In this project, learn how to recycle milk and juice cartons, or any size of gable-top carton, into strong gift boxes. You can either wrap the boxes in your favorite way, or transform the carton into a house, a church or a cuckoo clock using Aunt Annie's patterns. There's even a special Valentine's Day cuckoo clock pattern that will turn your milk carton into a fun classroom mailbox for Valentines.
For added fun, you could make an entire village of houses, stores, churches, and other buildings from various sizes of gable-top cartons. Start today with one building and add new ones in the days and weeks to come. Soon you will have an entire village!
Any gable-top milk or juice carton will work well for this project. Open the gable and thoroughly wash the carton. Allow the carton to dry completely—overnight is best.
Cut the gable off the top of the carton, cutting on the folds all around the top of the carton. Discard the gable top. Go on to Step 2 to make a gift box, or Step 4 to make a house or a cuckoo clock.
To transform the carton into a gift box, you will need to make a lid from a piece of cardboard about twice the size of the box's top. Poster board or cereal box cardboard both work well.
Place the box top down on the cardboard and trace around it with a pencil or pen onto the cardboard. Remove the box and use a ruler to straighten the sides and square the corners.
The lid will need a hinge and a flap. For the hinge, draw a rectangle on one side of the traced lid. Draw it about ½" to 1" (1-2 cm) deep and the entire width of the traced lid. For the flap, do the same by making a ½" (1 cm)-deep rectangle on the opposite side of the traced lid.
Cut out the lid on the lines you have drawn. For a beveled flap, cut the corners off the flap. Fold the cardboard on the lines for the hinge and flap. Place the lid on the top of the box and attach it at the hinge to the side of the box, using tape or staples.
Put the gift inside the box and wrap the box in your favorite way. That's it, you are done!
Tip: Cover the box and lid with paper before attaching the lid. Now the box is permanently wrapped.
Instead of adding a lid to the milk or juice carton, you can turn it into a house-shaped box by cutting roof peaks and adding a roof. Make a pattern for cutting the roof peaks by cutting a triangle from paper. Make the triangle's base the width of the box and make the height one-half the width of the box. (Cut a taller triangle for a steep church roof.)
Trace the triangle onto opposite sides of the box. Be sure to point the tip of the triangle up and align it with the top of the box. On the other two sides of the box, use a ruler to draw a line connecting the bases of the triangles. Cut all four sides of the box. You should have two roof peaks and two flat sides, even with the bases of the peaks.
Cover the house with solid-colored paper or decorative paper. Use a good quality glue spread thinly on the paper with a foam brush. Fold the excess paper at the top over the sides and the roof peaks, then glue or tape the paper edges inside.
Cut a roof from cardboard. Make it a little wider than the box width and long enough to cover both sides of the roof plus ½" (1 cm). To determine the roof's length, measure along the roof peaks. For most ½ gallon cartons, a 4¼" by 6" piece of cardboard should work for the roof.
Fold the roof in half. Tip: Score the fold line with the tip of your scissors to make folding easier.
Place the roof on top of the roof peaks. Attach one side of the roof to the house with tape from the inside. Leave the other side loose to open easily, or attach it with tape or glue. You may want to cover the roof with colored paper before attaching it to the house.
Choose house cutouts or clock cutouts. There are black & white and colored patterns for each. Download and print the pattern. Color the black & white cutouts, or use them as patterns to trace onto colored paper.
Patterns are Adobe PDF files. The Adobe Reader is available for free.
All of Aunt Annie's Crafts project patterns are designed to be printed on standard letter-size paper (8.5"x11" or A4). When printing from Adobe Reader, you may need to select Auto-Rotate and Center or Choose paper source by PDF page size to ensure the best fit.
Cut the cutouts, then glue them onto the box to make a house, a church or a cuckoo clock. You could also make your own decorations. What other ideas do you have for the recycled milk carton?
That's it! Your gift box is done!