How to Make Reverse Trick-or-Treat Bags

I’m thinking this would be a good year for some reverse trick-or-treating.

Halloween candy bag

While I’m not really into Halloween, I do like it as an excuse to indulge in some of the junk candy that I don’t buy the rest of the year, and I’ll pick up a bag or two “just in case.”

I even did this when we lived in a third-floor apartment. Since I didn’t expect anyone to come up, I made a few little candy bags and brought them to my neighbors instead. Reverse trick-or-treat!

In the 2020 version, I’d mask up and leave the treats outside neighbors’ doors.

 

Craft materials: markers, tags, and tape

Materials + Tips

Here’s what I used, plus alternatives in case you want to make the project simpler or fancier or to use materials you happen to have already…

Treat bags – These are great to buy when they’re on sale after the holiday – unlike candy, they’ll keep! I got a pack of clear ones on clearance at Target several years ago, and I’ve used them for a variety of things since then, including sleeves for pressed flowers. Alt: regular sandwich baggies, small paper bags, gift bags

Crinkle paper – Upcycled from some other packaging (maybe it came from these costume mask kits-?) Alt: tissue paper, shredded paper, confetti, or skip it (It’s mostly there for color.)

Cord (for the bow) – I used what I had on hand from an envelope journal workshop. Alt: ribbon, raffia, yarn, bakers’ twine, nothing (Again, it’s just a festive touch.)

Shipping tag – I wrote our names on the back with a reminder who we were (i.e. “From: Phillip and Stephanie from upstairs”), since I suspected some of our neighbors  might recognize our faces but not our names. To be honest, I wasn’t sure about some of theirs, which is why there was no “To:” – just a “Happy Halloween” on the front. Alt: label, card, or make your own gift tags

Ultra fine tipped marker

Washi tape to keep the bag closed

Candy – make sure it’s individually wrapped!

 

Washi tape to close treat bag

Kids need a project?

If you are looking for something to occupy your kids or teens (hello, parents working from home!), here are a few ways they can help with these…

  • Color, stamp, and/or add stickers to bags.
  • Make Halloween cards or tags.
  • Cut construction paper into pieces to use instead of crinkle paper. (Or use a hole puncher / leaf-shaped paper punch to make confetti.)
  • Fill the bags – if they can be trusted around all that candy! (I barely can.)

On the tag or card, include the age(s) of any contributing young artists (i.e. “From Velma, Fred, and Daphne, age 3”), because that somehow makes it even cuter.

candy bag for Halloween


If you make candy bags, I’d love to see them! Tag @travelcraftjournal or #TCJreco on Instagram. Have fun!

Treats (no tricks!): Fall 2020

In these tricky times, here’s a virtual goodie bag full of classes, films, performances, and tours you can enjoy from home, as well as artisan wares you can shop from anywhere!

tissue paper flowers

For good stuff and in between these seasonal roundups, watch our Instagram stories!

Stay well and be safe, friends! Keep supporting artists, makers, local businesses, and causes when you can.  Nourish your soul.

 

tropical plants
Denver Botanic Gardens tropical conservatory, 2013.

Freebies

Badge Bomb:

  • Fun stay-at-home-themed coloring pages, activity sheets, and stickers. Download a PDF or request a free printed sheet with any order.
  • Free shipping on US orders over $50 + international orders over $75.

 

Black Lives Matter poster printable: PDF you can download from Dropbox, print, and hang up. Artwork by Stephen Powers. (Preview)

 

Denver Botanic Gardens virtual Día de los Muertos celebration: Coloring pages, classes, short film competition, and online mercado.

  • In Denver: Glow at the Gardens, Oct. 20-25. Reimagined for 2020, an evening of luminous displays and live performers. Advance purchase of timed tickets required. $17-21

 

Why I Love Where I Live sign

 

Monterey Bay Aquarium:

 

Museum of Craft and Design: MCD@Home has partnered with artists and community collaborators to create at-home projects based on museum’s signature programs and exhibitions.

 

Where to Go + When: Free ebook by longtime travel blogger Sherry Ott of Ottsworld. Email address required to receive the download link.

 

Why I Love Where I Live:

 

Chrysanthemums

Classes

Debbie Allen Dance Academy: Founded by Debbie Allen of Fame fame, DADA is a non-profit organization with programs to expand young people’s access to dance + theater.

 

Hanna Naegle yoga:

 

MyIntent:

 

San Francisco School of Needlework + Design:

  • Online classes on embroidery and other stitching techniques. Fees vary.
  • Virtual Stitch-ins: Weekly Zoom meetups where you can craft along with fellow fans of fiber arts. No RSVP required. Free.

 

Olney gallery in Phoenix
Olney Gallery, a Phoenix First Friday and Art Detour venue.

Virtual Tours

Artnet: Roundup of virtual art world events.

 

Fort Wayne Museum of Art: Take a virtual tour from home.

 

Mission San Juan Capistrano:

 

NYC virtual guide:

 

Phoenix-area virtual attractions:

 

Not Just Quiltz
Fabric at Not Just Quiltz, designed by Donna Abbots.

Shop Art + Craft

L.A. County Yarn Crawl Shops:

 

Not Just Quiltz: We met this vendor at the Quilt, Craft, and Sewing Festival!

 

Orenda Tribe SPREAD LOVE + SHINE LIGHT Shop: Sale of art and artisan goods with 100% of proceeds going to critical aid on the Diné / Navajo reservation during the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

Quilt-Craft-Sew Mall: Shop vendors from Quilt, Craft + Sewing Festivals online, since so many of 2020’s events had to be canceled.

 

Riders of the Purple Sage program
Waiting for the premiere of Riders of the Purple Sage!

Watch

Arizona Opera’s Reimagined 2020/21 Season:

 

The Loft Cinema:

 

Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts concerts: Many upcoming Scottsdale Arts shows are either all virtual or in-person with a virtual option. Live stream tickets vary by show ($20-39).

 

SXSW Short Films: A collection of shorts that were selected for SXSW 2020, but couldn’t be screened when the festival had to be canceled last-minute, due to the pandemic. You can now watch them from home! Free.

 

The Loft Cinema

Fall 2020 Happenings in Tucson

As Tucson slowly begins to reopen and our weather – even more slowly – starts to cool down, there are some good things going on I wanted to share with you!

Hotel Congress patio

Happenings List: Tucson

Hotel Congress reopening

Oct 1 / Hotel Congress, Tucson

The historic Hotel Congress, which had to close its doors the last 3 months due to the coronavirus, re-opens October 1st.

  • Reopening special $80/night October 1-10. Must call to book.
  • Club Congress concerts and Soul Food Wednesdays also resume this week with strict safety measures in place. All events will require masks, limit capacity (first come, first served), and have spaced seating.
  • Cup Cafe has expanded patio seating and added a new all-day menu.

 

Sydney’s Sweet Shoppe Grand Opening

Oct 1 / 8969 E. Tanque Verde Rd, Suite 209, Tucson

Popular piemaker Sydney’s Sweet Shoppe has moved into a brick-and-mortar bakery on the northeast side and is open for business!

 

Lao weaving at Tucson Meet Yourself
Bonyang Michaels demonstrates Lao weaving at Tucson Meet Yourself.

Tucson Meet Yourself (TMY) Folklife Festival “Reframed”

Oct 1 – Oct 31 / Tucson

This popular food and arts festival has come up with some creative ways to continue to safely showcase Tucson cultures!

  • All month: Live online conversations, demonstrations, and performances with folk artists, musicians, dancers, cooks and others keeping the many cultures and heritages alive in Tucson.
  • All month: Online marketplace featuring works for sale by select TMY folk artists.
  • Friday evenings: Traditional artists on walls! Video projections on public walls around Tucson of traditional dancers and artisans practicing their crafts.
  • 3 weekends: Oct. 10-11, 17-18, + 24-25 from 11am – 5pm. Three Tucson heritage sites will have vendors selling food-to-go and large LED screens showing performances from long-time TMY performers to watch while you wait.
  • Oct. 30, 6:30 + 8pm. Renowned Pascua Yaqui performer Gabriel Ayala closes the 2020 festival with an on-screen drive-in concert, following the Yellow Bird Indian Dancers.

 

HUB
Dinner at HUB.

Sonoran Restaurant week

Oct 2 – Oct 11 / Tucson

For 10 days, locally-owned restaurants across Tucson offer 3-course prix fixe menus for $25 or $35. Part of the proceeds benefit Community Food Bank of Southern Arizona.

SN: This spring Sonoran Restaurant Week organized “Tucson To Go” to spotlight local eateries offering takeout while dining rooms were closed for the pandemic. We had excellent meals from Reforma and Tito + Pep! (Photos on Travelcraft Journal’s Instagram.)

 

Carolyn Niethammer cooking demo
Carolyn Niethammer’s cooking demo at Mission Garden.

A Desert Feast: Carolyn Niethammer Book Launch

Oct 17, 9am – 1pm / Mission Garden, Tucson

Book launch party for Carolyn Niethammer’s A Desert Feast: Celebrating Tucson’s Culinary Heritage, which explains the agricultural and culinary history that led to Tucson’s designation as the first “UNESCO City of Gastronomy” in the U.S.

  • Other Tucson makers, local food system experts, and representatives from the City of Gastronomy project will be present.
  • COVID-19 precautions will be in place, and there is plenty of room in the four-acre garden for social distancing. Please wear a mask.

SN: We saw Carolyn Niethammer give a fantastic cooking demonstration at Mission Garden during the Agave Heritage Festival!

 

Native Seeds/SEARCH Online Fall Plant Fair

Oct 21 – 27 / Native Seeds/SEARCH Conservation Center (3584 E River Rd), Tucson

Sale of surplus arid-adapted plants grown by non-profit seed conservation organization Native Seeds/SEARCH.

  • Online-only sale.
  • Pre-order plants (5 plant minimum) for curbside pickup at the NS/S Conservation Center.

 

Quilt at craft festival
Quilt by The Rabbit Hole at Quilt, Craft, Sew Festival in Tucson.

Quilt, Craft, Sew Festival

Nov 5 – Nov 7 / Tucson Expo Center, Tucson

Expo with sewing, quilting, needlework, and craft supply vendors (both local and national), as well as workshops and presentations.

  • Free admission and parking.
  • New health safeguards include requiring face coverings, frequently sanitizing high-touch surfaces, and allowing for social distancing with wider aisles and larger vendor booths.
  • Look for the show program and coupons 10/26.

SN: We went to the Tucson show last year. While there were fewer vendors than at the Phoenix show, it was much less crowded and less hectic.

 

Tucson Meet Yourself
Tucson Meet Yourself.

Have fun, be safe, and let me know what you’re up to this fall!