Three years ago, Glen Zubia was stuck under a mountain of student loan debt, living with his parents and struggling to scrape together car payments. Now, the year-old has his own four-bedroom house in El Paso, Texas. He even co-hosts a weekly podcast where he tells listeners oyt about how he turned his finances. Zubia bif a master of passive income through print on demanda system in which designers link up with sites like Amazon, Teespring and Redbubble to sell shirts and other items. Companies handle the production and customer service while paying out royalties, meaning people like Zubia can earn big without much investment or upkeep. Zubia is no stranger to making money off of the internet. While he was in college, he sold custom action figures on eBay; while trying to pay off credit cards, he tried writing books through Kindle Direct Publishing. But in his fourth month, he got a check. He used Adobe Illustrator how to make a big shirt out of money his iMac to crank out a catalogue of 2, designs — a process that involved seemingly endless brainstorming, researching, designing and saving. No way would it happen if I were messing. When the cash started coming in, he put it aside. Plus, he gets to set his own hours. Glen Zubia. By Julia Glum November 12,
Watch me make some of these t-shirt bags
You can use this folding technique for any dollar bill! If you have any questions, feel free to leave a comment below. Please be considerate and let me know what you think! Did you use this instructable in your classroom? Add a Teacher Note to share how you incorporated it into your lesson. Start with the front up. Crease horizontally down the middle and fold both the top and bottom sides inward like the second picture. Fold each corner over to approximately where it shows in the picture. It is important that there are those flaps at this step or else you won’t be able to hold the rest of the shirt in place. Take the opposite side of where we were working on earlier and bring it over. It helps me to reference where the placement should be by creasing where the raw edge that divides the O and the F of «OF. When you double over, we will eventually have the edge go underneath the collar, so you want it to be a little below that line. Here’s where it gets a little trickier. Pay close attention to the pictures. First you unfold the last step to go back to the long section, then you take an imaginary line and draw it from the top and bottom points of the first crease on the left and a point somewhere in the middle of the center section. Valley fold out and crease back so that it winds up looking like you popped a sleeve out of the side. After you have made the sleeves, flip the whole section back up and tuck the edge of the shirt under the two collar flaps. Congratulations, you have successfully made a dollar bill shirt! Now that your done, have you ever thought about making some matching pants? Great pictures and explanation! This is the first time in all my years that I have been able to successfully complete these.
Idea, Design, Upload
I may receive a commission if you purchase through links in this post. Learn more. There are lots of ways to make a t-shirt into a bag or backpack. In the last year, here in Spain, a ban has been implemented on giving out free plastic shopping bags at supermarkets. Despite being a person who composts, and recycles, and tries to minimize waste, I have to admit that I had mixed feelings about the ban at.
Here in Spain, it is very unusual to see any alternative bag types being offered at the stores. I guess now that the stores are charging for plastic bags, there is no incentive for them to offer alternatives to those who need bags.
Heck, that brown paper would be great for making origami planting pots for starting seeds in the garden. Hopefully people are using less plastic, rather than just paying more for the bags they use. While recycling is better than throwing things away, it still is best to make something like a t-shirt bag that can be used over and over. T-shirt bags are really great because they are lightweight and elastic.
They are able to hold lots of heavy items, conforming to the shape of almost anything you try to shove into. I read something q about reusable shopping bags in general that you should definitely keep in mind.
Coli since plastic bag bans have gone into place. Or. These bags become contaminated and reused with new, fresh foods. I also plan on switching to t-shirt bags for most of my food shopping. The ideal solution would be to have several bags with their own color code or label so that you can separate your meats from your fruits and vegetables and other items.
That would help prevent contamination between washings. Having several lightweight, but strong, bags that will hold up to multiple washings definitely helps. There are already tons of tutorials over the internet on how to make a shopping bag from a shirt. I have seen, and tried, many of. Some I have liked more in theory than in practice, and others I have liked with some personal tweaking. It is probably the most common way to make a bag from a shirt that you can find on the internet.
All you do to make this basic t-shirt bag is to cut the neck and sleeves off the shirt, and then sew across the. The problem with this basic t-shirt bag is that when you moey the bag bigg the handles, the front oug the shirt really becomes the side of the bag. When you wear the bag as you normally would, the corners of the bag sort of poke into your. My yellow bag in the picture above was made with this method. It shir the first bag I made years ago before I experimented with other methods.
A tank top can be converted, in this manner, even easier, because the sleeves are already gone. They usually have a deeper scooped neckline, too, so you can usually get away without cutting anything at all, leaving the edges more finished.
Once again, there are numerous tutorials mxke over the internet on how to make a tank top tote. The link above goes to one of my favorites. Instead of just sewing the bottom shut while the tank is open as in the first example, you turn the tank on its side, and line up the straps at the top. What I mean by that is that it no longer looks like a maje top sewn across the bottom, and is actually much more attractive as a bag. The thing to keep in mind here, if you want to keep the finished edges from the top of your tank top, is that you should have a tank top that is as close to symmetrical between the front and the ro as possible or it will look a bit off.
I finally got around to making one myself, but using my flipping method for the top. In the end, I think mine turned out pretty darn cute! Rather than sew the bottom, you cut slits into the bottom, and start tying the front and bottom pieces.
When you flip the shirt right side out again, the fringe will be in the inside. This bag makes use of the bottom hem of the t-shirt to convert the bottom into a drawstring closure.
All you need to do here is to make a slit through the top layer of the hem enclosure and run a cord through until you come back out the same hole. To close up the bottom, pull the cord closed as tight as you can, and tie it shut! The produce bag can be made from any of the other types of bags.
The idea is to put a lot of slits into the bag to give it a bit of style. It will also allow the bag to stretch even bigger than it normally. Overall I like these bags for storing sandy or dirty things, like when you are going to the beach or when you are storing kids shoes or toys. In plastic produce bags, the holes are there to allow the produce to breathe, but if you make a regular t-shirt bag, the cotton fabric already allows some air.
Instead, I used the idea of accordion folding. If you accordion-fold something and cut the sides in an alternate pattern, you get the result that you are really looking for in the produce bag.
Any cut that you make will actually be twice as long when you unfold it. When you try to accordion fold the entire bag, it gets a bit too thick to be able to cut all of the slits at. To deal with this problem, I partially accordion folded the shirt before beginning to make my slits. Mkney, I pulled back the end side and folded down the next section, making slits right where the other cut slits from other folded sections already.
I kept doing that until I had finished making slits throughout the whole bag. I know that might not make a lot of sense, but I think you will see what I mean if you actually try to do it. I was offered a lot of her clothes when her son had outgrown. The fabric of the shirt was rather stiff, and, while I thought it was cute, I found it a bit too busy to wear as a t-shirt.
Instead, I envisioned it being a much our little backpack. To make it, I first cut off the sleeves and the collar, cutting it straight across as high up as I could to maintain as much fabric as possible. To make a new drawstring enclosure at the top of the backpack, I hemmed down the fabric, sewing it just over a centimeter down from the fold, to create a small tube for whirt straps to go.
To make things simpler, though, you can use some cord for the straps and drawstring instead. If you want to make your own straps from the sleeve material, though, cut fabric strips just over an inch wide. Then, fold them lengthwise, with the right sides facing each other, and sewed across the open edges along the sides and our one end.
I made one long tube from each biv and used a skewer to help me turn the tubes back right side out to form my finished straps. I closed up the backpack, and gave it mkae shape, by flipping it inside out and sewing up the sleeve holes just up to the hem at the top, but not across the hem! Next, you want to thread your straps through the drawstring closures at the top. If I have a longer cord, I normally thread the cording through all the way around the top, ending up back at where I began on both sides.
Ou knotted one on the left side, and the other on the right, to prevent the straps from coming out of the x later on when closing the backpack. To finish off the backpack, you want to sew up the bottom hem. Hopefully you understand. One strap should be on either side of the bottom hem.
Can you see what I mean in the photo above? Flip it right side out, and you end up with a cute, drawstring backpack in which the straps also serve as the drawstring which opens and closes the bag.
This saves a lot of time, and means you can pretty much make a t-shirt backpack with only one seam! This is super simple and involves cutting off the sleeves and neck. You want to turn the shirt upside down and see the bottom hem as your drawstring enclosure and the backpack will now have a rounded. Follow the same steps as in the other male.
When using cording, I like to run the cording through the hem both ways as you would when making a double drawstring enclosure. See what I mean in the backpack. Here you can see how I run the cording.
I run one cord through one way, and the other cord through the other way. I then flip the shirt inside out before sewing the cord into the bottom seam to hold it in place.
See the pics for the other backpack to see where they need to go. Rather than just cut off the sleeves and neck and sewing across the bottom, I flip the shirt, lining up the sleeve holes. The result is a bag that points from front to back when worn on the shoulder, not one that points outward and jabs into your.
Remember that this method is best for blank, non printed t-shirts, especially those without side seams. If there are no side seams, there is a blank space for decorating the once-side-of-the-bag, which is now the. Make sense? Fold the t-shirt in half, and then cut the neck and sleeves off your t-shirt. If your shirt had side seams, they will now be touching in the center of the shirt. Sew the bottom shut.
If you want to attach your pouch in the seam, read my notes below. I like to use a serger to make the seam tidy, but you can use a regular sewing machine.
If you hoq to attach your sleeve pouch to your bag, you can either sew it into the bottom seam or sew it someplace. Remember, your shirt is inside out, so if you want the cord of the bag to be on the inside of the bag, leave it on the outside.
If you do it that way, you end up with a handy otu cord for carrying your pouch like a purse. Since you have to cut the sleeves off when making your bag, why not put them to great use and make a pouch from them? This is a super quick and easy project because sleeves have a hemmed bottom that can be used as a pre-made drawstring closure.
Easy Money Origami Shirt Design by Foldin Money
1. Design the Shirt
In this walk through, you will learn how to make a detailed collared shirt out of a one dollar. This makes for a unique origami project and creative way to leave a tip! See Step 1 below to get started! To create this article, 84 people, some anonymous, worked to edit and improve it over time. This article has also been viewed 1, times. Categories: Featured Articles Paper Clothing. Log in Facebook Loading
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