About two years ago, I decided I was going to try to make some carpetbags so that I would have something authentic to carry around all my little lovelys at reenactments. I dove into research. Carefully, I made lists of all the items I would need. You can find everything you need for a carpetbag online. The only tricky one is the frame-the largest one available is 18". That's fine if you want a slightly smaller bag, but I wanted all the space I could get with these bags (When going to living history events, I'm not known as a 'light packer') so that wouldn't do. After much research with no luck, I showed a picture of a frame to my dad who can put together pretty much anything and told him 'I need something like this but 21" long and 7" wide when open". Next day, I had two lovely metal frames. Gotta love Dad! I have no earthly idea how he did it but it looks like he took pieces of flat 1/4" metal and bent them into shape. Then drilled holes into the ends and inserted a little connector of sorts. Here are some pictures:
So, I had a frame. I bought locking supplies online, I bought a keyhole cover, the inner key mechanism thing and a skeleton key. I didn't buy the little hook thing that the key mechanism hooks into to lock the carpetbag, but I found something similar to the piece at Home Depot and used that instead.
Little Hook Thing Keyhole Cover Inner Key Mechanism
Anyway, since I wasn't sure how this would work, I bought some carpety looking fabrics from Hobby Lobby instead of going pure wool carpeting. I bought a blue/green and a red/black fabric. Then I cut my pieces. I cut 2 22" by 18" pieces and 2 8" by 18" pieces. The smaller pieces, I cut the tops to look like a v to accommodate the frame's curve. The point in the middle was 16" from the bottom.
Then I flipped the whole thing to where it was right side out. I took the extra leather and cut handles (I cut 2 pieces 2" x 16" for each carpetbag). I put a thick cording in the middle and sewed the handles together and then to the outer fabric of the carpetbag. I then cut lining the same size as the outer fabric (plus a 8" by 22" piece for the bottom) and sewed it in. I used extra muslin, but a lot of originals had white silk interiors.
I then sewed the key mechanism and the hook thing into the interior of the carpetbag. After that, I sewed the keyhole cover in using gold thread and a little superglue. Not period correct at all, but I couldn't figure out another way to do it.
Voila! Functional (although not exactly period correct) carpetbags.