Create decorative mini-gift boxes to hold small personal items or give away with this paper-folding craft idea that recycles new and used greeting cards.
Don't throw out those old greeting cards! Here is a craft idea for recycling the many lovely, funny, or imaginative holiday, birthday, and other greeting cards that friends, family, and businesses send to one another. These mini-boxes are so easy to construct that even young children can make them with a bit of assistance.
Choosing Appropriate Greeting Cards for the Mini-Box Project
This craft project is perfect for recycling new or used greeting cards. Christmas cards make especially lovely boxes; but any holiday will do. Halloween, Thanksgiving, and Easter cards will make fun boxes. Birthday cards, get well cards, and thank you cards all have the potential to transform into unique and attractive mini-boxes.
Greeting cards with centered images work best. Cards that are 4 inches by 6 inches or larger will be easiest to work with. Smaller cards can be used, but the boxes will be proportionately smaller.
Materials Needed to Make a Greeting Card Gift Box
One greeting card for each box.
Scissors
Straight edge or ruler
Pencil, pen, or marker
Tape
Steps to Make A Greeting Card Gift Box
Cut the card into two equal-size pieces, along the fold (see illustrations below).
On the back of the card's cover, use a ruler or straight-edge to draw a large X from corner to corner. The center of the X should be at the center of the page. Draw a corner-to-corner X on the message half of the card, too.
Starting with the card’s cover, bend each of the four sides up to the point where the edge meets the center of the X. Crease the folds, then lay the card cover flat. Do the same with the message half of the card.
Holding the card’s cover vertically, use scissors to make a cut starting from the bottom of the left fold line and stopping where the fold line touches the arm of the X. Do the same for the right fold line. Flip the card around and make the same cuts on the opposing fold lines.
Fold the cut ends of the card’s cover, tucking the short flaps inside the larger flap. Fold the excess top of the larger flap down over the shorter flaps. Use a piece of tape to secure the flaps. This will be the cover of the box.
Cut and fold the ends of the other half of the card; secure with tape. This will be the bottom of the box.
Uses For Greeting Card Gift Boxes
This is where the craft-maker’s imagination will come into play. These mini-boxes can hold jewelry, candy, small gift trinkets, or… anything!. One first grade teacher gives them to her students to use as banks, to hold the plastic money they receive as a class allowance for their economics unit.
Mini-gift boxes using recycled greeting cards are quick and easy to make and practical to use. Adults and children alike can participate in this craft project. And it doesn't have to cost a thing!
The copyright of the article How to Make a Greeting Card Gift Box in Scrapbooking & Paper Crafts is owned by Margaret M. Williams. Permission to republish How to Make a Greeting Card Gift Box in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
idk acutuall i dont remember how but my teacher taught us a diff way tht
like doesnt need glue...u just fold and cut and measure and make an X with
a penciul or sumthin :D
Jan 5, 2009 3:04 PM
Guest
:
I have made these for years, since the Edmonton newspaper posted the idea.
In it, the directions said to cut 1/4" off the bottom end of only the
message part of the card. DO this BEFORE you make the X from corner to
corner for fold lines and cutting. Makes the bottom of the finshed box
slightly smaller, and the lid will fit over easily. The other tip is
that with this method of card box, a card taller, than wide works best.
Squares are not as neat. If I really like a square card, I cut the sides to
make it a rectangle, before I start the project.
Jan 5, 2009 3:04 PM
Guest
:
I have made these for years, since the Edmonton newspaper posted the idea.
In it, the directions said to cut 1/4" off the bottom end of only the
message part of the card. DO this BEFORE you make the X from corner to
corner for fold lines and cutting. Makes the bottom of the finshed box
slightly smaller, and the lid will fit over easily. The other tip is
that with this method of card box, a card taller, than wide works best.
Squares are not as neat. If I really like a square card, I cut the sides to
make it a rectangle, before I start the project.