How to upcycle cardboard to make cute little gingerbread houses
Guide

How to upcycle cardboard to make cute little gingerbread houses

Making a decorative gingerbread house from used cardboard is a piece of cake and a fun activity to do alone or with kids. I’ll walk you through the easy steps and provide you with two templates to trace and cut out.

You’re all set with Christmas gifts and have a pile of empty cardboard boxes to prove it? Good for you. And I’m not being sarcastic, by the way. Why would I when you can make beautiful tea lights from the boxes and transform your living room into a snowy winter village?

What you need

To make gingerbread houses, it’s best to use cardboard that’s not too stiff and easy to fold. Alternatively, you can use sturdy greeting cards. The delicate windows are best cut out with a cutter, whereby a protractor triangle or ruler is helpful to get those straight lines right. The flaps can be glued together with a glue stick and the decorations are best drawn on with a white or coloured Sharpie. LED tea lights will light up the gingerbread house from the inside and last longer than real tea lights on top of eliminating the fire hazard.

Edding 8055 (White, 2 mm, 1 x)
Markers
EUR26,72

Edding 8055

White, 2 mm, 1 x

Donau Self-healing cutting mat A3 (450 x 300 x 3 mm)
Mats
EUR13,75

Donau Self-healing cutting mat A3

450 x 300 x 3 mm

M+r Geometric triangle (300 mm)
Ruler
EUR10,38

M+r Geometric triangle

300 mm

Edding 8055 (White, 2 mm, 1 x)
EUR26,72

Edding 8055

White, 2 mm, 1 x

Donau Self-healing cutting mat A3 (450 x 300 x 3 mm)
EUR13,75

Donau Self-healing cutting mat A3

450 x 300 x 3 mm

M+r Geometric triangle (300 mm)
EUR10,38

M+r Geometric triangle

300 mm

Copy the template and off you go

I created two templates for my winter village. I’ve gone for a house and a tower. Simply trace the two models onto the cardboard and adjust the size to your liking or print them out directly onto A3 paper.

The little house.
The little house.
Source: Stefanie Lechthaler
And the tower.
And the tower.
Source: Stefanie Lechthaler

If you’re creating your own design, be sure to include tabs you’ll need to glue together. If you print out my template for tracing, you can later cut out the cardboard along the solid lines using a cutter and transfer it to the cardboard with a felt-tip pen.

Once you’ve drawn the house onto the cardboard, cut it out with the cutter by guiding it precisely along the solid line using a protractor or ruler. Make sure you don’t confuse the solid with the broken lines. Then cut a slit into the bottom to insert and remove the LED tea lights.

Use a protractor triangle to make the cuts straight and precise.
Use a protractor triangle to make the cuts straight and precise.
Source: Stefanie Lechthaler

Decorating

Before folding and glueing the cardboard together, decorate the outside of your model house. Doing it last is much harder. With details including a roof, white window frames, painted-on hearts or rhinestones, you can transform the template into a magical gingerbread house. To prevent the tea lights from being visible through the windows, try covering them with baking paper. This will only make the light from the LED tea light shine through, which looks like a cosy flickering open fire from the outside.

I draw the roof and murals on with a white Sharpie.
I draw the roof and murals on with a white Sharpie.
Source: Stefanie Lechthaler

Scoring, folding, glueing

To make folding easier, you can also gently «score» the dotted fold lines with the cutter. However, only apply light pressure to avoid cutting through the cardboard. Next, it’s time to fold the flaps and glue them to the appropriate place on the little house. Finally, use the LED tea light and let yourself be enchanted by the winter spirit.

I was taken in.
I was taken in.
The hole for the LED tea light isn’t a perfect solution, but it works.
The hole for the LED tea light isn’t a perfect solution, but it works.
Source: Stefanie Lechthaler
Chasing away some of the winter gloom with a little light.
Chasing away some of the winter gloom with a little light.
Source: Stefanie Lechthaler
Header image: Stefanie Lechthaler

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Painting the walls just before handing over the flat? Making your own kimchi? Soldering a broken raclette oven? There's nothing you can't do yourself. Well, perhaps sometimes, but I'll definitely give it a try.


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