My first trick with old printouts is to simply gather them altogether, turn them over and stick a bulldog clip on them as a handy desk pad.
However, when the time came to leave this job I realised I was never going to use all of this up and so my mind turned to giving them away. I couldn't give them as gifts in the bulldog clip format so I started investigating making notebooks. There are tonnes of tutorials on bookbinding on the web, but I needed something where I didn't require specialist equipment of any sort.
I patched lots of different ideas together from various sources so I'll outline the rough process here. However, take a look at the great blog on Design*Sponge (always a great source of inspiration!).
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What you will need:
Office paper printed on one side
Card
Bulldog clips
Guillotine / scissors
Heavy-duty stapler
Double-sided stickytape or wheat paste
Cover materials (fabric, paper, wallpaper, old maps, etc)
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- Fold your office paper so that the print is on the inside
- Stack them all into a pile with the folds all on the same side
- Cut two pieces of card the same size and put them at the top and bottom of the pile
- Ensure the pile is neat and then fasten the paper with bulldog clips
- Draw a vertical line down the non-folded edge of the top piece of card
- Use this as a guide to staple along the edge
- Stick double-sided tape around the four edges of the front piece of card (or brush on wheatpaste) and lay the notebook onto your covering material
- Turn over the book and apply adhesive to the back cover
- Gently turn the book and stick down the covering material to the back side
- Cut away any excess materials to give a clean edge to the notebook
- Fold the front page just in front of the stapled edge to allow the notebook to open cleanly
...and that's it! It's really easy. I used a load of wallpaper samples I had left over from when I was decorating the flat, but my favourite was one I covered with an old geology map of Lichfield I found during my clearout (it was actually a colour photocopy I think, but sadly I don't have a photo of it).
I also did different sizes. I found that using a guillotine to cut the A4 paper in half first, and then folding it to A6 size made for a great-sized pocket notebook.
1 comment:
This is genius, genius I tell you! I need a new notebook and have so. much. paper! (when I left my office job - during which I had implemented procedures like printing on the back of scrap paper as default for anything internal and then recycling* - I took with me a good few boxes of paper for reuse)
* which apparently as soon as I left they scrapped both of. Sigh.
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