Pringles have been on half-price for a while here, and we#ve been eating a fair few of them, and the cans seem like the sort of thing that should be useful. However, I can’t actually think of many uses and I’m usually good at the ‘find uses for a brick’ type thought experiments.
I know you can make rockets out of them. Any other ideas? This can be for one can, multiple cans, minimal extra materials, lots of extra materials, whatever.
I’ve seen one used as a soap mold. The woman who was demonstrating this had cut a loofah to fit into the can, too. So when the soap was unmolded and sliced, it had a core of loofah in it, which I thought was neat, but not worth buying and eating a can of Pringles for that use.
At my friend’s son’s elementary school, they use the pringle can as a way to deliver important messages to parents.
The children get to decorate the pringle can and whenever an important letter goes to the parents, the children would put it in their can and give it to their parents to open.
I suppose you could make some kind of light fixture from the cans. Paint the outside, poke some holes in them in a pattern, attach some lighting that won’t get too hot. I can see it in my head but I can’t describe it well.
Way back when, I used to use them to mail things in. Pringles cans happen to be just the right size to stick a couple of mixed tapes in, along with whatever handwritten messages are included.
Think of them as cheap map tubes.
I will be following this thread as well, since I enjoy the weird flavours Pringles comes out with, and could probably build a tree fort out of the cans if I didn’t throw them out.
DIY habitrails, maybe? Our cats are too big now or I’d be all over it!
They are great for garage organizers. Turn them on their sides and punch a few holes in each one. Wire them together like a bandoleer and lay them on a shelf. Now you can toss all your little nails and screws and crap in them.
Back in the day (mid- 70’s?), my mother would use them as molds to make pillar candles. That worked out quite well, since if the candle didn’t want to come out of the mold, it was easy enough to just tear it away.
I use them to store artist’s brushes, xacto knives and sharp, pokey things to take camping. No more slicing your thumb to ribbons reaching in the camp box.