Homemade Notebook From 100% Upcycled Materials

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Introduction: Homemade Notebook From 100% Upcycled Materials

My job had a common problem – one of the printers could not print double-sided. This bothered me on a daily basis as I stood by to watch TWICE AS MUCH paper being used as was necessary.

But then I got an idea from my girlfriend’s librarian, and I decided to turn them into notebooks! All it took at first was to save those printed pages that were blank on one side, fold them in half, and put them in a neat little stack on the back corner of my desk.

With those pages I made some beautiful notebooks, which I would like to share with you here.

Step 1: Gather Materials

These notebooks are great because you can make them from materials that would have otherwise been thrown away (or put in the recycle). Also, each page in the finished notebook is unique because you can see a faint hint of what was on the used side.

Here is what you'll need:

Paper – Save your papers that have only been used on one side. Fold each piece of paper so that the blank side is on the outside. (I used 40 pages for this notebook)

File Folder – I used a file folder from an old project for my notebook cover. It’s nice, thin cardboard for a cover, and it already has fold lines on it which you can use to set the width of your notebook!

Colored Paper

Sewing Machine (or thread and a way of punching holes)

Glue – Any paper glue works fine. I used super glue so it’s extra robust.

Razor Blade

Ruler

Step 2: Cut Cover to Size

Cut the file folder down to the size of your paper pages. It can help to make the cover slightly larger than the pages in case things shift while you’re sewing. Then the excess can be trimmed off once it’s bound.

(Tip: You may be thinking “Wouldn’t it be easier to cut the cover after I bind everything?” WRONG! For one, it will be harder to cut the cover after binding. Second, when you sew it is very helpful to know exactly where the edge is so you can stop one stitch short of the edge.)

Step 3: Sew the Binding!

With the pages in and the cover cut to size, put the whole thing in the sewing machine and [carefully] sew. The fold-lines on the file folder help on this step too, because it gives you a straight line to sew on. Go slowly, and as straight as possible for a strong binding.

I used a Juki sewing machine with a walking foot, which is pretty heavy-duty, and I still had to use my hand on the wheel to manually punch the holes. After I’d punched the holes I went back through them, with thread this time. Sew back and forth 3-4 times to make the binding strong.

If you don’t have a heavy-duty sewing machine, you may need to punch the holes by hand (for example with a hammer and a small nail), or punch holes in a few pages at a time and line them up later.

Step 4: Finishing the Binding

At this point your notebook is functional! But there are still those unsightly stitches, and it could look a whole lot better.

First, cover the stitches. With some of the cardboard scraps you have from the file folder, cut a strip that is wide enough to wrap around the spine and cover the stitches. When you fold the strip, it helps to lightly score the line you want to fold with a razor blade. Then when you fold it, it will fold easily and in a straight line. Wrap this around the spine and glue to all 3 sides.

You may want to go around the whole cover and trim off any excess allowance you had so it’s flush with the paper pages. But, this is not necessary if you like the look of it already.

Step 5: Personalize

For a final finishing touch, add some color! This is the same concept as the cardboard spine you just added to cover the stitches, but instead you add colored paper to cover the cardboard spine! Cut a strip of colored paper that is wide enough to wrap around and go past the cardboard spine.

(Tip: Leave some extra width of the colored paper to fold under itself, so the edge of the colored paper is straight and smooth. Notice in the first picture of the orange paper – the left side is already folded and glued onto itself, and the right side is folded but not glued yet.)

At this point it helps to “break in” the binding. Simply fold each cover over, and maybe leaf through the pages and gently fold them back to break them in as well. This also will give a nice looking crease on the cover binding.

Step 6: Experiment!

These notebooks look great, feel great, and are quirky because each page is a little different (given the slight see-through quality of the paper). However, you have tons of room to explore! Some things you might try:

  • Different paper colors inside
  • Different paper sections (plain, lined, graph, hexagonal, artisan paper, etc.)
  • Different cover materials
  • Different sizes
  • Different bindings
  • Add pockets / folders inside
  • Add tabbed sections
  • Print pages with actual content (landscape, 2-column) to make a real book
  • Make a thin notebook and use staples instead of sewing (this is very easy to do and works quite well)
First Time Author Contest 2016

Runner Up in the
First Time Author Contest 2016

2 People Made This Project!

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28 Comments

0
Fenris_Ravenwood
Fenris_Ravenwood

6 years ago

that was fun! i really enjoyed making it and saving money was even better! :)

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Dawsie
Dawsie

6 years ago

it's been many years since I used my bookbinding skills but after reading your instructable I thought I would pull out my bookbinding tools and make a few myself I always keep the single sided printed paper for notes but had never thought of making a notebook out of them :-) thank you for reawaken my old trade up :-) I love the idea and it does keep all those lose sheets nice and neat :-)

lol while reading the instructable I had that Do'h moment of why did I not think of this :-)

0
madalyncait
madalyncait

6 years ago

My printer doesn't have a double sided option either, so I print one page, flip over the recently printed page, and put it in the paper slot and viola, printed on both sides

0
zfehr
zfehr

6 years ago

Did you just glue the pages together so that you don't have the text on the pages?

0
kgklinkel
kgklinkel

Reply 6 years ago

Actually the pages are just folded in half. Then, when you sew the binding, the loose ends are trapped in the spine and the folded edge of each page is out.

It's kind of nice too, because when you turn the page you thumb the smooth fold - no paper cuts!

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Technohippy
Technohippy

Reply 6 years ago

thats a great idea. although I may not go that route, because i don't like writing on the left side of a notepad for some reason!!

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waraji
waraji

Reply 6 years ago

You can still write on the right hand side only with this design.

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Technohippy
Technohippy

Reply 6 years ago

yeah but a more efficient use of paper would be to cut the folded sheets in half and stack blank side up

0
waraji
waraji

Reply 6 years ago

For me I don't like the distraction of seeing the recycled print on the left side. Folded over mutes it. I guess we all have our quirks!

0
watchmeflyy
watchmeflyy

6 years ago

It took me a moment to figure out how you were using papers that had print only on one side, but then I realized how clever your idea was to fold them in half and thus hide the print! Nice job. :)

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geologymom
geologymom

6 years ago

Voted. For a very reasonable price you can get notepad adhesive which works great without the sewing. It would make this project accessible to a youth activity group or scout troop. Great idea.

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geologymom
geologymom

6 years ago

Voted. For a very reasonable price you can get notepad adhesive which works great without the sewing. It would make this project accessible to a youth activity group or scout troop. Great idea.

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BobbyZ1
BobbyZ1

6 years ago

Nice project! The part that worries me is punching holes in the notebook by turning the Juki wheel manually. You might be really damaging the machine in that way—I don't think it wants to punch through ~50 sheets of paper!

To others who want to do this but who don't have access to an industrial sewing machine: you can use a nail and hammer to make the holes, and then use a threaded needle to do the binding. I'd advise holding the book in a vise or other heavy clamp during this process, since the pages will tend to smear apart and misalign otherwise.

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kgklinkel
kgklinkel

Reply 6 years ago

That's a great idea - Use a hammer and a small nail to punch the holes. I would definitely recommend that technique to everyone who doesn't have an industrial sewing machine. Thanks for sharing!

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Meglymoo87
Meglymoo87

6 years ago

Wow...nice job!

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SandyF25
SandyF25

6 years ago

Try using a leather needle and uphostery thread. Very strong and the leather needle is made tocreate a hole.

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agis68
agis68

6 years ago

Great Instructable and presentation....thanks for sharing

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greenwoodcreations
greenwoodcreations

6 years ago

almost everyone has an electric drill now a days: clamp your pages between two pieces of wood, with vise grips, c-clamps, then use a small bit to drill though the whole 'sandwich', and do the whole line at once so they ahligned the first try. Use can re-use the wood guide later on the next one.