Making gift bags at Craft Hack

Paper craft demo

Showing my Craft Hack group how to make gift bags last month was a lot of fun! It turned out to be a collaborative experience (which I love!) with crafters coming up with their own techniques and helping each other out. A few even brought supplies to supplement what I had.

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making paper gift bags at Craft Hack

We started with regular paper lunch bags and used paper crafting techniques to make them gift worthy!

I always love the simplicity and down-to-earth look of brown paper. (I’ve even incorporated the look into my Bold Avenue branding.) It can be such a great backdrop to highlight colorful elements. But I’ve been on even more of a brown paper bag craft kick lately with this and the paper sack travel journals and a few other projects I’ve been wanting to make but haven’t squeezed in yet.

making paper gift bags at Craft Hack

In addition to the classic brown lunch sacks, I brought red paper bags that I had picked up at Target. (If I remember correctly, they also sell blue, white, black, and maybe green ones, but it might depend on the time of year.) Red is such a great color for so many holidays – it can work with an autumn palette or go Christmasy.

making paper gift bags at Craft Hack

I love how everyone drew inspiration from the tools and materials – deciding to stencil leaves, incorporate gold paper for a more festive look, cut out patterns from scrapbook paper, or create a collage.

I hope whatever gifts they place inside these bags will be a little more special because of the heart they put into the wrapping.

 

Top photo by Anne Watson Barber.

Paper bag journal: part 1(ish)

paper bag scrapbook pages

The idea of collecting trip mementos in paper bags has stuck with me since I saw it in Anna Corba’s Vintage Paper Crafts awhile ago, and I wanted to give it a try during our Colorado trip this summer.

art journal pages on paper bags

Last year when we went on our Epic California Road Trip, we picked up a postcard for each day and wrote what we did on it. However, this time, I knew we couldn’t rely on always being somewhere with postcards for sale. Instead, I jotted down my notes about each day on brown paper sacks and tucked the day’s mementos (maps, cards, travel information, etc.) inside. I also collected a flower for (almost) every day to press during the trip and clip onto the pages later.

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As we were getting ready to leave, I threw a stack of paper bags, pens, scissors and glue sticks into another paper bag. While Phillip drove, I numbered the bags 1-7 with the day of the week and wrote the date on each. Before I went to bed, the next day on the road, or whenever I found a moment, I would write about the day and doodle around the number with something related to what we did.

My notes got shorter toward the end of the trip, but the point was to write something – not to write a novel. I brought scrapbooking supplies, but I didn’t end up using them. The days were so packed it was all I could do to keep up with my basic journalling. I decided I could put things together when I got home and just kept the items I collected (except the flowers I was pressing) in each day’s bag.

paper-bag-scrapbook-supplies

If you wanted to give this a try, here’s what you need to create your own paper bag scrapbook:

  • A paper lunch bag for each day of your trip, plus one to store them all in. (Okay, maybe a few extra, just in case.)
  • Nice, archival-safe pens for journalling, doodling, or simply making a list of interesting things you saw that day.

Optional:

  • Clothespins or clips to keep bags together and/or clip things on outside of bags
  • Additional scrapbooking supplies (scissors, glue stick or double stick tape, etc.).
  • If you plan to collect a leaf or flower for each day, check out How to press flowers while traveling.

paper bag scrapbook pages

Now we’re back, and I have a record of what we did each day, a book full of flowers being pressed, and the other odds and ends I picked up along the way sorted by day. 

Phillip says that if I never got the rest done, we’d still have a nice record of our trip. Me being me, I want it all finished and awesome. I’m still want to print more photos, weed out the bag contents, put the pressed flowers in clear plastic bags and attach them to each page. I don’t have a great track record with finishing scrapbook projects. But I’m crossing my fingers this post will have a Part 2!

How to press flowers while traveling

Flower pressed on book page.

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Pressing wildflowers is a great way to remember the landscape you’ve traveled. You create a simple souvenir, a keepsake with more dimension than a photo.

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Before you go/materials list:

1. Find a book you don’t mind destroying. You can use an outdated catalog or phone book, but just make sure it’s not too bulky to pack! This will be your portable flower press.

2. Find a rubber band that will fit around the book to keep it shut or several clips (or clothespins) that can hold a group of pages together.

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On the road:

3. Look for leaves or “flatter” flowers with fewer layers (think daisies over roses) along the road, trails, or other places you visit. Pick a one or two or a few. Note where you found it/them or take a photo of the spot, so you can remember later. You may want to pick a flower for each day of your trip. After you pick one, I’d recommend doing a quick check for bugs. And, of course, don’t go picking on plants where it’s prohibited, like National Parks or people’s gardens.

4. Set the flower on top of one of your book pages. (If you’re picking one each day, you can press the first day’s flower in Chapter One, the second day’s in Chapter Two, etc. Or just make a note on whichever page you press the flower on.) Carefully close the book over the flower, so it’s positioned the way you want it to be pressed. You can put a few flowers on a page, but don’t put them on adjacent pages.

Flower pressed on book page.

5. Band the book or clip a handful of pages around the flower to keep anything from falling out. Stick the book under your luggage, in between large items in your pack, or wherever you can put the most pressure on it.

6. If you add more flowers, place them in a different part of the book, so you aren’t moving the first one and are allowing additional pressure/weight between them. (Again, starting near the front and working your way back might be helpful.) Also, you want plenty of pages in between to absorb any moisture the flowers release while drying.

Stack of books.

7. Give them a few weeks. When ready, flowers will be thin, dry and papery. If you get home before they’re ready, stick the book at the bottom of a stack of books or some heavy object that you won’t be moving around. Just don’t forget about them!

8. Pressed flowers and leaves would be a beautiful addition to your trip scrapbook or framed with your travel photos! They’ll be pretty fragile, so you may want to put behind glass, slip into plastic sleeves, or cover with contact paper.

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