If you have kids, chances are at some point you’ve cut a couple of holes in an upside-down cardboard box and called it a “tunnel” for the train set, or a “house” for a doll family. Although kids seem to love them, these impromptu structures tend to be pretty forgettable. I’ve found that with some inkjet prints and spray adhesive, you can turn these quickie buildings into toys that, while still ephemeral, will hold your child’s attention for months rather than hours.
At our house, Playmobil knights and Vikings are all the rage, and while the Playmobil castle and fortress sets are thoughtfully designed and constructed, they are also pretty expensive for what will certainly be a short-lived obsession. By the time our cardboard fortress wears out, we’ll be on to the next thing. If not, we’ll just whip up another one for pennies on the dollar compared to commercial sets.
Steps
Step #1: Making and printing the textures.
Next


- Once you decide what you’re going to build, poke around the web for appropriate “texture” images. A couple of handy sites are Mayang’s Free Texture Library and Image*After.
- After you find a texture you like, you will probably need to manipulate the file a bit before printing it out to use on your project. At least you’ll need to resize the image to fit your printer paper, but chances are you’ll also want to tile the image to fill the page.
- Typical file preparation involves the following steps:
- Open a new document in your image-editing software and set document size to 8.5×11 at 150 dpi.
- Open your texture image, choose “Select All,” and copy the contents of the image to the clipboard.
- Paste the image into your new file. Repeat as many times as necessary to fill the page with the texture, butting the tiles against one another in a neat grid.
- Print out as many sheets as you need.
- Tip: Printing lighter-colored textures will be easier on your ink cartridges than dark, saturated ones.
- There are simple techniques for creating seamless tiled images using Photoshop or other image-editing programs, but simply copying and pasting the image to fill the page usually suffices.
- Using 8.5×11 plain paper, our example fortress required about 10 sheets of the main body stone, 6 sheets of the upper stone, and 4 sheets of “wood floor” texture for the deck surfaces. The bigger your building, the more prints you will need.
Conclusion
This project first appeared in CRAFT Volume 02, pages 142-144.






































