Jennifer's Dollhouse Printables

 

Christmas Rectangular Gift Boxes

Selection 4

INSTRUCTIONS

There are 3 sizes of gift bags on this page just keep scrolling down to find them.

To save the printable to your computer, hold your mouse over the printable and right click, then select 'save picture as'. Choose the highest setting on your printer.
Spray your printable with a matte spray sealer so that the ink won't run when you glue the printie. I have used different sprays over the years, and have found that they all do the job. You can purchase the sprays at most hobby shops or paint stores.

 

 

Christmas Gift Bags
Christmas Rectangle Boxes
Christmas Square Boxes
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Making the Gift Boxes and Gift Bags

First of all, of course, you have to print your gift bags. Use the highest setting on you printer. Let your printie dry for a few minutes, then spray it with a matte sealer. This seals the printie so that the inks won't run when you apply the glue.

I use card stock for almost all my printables. I know some people prefer to use thinner paper. When you cut out the printable leave the white parts on, you will want to snip some of them off when you glue the box/bag together.

You need to score the folds of the box/bag so that when it is made the corners will be nice and straight. It is a little bit easier to glue the handles on the bag before it is assembled.

Emboidery thread makes a good string handle, or you can use a little strip of paper, see diagram. After the gift bags are made up, pinch the sides of the bags and the top to make a little pleat. Tucking some tissue paper in the bags and adding a bow to the boxes adds to the realism. Have fun mini-ers!

 

 

Free Stuff

You can find a free printable Christmas lantern at this web site home.
planet.nl

Pick up a free printable Christmas box of tree decorations here home.
epix.net

 

Links for Dollhouse Christmas Supplies

 

www.microjivvy.com

greatminiatures.com

oakridgehobbies.com

dollhouseexpress.com

smallerandbetterthings.com

janetgoodrickminiatures

 

Build a Professional Looking Website with Homestead.com.

Memories of Christmas Past
My First Dollhouse

One of my first memories of Christmas was the year I was 4 1/2, 1948. We lived in England about 20 miles from London. The war had ended in 1945. It was a happy time, with my uncles returning home from service in far away places, eager to get on with their lives.
Many things were scarce though, lots of food was still rationed well into the 1950's. Britain was busy manufacturing the necessities of life, after too many years of building bombs and fighter planes, so there were not a lot of toys around.
It was my Uncle Ben who made that Christmas so magical. He was a carpenter and had made gifts for all of us. For my parents he had made a wooden tea tray, with a decal of a beautiful rose in the centre [I still have it]. For my brother he built a garage, what we now call a service station. It had two big doors and was large enough for our cat to crawl into.

My gift was the best of all.
A dollhouse!
Not only a dollhouse, but a fully furnished dollhouse!
Not only a fully furnished dollhouse, but a fully furnished dollhouse that actually lit up! Oh my,
I felt like the luckiest little girl in the world.

In 1949 Uncle Ben and his fiancée, Auntie Betty immigrated to Canada. Even though they were an ocean away, he and his new wife continued to be the people who made our Christmas special. Year after year, around the middle of December we received two big boxes from Canada. My goodness, we were always so excited when they arrived.

We would closely examine them. The stamps the brown paper and string. We tried to read the customs stickers, which never revealed anything, since Auntie Betty never declared exactly what the gifts were. Mum made us wait to open the packages. After Dad came home from work, and teatime was over, and all the dishes were washed.

That was the right time. It was an event. One box contained food. All sorts of food. Luxury food. There were cans of salmon, cans of Niblets corn, enormous cans of ham, and a tin with a pretty picture on it filled with cookies. There were always bags of candy, boxes of chocolates and Chiclets gum.

Oh boy! My brother and I loved that Chiclets gum. It was the only thing we were allowed to have before Christmas. We didn't chew it all at once. Oh no. It was more fun to brag about it, take it outside to show our friends, let them shake the box to hear how it rattled. We were the only kids on our street that had relatives in Canada.

The second box was even more exciting than the first. This box contained our Christmas gifts. Of course they were all wrapped up and stickered with ‘‘Do Not Open 'til December 25th'', but we got to see which parcel was ours. We could hold them and smell them and look at the gorgeous paper they were wrapped in. Believe me that gift wrap was worth looking at. Our English Christmas wrapping paper was very thin and flimsy, mostly a white background with holly, or a tiny Santa printed on it. It was dutifully saved and reused each Christmas, until it wore out.

The Canadian gift-wrap was thick and rich and strong, and the colours so bright. I loved them. I vividly remember one paper, which had a black background and was printed with snowflakes, and a snowman with a green hat and red scarf. It was awesome. I can remember all the wonderful Christmas presents that came from Canada. A Barbara Anne Scott figure skating doll, a music box, a watch, a pair of mitts with white fur on the back and Rudolph the Rednosed Reindeer printed on the red fronts

.

I was so proud of those mitts.
When I wore them, I would walk or ride the busses with my hands held palms out so that everyone could see the lovely picture of Rudolph. My family joined Uncle Ben and Auntie Betty in Canada in 1957.
We shared many a happy Christmas after that.
Sometime, in the 1980's I was reminiscing about the Rudolph mitts and added a little note in my uncle and aunt's Christmas card. I told them how much I had loved their gifts as a child, especially the Rudolph mitts.
Neither one of them had any recollection of the mitts.
I, on the other hand , can remember every detail, even how the smelled.
They smelled of Canada.

The dollhouse? It didn’t make it to Canada.
It was handed down to younger cousins, and handed down again when they grew older.
I like to think that it is still being handed down.

Jenniferr

 

 

Bows and Trimmings

The extra trimmings on the gift bags and boxes make all the difference.

I am not at all skilled at making bows, but here are a couple of links where you can learn from the experts.

Learn from Joy Parker of Swallowhill Miniatures
how to make a ribbon bow

Swallowhill Miniatures

Learn from Cynthia Howe how to make a large bow

Cynthia Howe Miniatures.

 

I came across a hint on the internet a few years ago, which suggested using unravelled bunka as decoration on gifts. It makes a very effective bow, I have used it here, but I can't take credit for the idea.
If you are the person who posted the clever 'bunka bow' idea, please let me know so that I can add a link to your website.
I can't find bunka in my area, but it dawned on me one day, that I can buy tassels at the dollar store. The tassels are made from bunka.

I have found that it is not difficult to cut or tear the 'real size 'curling ribbon into thin strips. I tie a few ribbons together with thin wire. The little fabric roses, that you can find at the dollar stores, look nice on top of a gift box. I was lucky find the foil bows, shown in the picture, at the dollar store.
I love the dollar store :- )