It's pretty structural as far as paper cubes go and can hold a fair amount of stuff (which would make it ideal as a small gift box).
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A ruler
A cutting board
An 11" x 17" piece of paper (or equivalent)
An Exacto knife
A pencil
An eraser





































![How to make an origami Bunny Rabbit Gift Box (Modular) - TCGames [HD]](http://www.instructables.com/files/deriv/FTA/OVO3/H9X3IRNE/FTAOVO3H9X3IRNE.SQUARE.jpg)









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If you want to try a few more folding projects, I found this site a while ago - it's pretty wild:
http://cp.c-ij.com/english/3D-papercraft/index.html
Any which way, I did go ahead and make the largest one I could using paper I had lying around (18" x 24" 60lb drawing paper). It seems to work well enough so long as you don't put anything excessively heavy in it or on it. It is paper after all.
The likelihood of having a larger and/or stronger sheet of paper than that lying around for most people is slim.
As far as shape, I have folded these to be more of a perfect cube and it seemed to work fine (as one would guess it would). However, I imagine the further you get from a perfect cube, the less structural integrity it will have (i.e. as the side walls become lesser, the surface area expands and the likelihood of it collapsing/breaking/falling apart increases). Although, as to why someone would need such a flat box, I am not sure.
If you put two 8.5" x 11" sheets of paper side by side you would have the equivalent of an 11" x 17" sheet of paper. I don't see how that is misleading.
Thanks for your thoughts on shape & strength. Good starting point for those looking to go 'outside of the box' (groan, did I really write that?) with your instructable.