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Handmade gift bags are easy to make and give extra touch to holiday gifts – Metro US

Handmade gift bags are easy to make and give extra touch to holiday gifts

Put down the tape dispenser and the wrapping paper.

Instead, make your own gift bags this holiday season. They can be done in a snap, and in their homemade splendour, they become part of the gift. There’s a gift bag for every sewing level; if you have sharp scissors and holiday-themed fabric, you’re basically ready to go.

Non-sewers can turn to “furoshiki,” a Japanese term for a simple square of fabric into which nearly anything can be tied. Crafters who can sew a straight line may want to try a cinched gift bag, while more advanced sewers can tackle something like the “eco-wrap pouch” created by craft blogger Jessica Okui.

The cinched gift bag is a favourite of Shawn Whyte, of Helena, Mont., who got tired of the mess generated by paper gift bags and wrapping. She began folding fabric in half and sewing it up the sides, often with a drawstring or ribbon sewn inside. She’s been whipping out these uber-simple, colourfully patterned fabric bags for seven years, and throws nearly every gift into them.

Whyte learned a valuable lesson along the way.

“Initially, I put a lot of effort into the bag, as it was part of the gift. I would hem the edges, and do everything to make it look great,” she says. “Then I cut myself some slack and figured out a way to whip them together – super simple, no fancy sewing. And guess what? People loved them just as much as the ones that took a lot of time.”

What’s amusing is that friends hoard Whyte’s crafted bags.

“Until people get about five from me, they won’t reuse them,” she says.

Okui, of the San Francisco Bay area, also created her fabric gift wraps to reduce the piles of crumpled gift paper on Christmas mornings. Her “Eco Christmas Gift Wrap” is a lined pouch perfect for smaller, more delicate gifts, or anything that needs special presentation.

“It’s really not that difficult to make,” says Okui. “I don’t consider myself an advanced seamstress.”

Instructions are available on her crafting blog site, Zakka Life (under the craft projects’ “Christmas” category).

Okui also enjoys making the furoshiki, traditionally used in Japan to wrap anything from books to melons, throughout the year. “We use them more for potlucks to bring food,” says Okui, adding that dinner hosts love receiving these simple wrapping cloths.

“It’s something different,” says Okui. “Anything that’s different is going to appeal to someone.”

Wrapping something in a furoshiki isn’t always simple; there are more than a dozen ways to wrap objects, depending on whether you’re wrapping a box or something more unusual, say, a fishing pole.

The government of Japan offers downloadable instructions for how to wrap a furoshiki 14 ways, at this PDF: http://www.env.go.jp/en/focus/attach/060403-5.html. Or search YouTube.com for video instructions.

Cindy Hopper, a craft blogger in Topeka, Kan., is an ardent furoshiki fan.

“I am totally taken with this method for wrapping gifts,” Hopper says on her crafting blog, Skip To My Lou. “It is not only beautiful but also eco-friendly.”

Hopper recommends the book “Wrapagami” (St. Martin’s Griffin, 2009) for its beautifully photographed examples of furoshiki wrapping.

Lightweight fabrics, such as silk, work best for furoshikis, but Hopper says anything can be used, even burlap. Or go simpler and use a bandanna, large dinner napkin, scarf or scraps of old clothing.

She recommends starting with a 50-by-50-centimetre fabric square (the standard size is larger, 71-by-71 centimetres). Hem it – or don’t. Fabric can be cut with pinking shears to limit unravelling.

Shawn Whyte’s Fabric Gift Bags

Supplies:

Fabric

Thread in co-ordinating colour

Scissors

Sewing machine

Ribbon, drawstring cord or ponytail holder

Assembly:

1. Working with any size fabric, fold it in half with right sides together (the folded end becomes the bottom of your bag). Sew the two sides, preferably creating ¼-inch seams (it now should resemble a pillow case). You can press these seams open, but Whyte doesn’t bother. She uses the fabric’s manufactured edge as the open end (no hemming). Turn right side out, and you have your gift bag.

2. For the tie, either wrap the gift bag with ribbon or drawstring cord, or sew it into the bag. Here’s how:

If using ribbon, before sewing the bag, with fabric right sides together, pin the centre point of the ribbon about 4 inches from the top (opening) of the bag between two sides of fabric. The ribbon sews into the bag seam as you sew that side (don’t let it get sewn elsewhere by accident).

If using a drawstring cord, after sewing the two sides of the bag and keeping it right sides together, fold the opening down about two-thirds of a centimetre, pin, and sew near the salvage. Insert cord by attaching a safety pin to the end of it and pulling it through the drawstring opening. Turn right-side out, and the bag is finished.

Optional: Forget the ribbon or cord altogether and tie the bag with a ponytail holder (a decorative one becomes part of the gift). Attractive versions of this bag also can be purchased online, at sites such as Etsy.com and Lucky Crow.

On the Net:

http://www.skiptomylou.org

http://zakkalife.blogspot.com