Fold a Paper Box

A folded paper origami box, also called a masu box, is beautiful in its functional simplicity. All you need is a piece of square paper. The finished box makes a great hiding place for small treasures. With a pair of boxes, you can use one as the box and the other as a lid to wrap small gifts. Read on to learn how to make a folded paper box.

Steps

Making Structural Folds

  1. Begin with a piece of square paper. You can use origami paper or fold any piece of paper diagonally from the corner to the opposite edge and trim off the excess. It is important that the paper is square since you are creating a box.
  2. Fold the paper in half. Crease the fold with your finger then open the piece of paper.
  3. Fold the paper in half along the other side. Use your finger to crease the fold, then open the paper again. You should now have two creases that intersect at the center of the square.[1]
  4. Fold the corners to the center. Bring each corner to the center, so that the points are all touching. Crease the folds with your finger. Rotate the paper so it sits squarely in front of you, but don't unfold it this time.[2]
  5. Fold the top and bottom edges to the center of the square. Crease the edges of both folds to secure them.
  6. Unfold the square along one side. Unfold the halfway folds and the triangles beneath those folds. Leave the side triangles folded in.
  7. Fold the long edges to the center. Fold over the bottom of the still folded triangles. Crease the bottom edge. You should have what looks like a necktie with two points.

Creating the Walls of the Box

  1. Reinforce the creases. For the purposes of the guide, the diamond furthest away from you formed by the "necktie" folds will be the "head" and the diamond closest to you will be the "foot." Match the bottom tip of the foot diamond to the bottom of the head diamond. Then, match the top tip of the foot diamond to the top of the foot diamond. Crease along the long sides to solidify the folds.
  2. Create the side walls of the box. Pull up the flaps along the long side to create the side walls of the box.
  3. With the side walls assembled, construct the head wall. As you lift the head wall flap, the creases from previous folds should form two triangle shaped flaps that you will want to fold inwards. Be sure these triangles are folded inwards before proceeding. The head wall will fold over these triangle corners and the top triangle of the head wall will fit neatly into the bottom of the box where you will want to crease it snugly against the sides to keep the box together. After creasing, you should see a triangle on the bottom of the box.
  4. Repeat the process for the opposite end or the foot wall. Try to make sure the folds are clean and not crinkly.
  5. Finished.



Tips

  • For best results, fold neatly. For each fold, carefully align the edge or corner with whatever edge, crease, or other feature it should meet, then crease the paper firmly.
  • You might want to dab some glue on the bottom of the triangular flaps in order to make them stay down, or you can use tape.
  • Use diagonal folds when you start, along with the straight folds. It will help a lot at the end.
  • Make a lid by creating a second box the same way.
  • If your paper is colored on one side, fold it so that the colored side faces down at first.

Warnings

  • Don't put anything too heavy in the box, or it will collapse. Remember, it is paper.
  • Watch out for paper cuts.

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Sources and Citations