Cut Out + Keep

Lunch Bag

I love packing a lunch, and I like to do it in style!

https://www.cutoutandkeep.net/projects/lunch-bag • Posted by Amy Karol

I love packing a lunch, and I like to do it in style. Why use disposable paper bags when you can reuse supercute ones? Adorn this clever lunch bag with your favorite images from magazines or books. The fabric for this bag has an image scanned from a vintage magazine, complete with a cookie recipe. This project uses only three photo fabric sheets (or homemade sheets with Bubble Jet Set 2000), and the pattern cleverly uses 81/2" x 11" (21.5 x 28cm) sheets, so you won’t waste any fabric. Once you make one of these, you’ll be hooked. Finished size 103/8" high x 61/4" wide x 31/2" deep (26 x 16 x 9cm), unfolded Materials Outer bag fabric: (3) 81/2" x 11" (21.5 x 28cm) photo fabric sheets for your printer or copier, or homemade sheets using Bubble Jet Set 2000, cut after printing into: (2) 61/2" x 11" (16.5 x 28cm) front pieces (2) 41/4" x 11" (11 x 28cm) side pieces Lining fabric: 1/4 yard (23cm) cut into: (2) 61/2" x 11" (16.5 x 28cm) front pieces (2) 41/4" x 11" (11 x 28cm) side pieces (2) 61/2" x 41/2" (16.5 x 11.5cm) bottom Binding: (1) 2" x 20" (5 x 51cm) piece of fabric for homemade binding, or, if using premade binding, (1) package (3 yards [2.7m]) of 7/8"- (22mm-) wide single-fold bias tape (1) 1" x 2" (2.5 x 5cm) piece of Velcro (optional) Vintage magazines or other images to copy Printer Sewing machine Seam allowance 1/4" (6mm) One bottom lining piece is used for the bottom of the outer bag.

You will need

Project Budget
Cheap

Time

2 h 00

Difficulty

Nice & Simple
Medium screen shot 2011 03 03 at 13.34.05 1299159429 Medium screen shot 2011 03 03 at 13.34.14 1299159479

Description

I love packing a lunch, and I like to do it in style. Why use disposable paper bags when you can reuse supercute ones? Adorn this clever lunch bag with your favorite images from magazines or books. The fabric for this bag has an image scanned from a vintage magazine, complete with a cookie recipe. This project uses only three photo fabric sheets (or homemade sheets with Bubble Jet Set 2000), and the pattern cleverly uses 81/2" x 11" (21.5 x 28cm) sheets, so you won’t waste any fabric. Once you make one of these, you’ll be hooked. Finished size 103/8" high x 61/4" wide x 31/2" deep (26 x 16 x 9cm), unfolded Materials Outer bag fabric: (3) 81/2" x 11" (21.5 x 28cm) photo fabric sheets for your printer or copier, or homemade sheets using Bubble Jet Set 2000, cut after printing into: (2) 61/2" x 11" (16.5 x 28cm) front pieces (2) 41/4" x 11" (11 x 28cm) side pieces Lining fabric: 1/4 yard (23cm) cut into: (2) 61/2" x 11" (16.5 x 28cm) front pieces (2) 41/4" x 11" (11 x 28cm) side pieces (2) 61/2" x 41/2" (16.5 x 11.5cm) bottom Binding: (1) 2" x 20" (5 x 51cm) piece of fabric for homemade binding, or, if using premade binding, (1) package (3 yards [2.7m]) of 7/8"- (22mm-) wide single-fold bias tape (1) 1" x 2" (2.5 x 5cm) piece of Velcro (optional) Vintage magazines or other images to copy Printer Sewing machine Seam allowance 1/4" (6mm) One bottom lining piece is used for the bottom of the outer bag.

Instructions

  1. Prepare your artwork by scanning and printing it onto your fabric at home, or make color copies of it and print it onto color copier fabric sheets at the copy shop. You will need 3 printed sheets total.

  2. Small screen shot 2011 03 03 at 13.38.04 1299159628

    Cut out the outer bag pieces from your printed fabric. Cut out the lining pieces and binding strip if you are making binding. (Skip this step if you are using premade binding.)

  3. Make the outer bag: With right sides facing, sew the long sides together on the front and side pieces, creating a box without a top or bottom. With right sides together, pin a lining bottom piece onto the front and side pieces. Sew carefully, flaring out the sides and front, stopping and pivoting with your needle down at each corner.

  4. Small screen shot 2011 03 03 at 13.38.13 1299159695

    Repeat step 3 with the lining fabric.

  5. Turn the outer bag right side out. Place the lining bag inside the outer fabric bag, wrong sides together. This will now look exactly like it will when it is done, minus the binding. Baste around the top edge to keep the layers together.

  6. Small screen shot 2011 03 03 at 13.38.25 1299159829

    Make binding by ironing your strip in half lengthwise. It will now be 1" x 20" (2.5 x 51cm). Align the raw edges of the binding and the top of the bag and lay out on the printed side of the bag, right sides together. Fold the short end of the tape over so there is no raw edge, and stitch using a 1/4" (6mm) seam allowance from the edge. Flip the folded edge to the inside on the bag, and hand-stitch it to the lining.

  7. To create the closure, machine-stitch one velcro piece centered just under the binding along the top edge of one front piece. Fold the bag over twice toward the other front piece, and mark where the Velcro touches the other front piece. Stitch the opposite Velcro piece onto the other front piece where the two Velcro pieces would touch. Tips, hints, and other suggestions You can make this with a vinyl lining. Plastic-coated fabric like oilcloth can be tricky to stitch with, so try a Teflon® presser foot or use masking tape on the edges and sew through all layers to keep the oilcloth from sticking. Create a cute closure by stitching an elastic band into the binding on one side and adding a button on the outside front instead of the Velcro.