Make Your Own Gift Boxes

Fri, 22 Jan 2010 14:45:43 +0000


I made up some hampers for Christmas this year. The hampers had an ‘afternoon tea’ theme and included a plate, a hand designed and embroidered tea cloth, some fresh QLD coffee beans, Northern NSW English Breakfast tea, homemade choc-chip cookies and homemade caramel filled truffles. To give the hamper a sense of unity I used the same paper to make all the packets. The labels were created using GIMP.

Homemade hampers are an inexpensive, personalised gift for any occasion. While they may not cost a lot, a lot of time, thought and effort goes into making these. The key to making them great is having quality ingredients inside all the fancy packaging.

So I thought that I would share how to make up these pretty packets and boxes.

To make these boxes you will need:

  • Scrapbooking paper or other patterned cardstock
  • Gift bags to put the coffee beans, tea or whatever you like in
  • Sticky tape to seal up the bags (if you’ve got one of those vacuum heat seal thingies even better)
  • Plain cardboard for the bottom of the truffle box
  • Clear acetate for the truffle box lid cut out (I recycled some acetate from packaging. Any clear sturdy plastic packaging can be cut up and reused for the box window).
  • Good glue or double sided tape to construct boxes
  • Ribbon to finish
  • Hole punch
  • Something to score and press creases (I used a sharp plastic chopstick to score creases and the end of the scalpel to press the creases firm)
  • Scalpel or small sharp scissors to cut out windows
  • Patterns (below)

Apart from the patterned paper I had everything at home, so the total cost for packaging came to $2 with some paper left over for another project.

The pattern for the tent boxes can be found here at Split Coast Stampers.

Never happy with the way things are, I altered the pattern by cutting a window in the front. The window is 1.5 inch square, centred horizontally, and a little below centre vertically so that I could put on the label.

After following the directions from the Split Coast Stampers, you also need to cut away at the inside folded part at the front of the tent box and fold back (see pics below) so you can see through the window, and rule and cut out the window.

The smaller tea boxes are made exactly the same way, using the pattern from Split Coast Stampers, except that I changed the dimensions to 5.5 x 9.5 inches with folds at 1.5 and 4 inches along the short side and at 4 and 5.5 inches along the long side.

Package your coffee beans or tea and seal, then place the packet in the cardboard tent outer. If you like, you can use a little glue on the tent to keep secure. Punch some holes and tie with ribbon to secure.

For the truffle box, I designed the box pattern to fit 6 truffles and you can download the pattern here. It is in PDF format, so you will need a PDF reader like Acrobat to read it. The pattern isn’t perfect. Off the top of my head, you may need to clip a bit off the box ends to make it all fit exactly. Fold along all lines and snip the small line between the end box piece and the tab so that you can fold the tab in.

Either print the pattern straight onto the back of your cardboard or cut and trace around it. To secure the tabs use a good glue or some double sided tape. For the window, cut the acetate to size and secure with glue or tape.

If you would like to use the same tea labels, you can download them here. I’ve also done up some coffee labels similar to the tea ones, which you can download here. Use the outer edge as a cutting guide. Print them on cardstock or plain paper to glue down or print on a label sheet.

If you have any problems with the patterns, let me know. As I’ve put a lot of work into creating and formatting these patterns for download, I ask that you don’t use them commercially. If you’re wanting to create your own labels, Microsoft Word does a pretty good job or you could try GIMP(free Photoshop alternative – I also used this to design the embroidery pattern) or Inscape(free Adobe Illustrator alternative).

Christmas set Photoshop Brushes (55+55)

* 55 HiRes Photoshop brushes (300 – 2428 pixels)
* 55 smaller Photoshop brushes (130-1400 pixels)
* Commercial license
* PC/Mac Compatible
* compatible with Photoshop 7.0, CS, CS2, CS3 and CS4

Click here for preview:

And, now print these graphics out on a paper. (Letter format or bigger. Depends on the size of the box you’d like to get.)

Of course, I made some some gift boxes and here are a little photo-story about how it went.

First, I printed all four papers on one 16.5 × 23.4 paper and this time I used Tecco’s Digital Photo 330 Gallery Board paper (it’s a little bit thick, but that’s all I had at the time). Then I simply cut the paper in four pieces.

Then following the instructions on the YouTube video (link is below), I assembled the first box – it turned out really cool :).

Now I needed one smaller box to nest it into the large one. To make that smaller one, I used one of the papers with graphics printed on it and I cut some 1/2″ of it from all four sides.

With this smaller piece of paper I made the same box shape, but this time it is a bit smaller so it can fit into the bigger one. So, the big one is a box lid and the small one is a box “container”.

Now, that looked cool! I was really impressed with the results! Then, I cut a little piece of a shiny red cloth. This cloth will save my Christmas tree glass ornament from breaking and it will make my gift look much cooler :)

Voila!

I hope you like what you see and I you’ll do the same for your own gifts!

Here is how to make origami paper boxes – YouTube video: Origami box

And here is a simple guide to a very similar origami box made by Sunni Bergeron: Origami GiftBox

That’s it! Hope you will enjoy your Christmas wrapping and have fun creating :)

S :)

You can make a business out of it!

So, no recession is an excuse to feel bad or depressed! Go, create, sell with Graphics-Illustrations Original 800+ Photoshop brushes MEGA package!

Popularity: 7% [?]