Upcycled Paper Stockings

 

Stockings from UPcycled Paper

I was inspired to make these during the COVID shutdowns.  I’ve been a reusable bag person long before it was law in many places.  When grocery stores were scrambling to find their own safety policies at an unprecedented time, some stores let us continue to bring our bags, but one of them didn’t.  We started limiting our trips to that particular store, but we still ended up with way too many tragic paper bags.  I began brainstorming uses for them, and this is one project I particularly love.

These homemade stockings are darling!  I love that they can be customized to the size you’d like.  You can leave the bag designs on the outside or turn the bags inside out for a blank canvas.

You can use these as actual stockings, decoration, or as very creative gift bags.

This is such a fun way to upcycle any paper product, whether it’s paper grocery bags, catalog pages, magazine pages, calendar pages, reused gift wrap, old maps, damaged book pages, or even coloring pages.

 

It’s quite simple:

–Cut the shape of a stocking on two bits of a paper –  Remember, if you’d like a specific side facing out on both sides, you may have to flip your template for the second cut out.

–Punch holes all along the edges.  The closer they are, the more secure the stocking will be for smaller objects, but the longer the threading will take.  Then just weave a piece of string, yarn, or t-shirt yarn through.  I’ve also used my machine to stitch these closed.

–Make a bunch at once to have them on hand for future gifts or to share with friends who might like to use them.

–Try making a bunch of tiny ones and number them for a decorative advent calendar.

Have fun with it!

What are your own creative ideas you’ll add to this project idea?

Your actions can and will make a difference.

Fabric Gift Wrap

                                                           

 

 

 

 

 

 

I am ALL about fabric gift wrap!  And having just been through the holiday gift opening, I’m going to highlight some of my favorite things about using fabric, instead of paper:

–It’s SO easy to wrap with fabric bags!
–No need to shop for wrapping paper every year.
–No need to store bulky, awkward wrapping paper rolls and tape.
–SO much better for the environment!  (especially when using upcycled cloth)
–WAY less mess!  (Can’t emphasize this enough.)
–SO easy and compact to store
–Looks quaint, creative, and homey

For me, using fabric gift wrap has been a gradual process, and I think that’s important to remember.  It’s awesome if you can make/purchase a whole stash of fabric gift wrap/bags all at once and dive in, but that wasn’t the case for me.  It started with small fabric gift bags people had used to gift me presents.  Then, I sewed a few of them one year.  And a few the next.  This year, I finally had the time to round out our stash quite a bit, which is probably why I’m on a fabric gift wrap mission right now.  It was so amazing to not deal with paper or tissue paper.  Not only for the mess factor, but for my environmentalist-self as well.  My heart sinks whenever I see piles of wrapping paper.

I also think this would be an awesome fundraiser for a school.  What a fun project to teach kids basic sewing (these bags can be very simple), to teach them and their families about reducing and reusing, and to help them get started on that journey.

I highly recommend giving fabric wrap a try, even if it’s only a little bit at a time.  Keep your eyes out for fabric bags throughout the year, and collect them with your gift wrapping supplies.  If you do sew, even if you’re a beginner, sewing fabric gift bags is EASY.  As with any project, you can make things more complicated if you’d like, but the basic idea is an easy one.  Collect fabric bits, old sheets, even old tee-shirts to use for sewing a simple bag.  My favorite fabric gift bag to make is a drawstring bag, but I don’t always find the time to make these.  Making fold-over bags for gift wrap is super easy, but sometimes I just sew a simple bag shape and tie a ribbon around the top.  Some people will even just use a piece fabric cloth to wrap with and use fancy folding methods.  These are beautiful to see, but the process is something I don’t have the patience to master right now.

Whichever method you use, I highly, highly recommend the switch!

**St. Nick comes to pick up some of our fabric bags at the beginning of December to take to Santa for that year’s gifts.**

ALL our holiday wrap in one small, little stack!

Other alternatives to wrapping paper:
Magazine Gift Wrap
Food Box Gift Bags
Upcycled Paper Stockings

Easter Egg Hunts-Reducing and Reusing

I love spring!  Especially this one, when a feeling of hope is slowly settling in.  I loved Easter as a child–wearing a special dress, being outside, having exciting egg hunts full of clues written by our Easter Bunny.  As a parent, I’ve worked hard to make the holiday special without indulging in some of the wastefulness or excessive treats.  Our bunny fills our eco-friendly eggs with a variety of alternative items, depending on the year.  But, thinking about Easter events in the community gives me a bit of a shudder…

I cringe at the thought of fields of egg hunts–plastic eggs, that, let’s face it, most parents end up tossing in the landfill (AHHHHH!) and cheap trinkets that end up with the same fate.  Many of these “hunts” aren’t even hunts; they are just grab fests.  Which kid can run out there and grab the most-type of situation.  To me, there is no redeeming piece to these hunts.  Sure, I’d love for our kids to have a fun celebration of spring with the community, but if it means participating in this environmentally-horrific, greed race, then I’ll have to pass.

I did ask our local community member in charge of one such event if they had a plan in place so that parents could place the plastic eggs in a bin to be reused the following year.  The answer? – No.  They buy their eggs pre-stuffed (with cheap, plastic toys) so there was no way she could make this work.

I have been to some small-scale hunts that were more conscious.  Instead of cheap, throw-away trinkets, the eggs held papers for collecting to choose from a table of more quality items.  The hunt was an actual hunt and the eggs were collected at the end to be reused the following year.  Huzzah to that.

Since we don’t do many mainstream sweets, our Easter Bunny had some thinking to do.  We picked up some Eco-eggs years ago at our local natural food shop.  They’re great!  Large and sturdy and beautiful colors.  We’ve still somehow ended up with some of the super cheap kind too, and the difference between the two types of eggs is incredible.  When our first-born was young, each egg held a tiny sticker on Easter.  As the kids have grown, the eggs sometimes hold pieces of Lego from a small set that needs to be built.  I’ve also heard of Bunnies who put puzzle pieces in each egg or seed packets.  Our bunny puts picture clues in each egg so the kids can each find a trail of eggs.

The kids’ baskets don’t contain much–just the first clue, really.  (And definitely NO plastic grass!  But sometimes fun, shredded old magazines.)  This year, Easter Bunny may include some homemade bath bombs (by request).  I think the fun of the hunt is really at the heart of everything, not so much what’s inside.  Our kids make their own egg hunts throughout the year–sometimes just because or sometimes on each other’s birthdays.

Here’s a picture of our Eco eggs and the felt eggs I made as well.  There are also hollow wooden eggs out there and many crafty ideas online or to buy on Etsy.  We just leave the eggs out a couple days before Easter for the Bunny to come pick up.

Visit my Pinterest page for a visual of some ideas!

Another alternative

T-Shirts/Jersey Fabrics-Reusing

Stretch fabrics are SO great for REUSE projects, because they usually won’t fray after cutting, and therefore require way less sewing.

First things first, though.  Consider the reducing and other reusing options for clothing before chopping up clothes.

I’ve started collecting ideas for reusing jersey/t-shirt fabrics on my Pinterest page.  Here are a few of my favorite reuse projects with shirts that can’t be passed along to others:

–Shopping bags
–Reusable gift bags
–Headbands

More coming soon!

Classroom Valentines

Like many, I have fond childhood memories of Valentine’s Day and the exchange of those commercial, store-bought, cartoon cards everybody dropped into decorated paper bags.  But as the years have passed, many of these valentines have more and more cheap, plastic add-ons.  (I think the most ironic stack of valentine cards I ever saw were ones from the movie, Wall-E.)  And the more I think about it, I feel like these store-bought valentines kind of miss the whole point.  This article nails it, and estimates school kids in US exchange as many as 750 million.  (This is not, by the way, including cards exchanged by teens and adults.)  Understandably, schools don’t want kids to feel left out, so will require that everybody gets a valentine card for everybody.  I like the thought behind that and I like the exchange of cards…but, like so many of our holiday traditions, much of the meaning has been sucked out and left an empty shell of obligatory tradition.

Also, with the unpredictable numbers of valentine cards “needed” by any one family vs. the numbers sold in packs, people often end up with more than they’re going to use.  (Here are some “print as needed” valentine options, because despite my rant, I am a sucker for punny valentine cards…)  Perhaps families/friends could also come together and share odds and ends cards to at least eliminate extra waste.

As someone whose love language is words, I do have a weakness for cards and hand-written notes.  The thing is though, most of the classroom valentines passed out in schools are purchased by parents and quickly scribbled with a signature.  And after the kids go through their stash and pick out the cheap candy, the cards often end up directly in the recycling (or trash).  I don’t know what the solution is, but here are some thoughts:

nature-based valentines ideas

–Or, perhaps, as the linked article above suggests, Valentine’s Day card exchanges should just bypass the Under 12 group.

Traditions are great, and many of us get very caught up in memories of how our own childhoods looked.   But, times are changing, and it’s okay to shift to new traditions.  Not just okay, it’s necessary.  I think it’s wonderful to have a holiday that centers around LOVE, and despite this post, I actually really do love the idea of exchanging cards.  But maybe by exchanging of 750 million cards in schools, the meaning has gotten a bit lost…