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Make a 100 page Notebook

Make a 100 page Notebook
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I am so tired of looking for new notebook and never find exactly what I want. So I thought, why not make my own? This tutorial will show you how to make your own notebook using an old record album cover. It also teaches a sewn in bookbinding technique. It may be that you have all these materials at home or something comparable. I used what I had at home. Here is what you'll need:

1. An old record album cover or any other large sized cardstock or thin cardboard. (manilla folder works well, thank-you to commenters below)
2. Paper. This could be blank, lined, grapned, colored or anything else you'd like. For this specific project I used blank 8 1/2 x 14 copy paper, otherwise known as legal sized paper.
3. Thread that won't break, like embroidery thread. (it also must be a cotton, otherwise it will tend to cut the paper and through the binding holes. 100% cotton yarn works great as well, but you'll have to make the holes a couple times larger for binding.
4. Embroidery needle or other thick sized needle that will hold embroidery or bookbinding thread.
5. Thumb tack.
6. Ruler.
7. Pencil.
8. Large paper clips.
9. Butter knife or bone folder.
10. A paper-cutter or really good pair of scissors or a really sharp xacto knife or a box-cutter.

Optional materials:
-clear packing tape
-colored paper
-pens
-glue stick
-button
-yarn
-large bead
 
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Step 1Making the Cover

Making the Cover
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1. Start with cutting your album cover so it opens like a book. To do this cut across the top and bottom, following the fold.

2. Then, cut it to these dimensions, 15" x 8 3/4". Leave the middle fold as the center of the cover. Don't try to change the place it will fold from or it will lose it's shape and sturdiness.

3. Measure 3/8" out from the center on both the right and left sides. Score the cover from top to bottom on both sides. These scores should run parallel with the center. Keep in mind that the side you score it on is the side that will be the outside of the cover. I chose the white, or inside, to be the cover. I wanted to decorate it with a blank slate this time.

4. Fold the scored sides in, shaping your cover. Now set aside momentarily.
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40 comments
Sep 6, 2009. 9:04 AMLiz_W says:
You could also add a section of tape or ribbon in a contrasting colour along the spine to cover the stitching.
Aug 12, 2009. 3:57 PMa02138 says:
wicked instructable...book binding always intimidated me slightly but this was super easy. i've also heard you can use dental floss in lieu of book binding/thick thread...i plan on giving this a go once i run out of the thread i've borrowed, but has anyone had any luck/experience with this?
Feb 7, 2009. 8:24 PMminnymooncat says:
Sweet Idea, I cant wait to try it!
Aug 7, 2006. 6:57 AMamelia82 says:
I modified mine by making an elastic band around it--(elastic was $0.81 for a yard--too bad they only had black or white). You can see the way I did it in the pictures, but I'm sure its not the only way. I also didn't make it full size because I wanted a certain part of the record cover on the front, and it happened to be on the right front. I just cut the paper down.
Aug 28, 2008. 9:14 AMjessyratfink says:
Hahaha, thank you so much for giving other people the idea to use Herb Albert. I work in a used bookstore and we absolutely drown in his records. :P
Jul 4, 2008. 9:43 PMJuCo says:
hahahaha... you have... or had that album?
Dec 8, 2007. 8:15 AMone4all says:
handmade papers and productshandmade paper suppliershi, this is cool well i would like to get more information on handmade paper suppliers it has all kind of details regarding handmade papers and products from india and all over the world
Jul 21, 2007. 10:52 PMferrisbuelleryourmyhero says:
This is so cool!!! I've always wanted a nicely bound, hand made note book, but they are all way too expensive! thanks so much!
Jun 14, 2007. 10:45 AMRowan13 says:
Very nice! I will be trying this this the next time I need a new diary. I've been using acco folders & covers with 8 1/2x11 plain typing paper, but the metal acco clips eventually rip out the punched holes in the paper and sometimes the metal clips give up and die. I'd think a sewn book would be a bit more durable. (Especially as the diaries are something I keep basically forever.) Thanks for a good instructable!
Sep 2, 2006. 11:32 PMtrebuchet03 says:
if only I could do this with engineering paper... those pads come apart with little force :/ I guess it has not bothered me enough to do anything about it :P Score: A --- well documented and a pretty good idea
May 24, 2007. 8:01 AMholzmanj9 says:
Engineering paper is SOOOOO pleasing to look at and use...... You could make notebooks of engineering paper, I guess it would depend on what you want it for. Fold it in half, sew it together, and it would make great notebooks and journals.
May 24, 2007. 10:36 AMtrebuchet03 says:
Not really... It's got a different rule. The back has a grid and the front just has margin and title areas. But, because of the back grid -- you can see the grid lines through the front to keep everything tidy and pro looking. It's yellowish paper, so when you photocopy, you don't see the grid lines and, depending on the machine, the photo copy is white - not yellow :)

Here's http://www.utdallas.edu/~cantrell/ee4301/epaper.gif a terrible gif image of the front of a sheet :p
May 22, 2007. 4:33 PMSherri5762 says:
Good job! I got it in my head I wanted to make books the other day and I have checked out books from the library, and scanned the internet and was still confused. This looks so easy the way you explain it!! Thank you. I can't wait to start.
Nov 25, 2006. 11:00 PMgforcerocks says:
me like it me want one me make one
May 17, 2007. 6:05 AMlazza says:
Good thinking and a good idea.
Aug 2, 2006. 3:29 PMSirGrok says:
Could you do this with a manilla folder? That would be a very cheap way to do this bulk. That plus a visit to your local office to grab some paper, and then a visit to your fishing tacklebox for some cord. I prefer writing on nonlined paper, especially seeing as I am an Engineering major... Calculus doesn't fit within the lines. And Polymath, I think that the motivation behind this project wasn't money saving, but instead a drive to have what he wanted.
Aug 2, 2006. 9:21 PMstuboo says:
I created a little web app that generates Cornell-Style note pages. http://eleven21.com/notetaker

As it turns out, another engineering student (named Ted) asked me to make the app generate horizonal lines on the front and vertical lines on the back so that when you need graph paper, you can actually see it through the paper. It's and old school technique but it's rad. If you want to try it out, just click "Do it up Ted Style"

As the application is written, it wouldn't work well with the folding that you're doing in this instructable - but it's nothing a bit of creative photocopying couldnt take care of rather quickly.

Nice work.
May 10, 2007. 3:12 PMionix says:
awesome... will come in handy...thanks
Aug 2, 2006. 3:39 PMmikesty says:
Manilla folder + good stapling will accomplish this.
Mar 20, 2007. 10:20 PMPackRat4448 says:
can i use lined paper with holes? Y / N
Mar 10, 2007. 10:20 AMAuntBee says:
This is cool. My son is an artist so I'll try to make him one (or more) using handmade papers, etc. I am an avid scrapbooker and card maker, so I will use some of the embellishments I have on hand for those hobbies to fancy up a book for myself. COOL! Thx 4 sharing.
Mar 7, 2007. 6:25 PMred thread says:
this is super easy and fun....thanks! i will definitely be using the technique and modifying much! oh yeah, and is there a good method for accomplishing this with 8 1/2 by 11 paper without simply making the whole thing smaller? i wanted a notebook with sheets of graph paper but only had standard notebook sized available....any suggestions? (and i realize i could just staple it or tie it or something, but i am asking for any suggestions using this particular technique)...thanks!
Jan 25, 2007. 12:18 AMmeibao says:
I did something similar but I used staples instead of sewing them, made my own diary.
Oct 15, 2008. 12:27 PMpeterrus says:
Gonna make one right away!
Jan 1, 2007. 1:45 PMpeterrus says:
And this is what it became.
Sep 23, 2006. 10:18 PMFR35H says:
Pretty neato (lol) seriously I'm def going to make one of these great idea keep em' coming!
Sep 9, 2006. 9:35 PMmarissa says:
which wayy do you fold the paper?
Aug 9, 2006. 8:27 PMcl0ney says:
Thanks for the post... Very cool indeed. I thought you might be interested to know that what you call a "booklet" is technically called a "signature." It's the little folded sections of paper inside of a thread-bound book.
Aug 3, 2006. 12:29 AMColeman! says:
is the reason your folios are so far apart because the cardboard can't stand for them to be closer? because i think a few strips of gaffer's tape on the inside(or outside..decorative!) could fix that right up.
Aug 2, 2006. 1:14 PMpolymath says:
How much did the copy paper cost or did you liberate it? I like the idea of having your own personalized note book but I don't see any cost savings when you add up time and material.
Aug 2, 2006. 11:16 AMTheCheese9921 says:
this is very sweet I think I'll make one out of cerial boxes also my mom buys the college ruled paper buy the truckload lol so I think I'll use some rings instead

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