[identity profile] choco-chippie.livejournal.com
With over 78 students, my classrooms go through a lot of tissue boxes. The boxes come with lovely designs so instead of just tossing them into the recycling bin, we decided to recycle them ourselves to make fun little party favors.
Here's what we did: )
[identity profile] mumms.livejournal.com

Hi all! Just want to share this great idea to use leftovers and upcycled materials.
This journal was made by my stepfather. He used leftover gabric pieces for the cover.
 


+3 photo... )
[identity profile] mumms.livejournal.com
Hi everyone! Just want to show the handmade journals made by me and my stepfather.

1. This journal is made of recycled jeans fabric, the cover is embellished with simple ribbon in white and green. Filled with upcycled assorted white, cream and blank paper, lined paper, vintage maps, pages from sheduler. Each time I turn a page I have a different combination of papers. Size approximately 4 x 6.5 inches, 240 pages counted both sides.

handmade journal of upcycled jeans  handmade journal of upcycled jeans
 
+5 journals more.. )
 

My booklet

Feb. 2nd, 2010 12:21 pm
[identity profile] eshgheman.livejournal.com
What you need is paper, printer, narrow ribbon, card paper for the cover. First print the material using the booklet option. Then divide the margin into 4 and cut with a scissors. Put the ribbon through the holes you made to stitch together the cover and the booklet pages. Voila.
[identity profile] grygon.livejournal.com
Does anyone here own one of these machines? Oh My Crafts has a pretty good deal on them and accessories but I had a few questions and wanted "real people" answers instead of reviews written by anonymous people on google's search.

* how long does that machine last? Meaning- how many books and how many laminations can I do before it dies?

* how many pages of regular paper (NOT laminated) can each regular-sized book hold (portrait, 8"by11")?

Anything you would like to add? Rants or raves?

The reason I am asking is I write fanfic... so OFCOURSE no publisher is going to touch my stories with a ten foot pole, nevermind that I don't want to sell them. I just want my fanfics in book form for me to keep forever. AND a second copy to give as a present to my co-writer. But we'd like a nice looking book instead of something that Kinkos had their way with... not to mention the fic is rated NC17 so I'd really prefer to handle the "publishing" myself anyway.

* if you wouldn't recommend the You Story for my needs... what WOULD you recommend?

edit- yes, i have considered handbinding. I joined the handbinding LJ comm a few weeks ago, too. But right now i simply have too much going on to really dedicate to learning how to bind myself. Thus, when I saw that machine on tv I was very interested!
[identity profile] steppie.livejournal.com
I was supposed to spend the day cleaning and packing up for tomorrow's trip to Vegas (yay!), but of course spend the day crafting instead.

I've always had a real fascination with book binding. While I'm not a big fan of regular novel reading (sometimes I wish I was), I am a big fan of understanding how they're physically put together. I'm in no means about to invest in some big book-binding machinery, but I am finding even the simple DIY journal binding to be very addicting. Anyhoot, it's a little rough because I was more excited about testing it out with the materials I had on hand than getting it perfect... but here are the results:


more photos this way )
It's my first attempt, and I hope to make more... with different fabrics, different types of paper, etc. But I'm pretty proud of my first one! What do you guys think? :)

xoxo,
Steppie

P.S. Anyone try Provo Craft's new Yudu? I just pre-ordered one!

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