Thursday, July 31, 2014

Summer's End, Travel, and a Notebook DIY



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July is coming to an end and I can hardly believe how quickly it came. I'm trying to hold on to summer for as long as I can. There's changes on the horizon...New opportunities, the end of one journey, the beginning of a next. I guess I'm excited but I have to admit, the summer has left me feeling a little frazzled and sometimes I just want to take one looong and cozy nap through the next few months.Wake me up when November ends, just in time to start putting up Christmas decorations.

I'm wrapping this summer up with a much-needed vacation. I'm going to see the family, dig my toes into the sand, and make some four-legged friends - two mischievous Doxie sisters my parents just adopted. I can't wait to meet them - and introduce them to you! How are you planning on wrapping up the summer? Any special plans? Or are you just ready to see it go?

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I wanted to flex my crafting muscles a bit and make something different than I usually make. Every design student ends up binding a book or two throughout the course of their academic career, but I have to admit, it's never been my forte. I'm just not a book binding natural, but I greatly admire those who are. I never have the patience to measure and trim and score and fold...And some people make it look so easy! This tutorial is simple enough for a book-binding novice and produces lovely results.

Blanche Devereaux's "Martinique"-inspired room
For the cover, I used a printout of Don Loper's fabulous banana leaf pattern, "Martinique", famously designed in 1942 for the Beverly Hills Hotel. I just love that it's an inspiration for Blanche Devereaux's room decor in the Golden Girls as well (did I mention I'm obsessed with The Golden Girls? And cheesecake. I'm also obsessed with cheesecake). I think this show is probably the first place I ever spotted this timeless design.

You can use the notebook for anything you like - sketches, notes, or maybe little memories from past vacations or happy moments. Fill it with ticket stubs or printed photos, scribble in ideas - whatever you like. There's very little trimming involved, too, so you don't really have to worry about precise measurements or aligning things correctly. I wouldn't recommend pasting too many actual photos into it because it will make the notebook really thick, unless you decide to use a larger cover to accomodate this. Printing photos out on plain printer paper would probably be a better alternative, or maybe print the images directly onto the pages you'll be binding, and then scribble notes on the side. It's up to you! Get creative and make it your own.

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Supplies
11-12 sheets of 8.5"x11" cardstock
1 cover, printed on the same cardstock paper
Ruler
Rubber cement or a book binding glue
X-Acto Knife
Cutting mat or thick surface to do your trimming on
Embroidery thread (not pictured)
Clamps of some kind to keep the paper together after gluing/folding (not pictured)

Directions
1. Print your cover design on a single sheet of cardstock paper. Make sure your printer is set to borderless printing. My cover has a 1/5" white bar down the middle where I will score the sides to create the spine. The bar isn't necessary, but it helped me to visibly identify where I need to score and it created a neat sort of line when lined up with other notebooks I made later (shown at the end).

 

2. Score along the edges of the white bar (5 1/4" in from each edge). BE CAREFUL not to use the sharp edge of your knife for this. Use the back edge (or a butter knife, a scoring tool, anything with a blunt edge) to score along the edge. Scoring just creates a little line of memory for the paper to fold along cleanly. (See below).

Score using "wrong" side of X-Acto knife

Presto Score-o..?


3. Set your cover aside for now. Grab the sheets of cardstock. I used 11 sheets for my notebook..You can add more if you plan on just writing in it. I left out one just to give it a teensy bit of room in case I wanted to paste something inside that might bulk it out later. You will need to trim 1/2" off the end of each sheet or else they will stick out past your cover.

Trim 1/2" off edge of each sheet of cardstock
 4. Now, make a mark or use the measurements on a cutting mat to measure the exact middle of your newly trimmed page - 5 1/4" from the edges. Score along this center line. Do this for all your TRIMMED pages.


5. Fold all your trimmed and scored pages, then line them up. Clamp them together to hold them in place.
Trimmed and scored pages all lined up. Clamp to hold in place.
6. At this point, I wanted to make sure that my pages had a little added security to keep them in place. I took a sturdy needle and poked two holes, one at each end, fairly close to the edges. Exact measurement is not important, just don't make them too far in or you'll have trouble opening your notebook later. I then threaded some embroidery floss through, tied it, and trimmed it down.



7. Cover the edges of your lined up pages and the inside of your cover's spine with a layer of rubber cement. Don't apply it too thinly, but don't make it too globby. I applied more to the spine than the pages. I also didn't include any photos of that because it was a pain in the ass to do that and try to photograph it simultaneously :| Glue + cameras on crappy tripods don't mix!

Add glue to pages and spine; Stick together, apply clamps.
8. Hold it all in place using clamps/clips and then let it dry!

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I made a couple more because I quite liked the idea of lining the colorful spines up! I'm going to try to make some mini travelogues out of past trips with these.

 



Hope you enjoyed! 'Til next time~

13 comments:

  1. Love your space here! Glad to have been introduced to it :)

    Oooh I love the palm tree design. And the uber cute travel books you crafted up. Smarty!

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  2. It's been forever since I made a book. Thanks for inspiring me. =)

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  3. These are beautiful! I need to make some one of these days. :)

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    1. I'd love to see them if you do! Thanks for stopping by :)

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  4. What a great idea, instead of buying an generic album to put your vacations pictures and memories, you can make one especially designed :D

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  5. does anyone knows where I can find that desing?

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  6. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  7. where can i find this desing? its so pretty

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  8. My wife keeps a list of alternative sights in mind in case I suddenly decide to draw for a while. But most of the time, international flights & hotels

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