can add a bow or gift tag, but there is no need for wrapping paper. Most cereal boxes are bright and colorful, so leave this funky resourceful look and you'll have a great wrapping solution. You could use a cracker box or any other food box in place of the cereal box. Get creative, pull from your recycling bin and have fun with it.

If you're interested in more thrifty and inventive wrapping ideas, check out some of Anna's suggestions.

Holiday crafts for families from PBS Parents

Child with a candy cane reindeer, by Flickr user MeltingMama.

If you're looking for simple crafty activities you can do with your kids (or grandchildren!), you will probably be interested in this page of family-friendly holiday projects and ideas that Kathy Cano-Murillo did for PBS Parents.

Kathy shares three simple, child-friendly ideas:

  • Toy Shadow Boxes: small toys or holiday decorations are displayed in an upright tray, which is hung on the wall or propped up on a surface.
  • Funny Family Wrapping Paper: a collage of elements (pictures, quotes, etc) is photocopied to make wrapping paper.
  • Gingerbread Gift Boxes: more of a "self-explanatory concept" than a "project with instructions." You might find this page of gingerbread recipes created specifically for people building gingerbread houses useful, if you decide to try this one.

There are a few other suggestions there for crafting with kids, at the holidays or any other time: cover your surfaces, use plastic gloves, have an "art supply box" to keep all your tools in and help children learn to clean up after themselves, and document the process with lots of pictures! Much more information is available at the PBS Parents site.

Your greeting cards want to dress up for the holidays too

gift boxNow that Thanksgiving has come and gone the time to think about Christmas is fully upon us. The gift shopping season is in full force and closets are beginning to fill up with wonderful secret things. While I know you have gifts on the brain, have you given any thought to what you will put those gifts in?

If you have any little gifts to give why not try making your own boxes for them? Sister Dianne from CraftyPod has created a wonderful tutorial for making these fun little boxes. There are also several pictures to help you figure out exactly what she is telling you to do.

I have made the basic box before but never could figure out how to make one to fit in the other. Thanks to the CraftPod tutorial I know what I was doing wrong. Also, this can be done with any card stock. While the cards are a very cool idea, there are many interesting kinds of card stock in many patterns at your local craft store. You could make many more sizes of boxes that way.

Make a unique gift box from money

twenty dollar billsEvery special someone in our life deserves to have a special gift. If you don't want to give just any ole gift to your teenage daughter, why not wrap her Christmas gift in money?

I say teenage daughter because that is what this instructional reminds me of. What teenage daughter or young child wouldn't love to be given a gift that is wrapped in money?

Using two crisp one dollar bills, the author shows us step by step how to fold a one dollar bill into a box, and then use another one dollar bill for the cover. The author doesn't like a "traditional" cover, so he (or she?) has made the cover to go around the box, so that you slide the box in and out as you wish.

If you are giving this homemade money gift box to a person under the age of eighteen, I suggest using money in larger denominations. I think that the only time I would use two one dollar bills is if I was giving the box to my spouse.

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