Upcycling & Repurpose
Upcycling plans that give old items a new job, with practical prep steps and clean results you can repeat.
About upcycling & repurpose
Upcycling & Repurpose is where we turn “I can’t believe I’m keeping this” leftovers into boyfriend gifts that actually earn a spot on his desk, in his car, or in his kitchen. This category is full of handmade pieces with storage — like soup mugs that don’t just sit there, or travel mugs that keep a tiny kit with them. You’ll also find small, cute items that fit in a pocket, plus low-maintenance gifts you can make without spending your whole weekend on one project. When we pick between ideas, we start with one simple question: where will he use it? Storage for the bedroom or workspace gets us into mug ideas, desk organizers, and anything that solves a “where do I put this” problem. If the gift needs to travel, we lean toward quick travel mug builds and compact organizers. For Valentine and Christmas, we choose materials that look intentional even when the base is thrifted — think clean fabric wraps, consistent paint coverage, and hardware that matches. Two pointers from me, from making these over and over: first, measure the item you’re repurposing before you buy anything new. A 12 oz mug body and a 16 oz mug body behave very differently when you add a lid or storage pocket. Second, for durability, roughen smooth surfaces with 220-grit sandpaper and use a primer made for the base material — plastic, ceramic, or wood each needs a different approach. That one step is the difference between “cute for a week” and “still solid months later.”
You’ll see projects that reuse jars, scrap wood, old mugs, and odd hardware, then finish them so they look like they were planned. We focus on practical detailing: compartments that don’t snag fingers, handles that feel comfortable, and closures that hold up to daily use. If you want something cheap, we’ll show you how to keep costs down without making it flimsy. If you want something that looks more luxe, we’ll show you where to spend money — usually on the closure, the wrap material, or the final finish, not on random craft supplies.
























