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Uses For Cardboard Boxes?

I work at a restaurant that throws away all of their cardboard boxes. For a month or so I have been recycling the boxes for them because it annoys me that they throw them away.

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Does anyone have any cool uses for boxes? Craft projects that require a lot of boxes? Or somewhere that I can donate boxes. Thanks!

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February 12, 20010 found this helpful

You don't say how big the boxes are. If they are about as big as the boxes copy paper comes in, I have decorated them and used these as "cars" for toddlers and preschoolers. Possibly a preschool or daycare center could use them. If they are big (appliance size) boxes, kids love to play house in them. If they are small (shoebox or smaller), let kids get creative and glue them together to make castles, robots, or anything they like.

 
Anonymous
February 12, 20010 found this helpful

This site has some ideas.

 
Anonymous
February 12, 20010 found this helpful

Having worked at restaurant, I would guess they are probably dealing with mid-sized boxes for produce, canned food and what not.

 
February 13, 20010 found this helpful

You can sell or donate cardboard boxes to the local Sheltered Workshop for the developmentally handicapped. They sell them for profit and the money is used for upkeep and to pay the people for working there.

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These places give the developmentally handicapped people a sense of usefulness and teaches them to take care of themselves, financially and otherwise.

 
Anonymous
February 13, 20010 found this helpful

I use boxes for drawers in places that normally don't have drawers. Cardboard boxes are great, because you can cut them to whatever height you need.

I use them for storage drawers under my bed, for drawers on my freezer shelves to keep food types together and easy to get out. I use them in the attic to organize plastic bags full of yard-sale finds that the kids haven't grown into yet.

Kids love to play in boxes, make cars, trains, mazes out of them, attach several together with open ends all facing one direction for a multi-story doll house.

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A local school would probably love boxes for dioramas, storage, crafts.

Maybe you could put a note on a bulletin board about where to pick up "free boxes for moving (or whatever)".

I'm sure I've seen something about making furniture out of cardboard; the corrugated kind is really strong when set a certain way. - MC

 
February 13, 20010 found this helpful

I just made a cooler for the truck of my car using two cardboard boxes and a bunch of plastic grocery bags. Works great, doesn't fall apart like styrofoam, and didn't cost a thing! If the boxes are uniformly shaped, I could imagine giant building blocks or a storage system for seasonal clothes and decorations.

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I keep craft supplies organized in smaller ones. If you want to try the cooler, the instructions can be found at the link below.

 
Anonymous
February 13, 20010 found this helpful

When I was a teacher we always needed boxes for one thing or another-all shapes and sizes. Maybe check with your local school and see if they could use them, or better yet, if you know any teachers ask them directly. Also, if you live near a college, maybe some of the students could use them at the end of the year to pack up their things! Good luck! - Beth

 
Anonymous
February 13, 20010 found this helpful

It sounds like you have a steady supply of same-size boxes. This is what some frugal women dream about! I can assure you there are people who would love to have those.

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To a frugal mom, this might mean enough compatibly-sized boxes to make a neat and efficient storage system for out-of-season clothes and yard sale bargains. To a teacher, it could be the storage system she's been longing for, to keep all her seasonal decorations organized, her craft materials, her collection of creative seat-work and seasonal activities, and more. To a woman running a home business on a shoestring, this might take the place of the filing cabinets her budget won't cover. To a quilter or other home-crafter, it would be the storage system she's always dreamed of, one with enough room for everything to have a set place. To a pack-rat wanting to declutter without hiring a organization consultant, those boxes would be the system for sorting out the stuff she digs out of closets and junk drawers.

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To someone just experimenting with composting, a cardboard box is a convenient way to keep all those scraps together, and as a bonus, the bin itself can decompose into fertilizer. To a teen, it could be the key to packing up stuff for college in the fall. For someone with a woodstove or a fireplace, it is first a box for kindling, and then it too becomes kindling.

Ask around, and you will surely find some takers for those boxes. - Rose Berry, thrift fanatic

 
Anonymous
February 15, 20010 found this helpful

I would like to congratulate the restaurant worker for not throwing away the cardboard boxes. If he/she lives in any size city, there is probably a recycle place that takes cardboard (usually cannot be mixed with other recycling). Call the mayor's office to find out. Also if there are any colleges nearby, sometimes they will have a bin on campus where you could put in the flatten pieces. - chunkychow

 
By spencer burt (Guest Post)
April 1, 20050 found this helpful

hey what size are the boxes cause if there small i could use them cause me and my friend are going to california in agust for our graduation and we wont get enough money just from our jobs cause we need $1800 total together to go and im going to need drop boxes to put at different business so people can donate money so if you can help call me at 801-298-4861

thanks spencer

 
By Emily (Guest Post)
August 8, 20050 found this helpful

Me and my friends took a bunch of cardboard and made cardboard CARS out of them and then raced them by like running... heres our website if you wanna see :) http://cbcd05.tripod.com it was great fun and we had a blast

 

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January 10, 20060 found this helpful

Depending on the size of the boxes....anyone who sells on ebay or other online auction would like them for mailing items they sell.

 
By Tristan (Guest Post)
January 12, 20060 found this helpful

Need 5 large boxes that people could lay or sit in for 6 hours. One of many events for Amnesty international STOP VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN campaign. Our school is hoping to raise 2000 pounds if you can help please respond. trisvsv @ hotmail.com (remmove space)

 
By Josh (Guest Post)
February 4, 20080 found this helpful

I'm currently in A-2 studio at Boston Architectural College. One of our projects this semester is to design a chair to be made out of cardboard. The challenge is that we cannot use any sort of glue or fasteners. We must assemble it by created joints in the cardboard. Please wish me luck.

I do know that making chairs out of cardboard is not a new idea if you do a google search your bound to find all sorts of interesting things people have done with cardboard.

 
By dbmy3 (Guest Post)
July 6, 20080 found this helpful

When I have several boxes I make a playhouse for my cats. Duct tape them together & cut corresponding holes for them to climb through. They enjoy it for weeks.
When I was young my mom & sister made me a doll house out of boxes, left over wallpaper and other fabric scraps. It was biggest and coolest of all my friends.

 
By Vivor. (Guest Post)
November 28, 20080 found this helpful

I work for a company that sends us WAY too much cardboard. I had made these suggestions to my fellow employees.Some are the same you have...
THINGS TO DO WITH ALL THE CARDBOARD OUR COMPANY SENDS US

1. Burn barrel starter material.
2. Garage floor covering for oil spills.
3. Packing material for shipping your friends presents.

4. Makeshift dust pans for large floor junk in the garage.
5. Storm window coverings.
6. Broken car window replacements.

7. Coloring material for the kids.
8. Project material for the kids and their friends and their friends...
9. Backing for paper note pads.

10. Garage notes for measuring, drawing or figuring something so you don't have to back into the house to find a note pad and pencil.
11. To use for your outside burn barrel cover, to set on the grass so the hot lid won't burn the grass.
12. Patterns for things.

13. Garage trash holders.
14. Use extra 123's to hold your movies in,
15. Use them for bookshelves or CD holders.

16. Sock drawer separator walls.
17. Placemats for the table when kids are doing home projects.
18. Fan to restart your burn barrel fire.

19. Computer mouse pads.
20. Wind protector for the beach.
21. Cut & line with foil and create a sun tan shield for your face.

22. Inside cupboard lining.
23. Silverware drawer separators.
24. Mudroom flooring.

25. Recycle.
26. Kids play houses.
27. Play houses for your cats.

28. Tear up for a compost pile or a worm bed.
29. Donate to a local cardboard drive.

 
March 14, 20090 found this helpful

You could check with your local Postmaster (the Post Office is the largest recycler in the US) and see if he will allow you to "donate" your cardboard boxes. My husband works for the Post Office here in Texas and they would allow that--but it's critical to talk to the Postmaster.

 
March 26, 20090 found this helpful

I use cardboard in my garden. Instead of laying down 5 or 6 sheets of newspaper or instead of purchasing that expensive fabric in the garden department that you lay under your mulch, I cut up the cardboard boxes and then put my mulch on top of them. It sure keeps the weeds away from my rose bushes and other plants and it will eventually deteriorate into the garden.

 

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