Wedding Card/Envelope Hat Box
by gidgetgoes in Craft > Parties & Weddings
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Wedding Card/Envelope Hat Box
I made my first hat box from a kit when I was in high school. When I was planning my wedding, I modified the pattern that I remembered and turned it into a wedding box.
Items Needed:
Cardboard (used for lid and bottom of hat box)
Heavy duty poster board - should be flexible enough to bend without creasing (used for sides of lid and sides of bottom of hat box)
Iron-on fabric adhesive - (used to attach fabric to cardboard and poster board)
Quilt batting (optional to hide imperfection on lid of box)
White fabric (to cover cardboard and poster board)
Glue and glue gun (used to assemble box)
Iron (used with fabric adhesive)
Scissors & Box Cutter (used to cut fabric, fabric adhesive, cardboard, and poster board)
Decorative white pearls, white cording, white ribbon (used to decorate lid of box)
Trace and Cut
Trace two circles -11 inch diameter on cardboard for top and bottom of hat box - (a large plastic lid works well for a pattern)
Measure a 1.5 inch x 36 inch rectangle on poster board for side of lid
Measure a 12 inch x 36 inch rectangle on poster board for side of bottom
Cut out the two circular and two rectangular shapes with box cutter
Trace on Fabric Adhesive
Using shapes that were just cut out, trace onto paper side of fabric adhesive
Trace:
4 -circles (2 circles exact same size and Add 1 inch to outside of other 2 circles)
1 narrow rectangle - Using cardboard for pattern trace a 3.5 x 37 inch [(1.5 + 1.5 + .5 inch) x (36+ 1 inch)]
1 larger rectangle -Using larger cardboard piece as pattern, trace 25 x 37 inch [(12 + 12 + 1) x (36 +1)]
The extra 1 inch is used to attach to cardboard and poster board
Iron and Cut
Iron the paper with previous tracing onto the back side of fabric
After fabric has cooled from ironing, cut out shapes with scissors
You will have 4 circles and 2 rectangles
Cut Vs out of the addition 1 inch that was added to the 2 circles and the large rectangle
The cut out Vs will allow you to fold over the edge of the circular shape on lid and bottom
Iron Fabric Onto Cardboard
Peel paper back off all fabric adhesive pieces
Place adhesive side against cardboard and line up
Iron fabric onto cardboard rectangles, the heat from iron will make the fabric adhesive stick
Now you are ready to iron on fabric to cardboard circles for top and bottom
Start with larger circular fabric cut outs with V cut outs, center on cardboard and iron top
Next you will need to fold tabs over to the bottom of cardboard circle, ironing as you go.
This part is a little tricky to start but gets easier with each tab, moving all the way around circle one or two tabs at a time
Do the same for second circle
Iron on one of the exact size fabric circles to the bottom of lid
Do not iron on the other exact size fabric circle to the bottom of the base of the hat box, you will do this after the box is assembled.
Assembling Box
Now it is time to assemble the box.
This step is also a little tricky.
Start with pieces for lid and shape narrow rectangular strip around round fabric covered piece
A paper clamp can help hold it in place
Using a glue gun attach on inside of lid with small line of glue on edge of circle
Next you will shape the larger rectangular strip around the other round fabric covered piece and iron the tabs on the bottom of the round. You will need to use the glue gun to attach where the side walls meet. After this has cooled, you can iron on the remaining round fabric piece to the bottom which will cover the tabs.
Make sure to test that the lid will fit on the bottom of box before you glue the bottom walls together. You can adjust size of bottom walls accordingly.
Decorate Top of Box
Cut the slit in top of lid for envelopes to go through.
You can cut the slit prior to applying fabric to circular cardboard for top but this gets a little more complicated.
You can now decorate the lid with decorative pearl or small white silk flowers.
You can use these decorations to hide any imperfections when assembling or edges of slit for envelopes