Youtube video channel known as “Inspire to Make” offers a slew of impeccable, high definition do it yourself tutorials. Try out one for yourself by creating a leather coffee cup sleeve using faux leather fabric from MJTrends.
- First, begin by laying out all of your leather fabric. You’ll want to use a cardboard coffee sleeve as a pattern, typically like the ones found on cups from Starbucks or other coffee shops.
- Trace the outline of the cardboard coffee sleeve with a pen onto the leather fabric.
- Use an exacto blade and work carefully to cut out your pattern from the fabric. For this tutorial, he added a signature extra, like a metal shield icon as a design on the side.
- After cutting out this extra piece, he sanded the edges lightly and attached securely using a needle and durable thread.
- Take the needle and thread to secure each ends of the sleeve together with simple stitching. The final product looks luxe, incredibly high quality and hard to believe that it’s hand crafted from an oh-so-easy DIY.
The gold shield design looks superb, and you can really let your imagination run wild when it comes to additional accents for the side. Get creative! You can inscribe a short handwritten phrase, like “But First, Coffee” or “I Love You More Than Coffee”, if you’re feeling sentimental. Thinking of creating a few as gift? You can even write out the name of a friend or the initials of a loved one. Make sure to look through our wide array of veggie leather fabric options before you get started.

















Nice reminder to check out the veggie leather options, since different textures or colors could completely change the vibe of the sleeve.
The gold shield detail stood out to me too, it adds a bit of personality without overwhelming the clean leather look.
I’ve watched Inspire to Make before, and this project fits their style perfectly—simple steps but a really polished final result.
I liked how the tutorial added the small metal shield accent, it really elevates the look from simple DIY to something that feels store-bought.
The stitching part sounds beginner-friendly, especially since it just uses basic needle and thread to bring the sleeve together.
I appreciate that the tutorial doesn’t overcomplicate things, just trace, cut, stitch, and optionally decorate, which makes it approachable for beginners.
Tracing the outline directly onto faux leather and cutting with an exacto blade seems straightforward, but I appreciate the reminder to work carefully for clean edges.
Using a cardboard coffee sleeve as a template is such a clever shortcut, I never thought to reuse one like that for sizing consistency.
I’m impressed how luxe the finished sleeve looks considering it starts with something as basic as a coffee shop cardboard template.
That suggestion to personalize with phrases like “But First, Coffee” makes this a great small gift idea without needing a ton of materials.
Adding initials or names turns this into a thoughtful handmade gift, especially for coworkers who always have a cup in hand.
The tip about lightly sanding the edges before attaching the extra piece is helpful, it probably makes the finish look much cleaner and more professional.
The idea of letting your imagination run wild with side accents is fun, I could see trying embossing or even small studs for a different style.