Posted 04 April 2007 - 12:51 PM
Great Idea!
I've done similar containers. I got a local framing shop to save me a few day's worth of scrap from cutting frame mats for photos and the like ( Freebie). These are thinner and stronger than cardboard, and one layer top and bottom is sufficient to make a strong container. I cut them to sthe shapes I need with a circular cutter or razor knife.
Quite often I will be sending only a single fly, usually a Classic Salmon Pattern.
I make a perimeter frame cut out of Foam core board, usually 3/4 wide at the perimeter. I glue a back mat to the foam core, then attach the front cover mat with a piece of masking tape, making a hinged cover.
Inside I cut a square of foam core and glue it to the back cover. Stick the fly in into the foam core, close the cover, secure it with another small piece of masking tape and stick it in a padded mailer, ready to ship!
This works well with wet salmon flies. For dry flies, etc. simply make the depth between front and back covers deeper with layers of foam core frame stacked and glued. You can make shipping boxes for multiple flies by choosing the size of the box appropriately, and you can arrange the box to have 2 layers ( 3 pieces of mat; top, bottom and middle) The flies would be stuck in pieces of foam core gued on both sides of the middle mat, and have hinged doors top and bottom, secured with masking tape or elastic bands.
Generally, framing shops throw out mat pieces they consider too small to be reusable. I've got pieces 2-1/2 x 3-1/2 alll the way to 7 x 10, as well as circles, ovals, etc in lots of sizes, colours and finishes.
As well as making shipping boxes, the mats are great for mixing up small batches of epoxy for fly tying or rod building and repair.