How to make a blind bag?

Blind bag exercise:

Take out a rectangular colored paper, fold the colored paper in half several times, roll the rectangle into a cylinder, and stick some gadgets you like together.

1 Select a piece of paper.

Choose a rectangular colored paper, or cut a square colored paper in half.

Double colored paper

Fold both sides of the colored paper slightly inward, and unfold it after obvious creases.

3 sticky glue

Roll this rectangle into a cylinder, and the overlapping parts should be coated with glue or glued with double-sided tape.

4 put some favorite gadgets.

Glue one side of this cylinder together, and then you can put some favorite snacks or gadgets in it.

5 the other side is bonded.

The other side should be bonded vertically. At this time, the basic shape of the small blind bag is completed.

Blind box refers to the toy box that consumers can't know the specific product style in advance, which is random. This kind of Chaozhou opera, which was born in Japan, was originally called mini-doll, and it was called blind box after being popular in Europe and America.

As a trend toy, blind boxes have accurately cut into the young consumer market, and many "blind box+"business models such as archaeological blind boxes, stationery blind boxes, beauty blind boxes and snack blind boxes have also emerged rapidly. ?

Blind box culture originated in America and flourished in Japan. The so-called blind box, as its name implies, is a box filled with cute dolls of various styles, but the box is not marked with which one. With its limited hunger marketing method, it has greatly stimulated consumers' desire to buy and repurchase.

Experts believe that from the macro consumption environment, in the era of high material abundance, sales have developed from selling goods to selling entertainment, and the craze of "blind box economy" has also come from this.

200211/On October 26th, official website, China Consumers Association, issued a consumption reminder, pointing out that some operators used blind boxes to clear their positions, which damaged consumers' legitimate rights and interests, disrupted the market and reminded consumers not to buy blindly.