A few weeks ago I made several of these Trick or Treat boxes for the children I work with. Due to events beyond my control, I neglected to photograph them. So I have quickly knocked together a sample box and some instructions to share with you.
Materials for the boxA4 Black card
1 piece of card 2inches by 3 1/2
Glue
For the panels
2 pieces of Black card 7 1/8 of an inch by 3 1/8th of an inch
2 pieces of red card 3 1/4 by 7 1/4 inches
2 pieces Whisper white card 3 inches by 7 inches
post it note
inks
yellow, red, orange and black.
Tools
scoreboard, paper trimmer, scissors, blending brushes, daubers, Halloween stamps, black die cuts,
Shrink plastic optional. Ribbon and thread. large circle punch and regular office style hole punch
Cut a section from the end of a sheet of A4 card so it measures 8 1/4 by 9 1/2 inches.
Score at 1/2 " 4" 4 1/2" 5" 8 1/2" and 9 "
Turn the card around and on the short side score at 1". This will be the bottom of your box.
Snip off the small rectangle on the first half inch score line. (as in photo)
Cut up the score lines to the 1 "inch score line. Cut a slither from each side of the narrow middle flap and the end flap. Removing a slither from these two small flaps will help to conceal them once the box is assembled. Which will give you a neater more professional finish.
Fold all the score lines accordion style. The 4 1/2 inch and 9 inch score lines should fold inward and the score lines either side will fold out.
The single half inch strip is your glue tab. I like to apply the glue to the underside of this strip and fold it around the first half inch strip on the opposite end, so that the edge of the join is in the centre fold.
You may like to apply the glue to the upper side of the glue tab and marry up the sides. I don't think it makes much difference whichever way you do it. I just found it easier to wrap it round. Why not do a dry run, try both ways before you apply glue and decide which way you prefer.
Once the side is stuck fast you can complete the base. Fold over one of the wide flaps, then fold over the small flaps either side and secure with glue. Apply glue around the edges of the remaining flap and fold over and hold in place until the glue has dried. I like to stand the box up and use something like a rule or a length of wood to press the base down from the inside, just to make sure all the layers are secure.
The box closure is just a piece of card 3 1/2 by 2 inches folded in half length ways. This piece of card can be any colour you like. I chose orange card and brushed a little red ink over it for some extra depth before I stamped the cobwebs . While it was folded in half I punched two holes for the ribbon to feed through.
I positioned the closure on the box and marked where the holes were with a pencil and punched the holes in the box.
Time to decorate the panels. These were really quick and easy to do. I started by brushing yellow ink lightly on to the lower section of my white card panels. Once I had a light covering of ink I placed a circle mask which I had punched (on the sticky edge) from a post it note.
Then I continued to apply more yellow ink with a blending brush in a circular motion until I had even coverage across the lower and middle section of the panel. Starting at the top of the panel I applied orange ink the same way, working my way down the panel and blending it in with the yellow. I repeated this process with the red ink.
I then took a tatty sponge dauber and applied black ink from the bottom of the panel working upwards in a flicking motion to give that ragged grass look.
All that was left to do was stamp some spooky silhouette images in black. I use black pigment ink, such as Versacolour for silhouettes as it is more opaque than dye based inks, the result being a more solid, intense image.
The skeleton on this box is a die cut.
The Stamps I used are retired stamp sets from S.U. called Wicked cool, Toxic treats and Monster munchies.
I added tags and charms to the side of the boxes.
The optional extra on these bags are the charms. I made a variety of charms for these boxes from shrink plastic. (Shrinkies)
They were made by stamping a fairly large image onto the shrink plastic using Stazon ink, then colouring the image with colouring pencils, punching or die cutting the image and heating the plastic with my heat gun until it shrinks.
These were then filled with mini chocolate bars and a variety of sweets before sealing the box with the ribbon.