Begin a family tradition by making bags out of pretty holiday fabric tied
with cloth ribbon, and placing your gifts in them. It is likely that everyone
to whom you give the bags will really appreciate the idea of saving resources
by using them, and will save the bags to wrap their own gifts next year.
Maybe someday fabric bags will be like chain letters—you give a gift to one
person, who gives it to another, and maybe one day it will be given back to
you!
Materials:
Buy colorful fabric ribbon, and enough yardage of pretty fabric (holiday
fabric is readily available in craft stores) to make the number of bags you
want. You may also have some nice fabric stored at home in a drawer or closet.
A little over a yard of 42" to 45" wide fabric will make two 20" x 10" inch
bags.
Step 1: Choose the size bags you want to make and then adapt them to this
pattern: For one 20" x 10" inch bag, cut out a piece of fabric 12" x 42" inches in size.
Fold the fabric in half so that doubled it is 12" x 21" inches in size.
Step 2: With the "inside" sides pinned together, stitch the side seams on three sides. Turn inside out. Then turn inside the raw edge on the top of the bag and hem, either by hand or with a
sewing machine.
Step 3: Cut a cloth ribbon at least 12" long. At the seam of the bag on one
side or the other, about four or five inches from the bag opening, stitch the middle of the ribbon to the bag.
Make Your Own Gift Wrapping Paper
Wrapped with natural raffia ribbon and decorated with crayons, brown grocery
bags make very attractive wrapping. The straw-like look of undyed raffia
makes a really lovely contrast to the brown bags.
Step 1: Cut paper grocery bags into squares.
Step 2: Tape together enough of the resulting squares of grocery bag paper
to wrap the present.
Step 3: Color with crayons.
Step 4: Wrap the present and tie with natural raffia ribbon (available at
craft shops).
More Wild, Worry-Free, Wrappings
Holiday wrapping can be much more fun than just covering a gift with colored
paper. Delve into the options below for exciting green alternatives to
store-bought wrapping.
Give a gift in a gift: A scarf with matching hair ribbon, a set of
canisters, a towel, a sheet, a cup or mug, a hat or cigar box, or even a
shirt all hold gifts without contributing to landfill problems. Visit a
garage sale for more container ideas.
Select pictures and stories from newspapers, magazines, and old calendar
pictures to make creative wrapping that thoughtfully suits your gift and/or
its recipient.
Wrap a travel related present with an out-of-date road map.
Wrap a present in old sheet music.
Wrap presents with used paper or in used boxes and glue magazine pictures
on top for color, humor, and style.
Reuse wrapping paper and spice it up by gluing on pictures taken from
cards and magazines.
Use flowers or reusable hair ribbons instead of plastic bows.
Use popcorn instead of conventional packing "peanuts" and insert a note
explaining that birds can eat it.
If you are going to purchase wrapping paper, avoid conventional wrapping
paper with metallic colors. Such paper is often produced in an
environmentally unfriendly manner. Instead, buy recycled wrapping paper.
Decorate used paper shopping bags (both brown grocery bags and white
department store bags) with:
A poem hand written in bright colors;
Stenciled holiday decorations (Cut a potato in half, and carve a stencil in the flat part of each half. Dip the stencil in paint.);
Hand paintings for a unique and personal touch; and
Crayons as described above.
Great Book Idea
For the most inspiring book you will ever see on gift wrapping, we recommend Gift Wrapping: Creative Ideas from Japan, by Kunio
Ekiguchi (Kodansha International, Ltd., 1985). Of particular interest are the
wrapping techniques using fabric. Ask your library to find it for you on
interlibrary loan if they don't already have it.