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Denim projects

Easy Ryanair Cabin Bag 40x20x25

Make a perfectly sized Ryanair cabin bag 40x20x25 for your next weekend trip with Ryanair, Easyjet and other airlines. Denim is an obvious choice or any other materials you might find around the house!

Low cost and easy Ryanair cabin bag 40x20x25 for your next low-cost trip!

Reduce and Reuse

Continuing my life-goal of reducing the fabric stash and buying less stuff, I set out last weekend to make a cabin bag for my next trip back to my homeland with Ryanair.

To keep costs down, me and my son will be travelling with just cabin bags for this long weekend. I wanted to make an easy to pack and use cabin bag; a low cost cabin bag a low-cost trip!

Low cost Ryanair cabin bag 40x20x25 for your next low-cost trip

Baggage allowance

The current requirement for a cabin bag, and basic Ryanair travel ticket is 40 x 25 x 20cm. There’s a great Kipsta option at Decathlon but is slightly under the maximum measurements and that’s a shame when every squared inch counts! It’s great value for money though, and I’ve seen a huge variety of similar sized bags which cost very little.

Easy-pack cabin bag
Easy to pack lightweight travel bag – rigiline boning came in handy for a good rigid structure when empty.

As my “prototype” I’m very pleased with this. I need to make another for my son, and I will probably have fun changing up some things.

Levis denim pocket - cabin bag side
Recycled denim pockets, great for tissues, chewing gum, face masks…
Cotton cord zip pull addition
Easy Ryanair cabin bag 40x20x25
Inside cabin bag, bias taped seam
Light coloured coutil lining, for strength and visibility

Easy Ryanair Cabin Bag 40x20x25

It was tempting to add pockets and handy compartments, but as a first mock-up and being short on time, I was disciplined enough to KISS (Keep It Simple, Silly).

This turned out to be a smart move and meant I finished the whole thing in just a few hours. I started it late one afternoon and worked a couple of hours then finished it off in a couple of hours the next morning.

A lot of time was spent faffing and deciding fabrics and how best to put it together.

Super materials, simple design

Since I’ve been hoarding fabrics without time or need for them for years, I’m slowing giving in to using them for purposes which weren’t their original life-goal.

For my cabin bag I wanted to use up the remainder of the waterproof fabric I bought for the picnic blanket.