Why thank you, Jessica. It truly makes me happy to hear from folks out there making and learning stuff, touching base and comparing notes. Hope you have a creative weekend! 🌷🌼🌻Kelly
I absolutely love how you do your videos!!! Your explanations and the pace at which you move thru them is great(at least for me). Thank you for sharing your wisdom 🤓
Ha. And you haven't even seem my stack of 19th century Welsh bibles. The truth is that we have not had a flea market in over a year and the second hand bookstores have only been open for a few weeks last year and I am very very short on new old books. I know how it is about time! You can always add this video to "watch later". I keep a stash of videos to watch, anytime I am tempted to watch the news. Arts, crafts, and adorable kittens. 😸
Really enjoyed your instruction. I started my first altered book journal and after decorating four pages it fell apart. I was heartbroken. You give many great tips. Thanks.
Hi Kathy. If it helps, I make altered books for a living as well as for love and have been making them for over 17 years and at least ONE out of three breaks apart or otherwise ends in disaster. It hurts. Often, however, I am able to take those pages out of the broken book and put them in another art journal so the work isn't all lost. I also sometimes use the broken books for making crazy art experiments in so that eventually I have a fun, distressed, messy book of stuff I learned from and that helps, too. Keep me posted and don't give up on making those altered books! Kelly
I actually watched your video all the way through which sometimes I don't for certain people because they talk and go off on tangents and whatnot but you stuck to it what you were talking about and I love the hand movements talking with the hands it was definitely informative and I will subscribe thank you so much
Wow Lani, thank you for that feedback! Really, because I am been a little worried that I don't meander enough like other (very nice) videos that do seem to get off the beaten track. I prefer to get to the point then get off so we can all make new stuff and be inspired but with less screen-time. So thank you for confirming that hunch.
Pausing at 10 minutes in to say what valuable information I’ve learned in the last 10 minutes !! Thank you, thank you, thank you !! And, this is silly, but, I’m proud to say that I knew what a “signature” is/was. So I feel like I am on the right path !! Lol. And when you said, “this book is ‘gorgeous’”, you almost sounded like me….a New Englander….😂😂🥰
Dear Cheryl, Funny about all of your message. When I first started preaching the gospel of the altered book, I assumed that I would be asked about manifesting vision, the mysteries of how art reveals itself, and so on but nope. By FAR the question I get the most is: How do you get your pages so darn flat? (Serves me right.😎) Re accent - I am from Mississippi and around age 17 trained myself out of my accent. Now I am sorry I did but I was 17 and prejudiced. Later I spent ten years in Boston and my son was born in Cambridge, Mass, so there. And you? Kelly
@@BookandPaperArts I did hear you mention Mississippi when you spoke about your yellow and black scissors…(apparently you have multiple pair), one lives at your son’s, and a pair in your “flat”. Which is so much nicer to hear than the word apartment. I grew up on Cape Cod (paradise) and now live in Virginia. Spent a few years in Boston, (definitely not a city girl), although Boston never felt like a big city to me. I am not a world traveler, but have been to London- sadly during the awful Grenfeld apartment (see, there’s that word) fire. That was devastating. Also love Toronto. I love vintage things, and books are just a part of that….my partner and I have talked about (daydream is an apt word) moving to Europe….maybe one day….🤍🤍🤍
@@BookandPaperArtsI also trained myself out of my southern accent as a teenager. We moved from my hometown of Columbia, SC at 14 to Oregon which is the tv/news anchor neutral for American accents. I got a lot of attention due to the accent. Not necessarily bad attention. People thought it was cute, but I was shy and didn’t want any attention. We had a section on accents in drama class and I used that to unlearn. Plus Australian mother, dad from Chicago and spent summers with cousins on Long Island, so people can never place my accent now. 😂 Thank you for such informative videos! Beautiful work on your finished projects. 💖🤗
@@AndreaCrisp Hi Andrea. Makes you wonder how many of us are out there. I wish I had my southern accent now that I live in a place where it is considered charming but how was I supposed to know that when I was 17 and angry? (Hmmm, pretty much apply that to everything and repeat.😺) Thanks for touching base and comparing notes! Kelly
This was a very informative video. One thing I do differently when I tear out my pages is to pull the leaf with both hands. I hold the right side of the leaf with my right hand and the left side with my left and then gently pull apart making the leaf tear down the middle. This way I am not putting too much pressure on the threads which could break and stretch out more than necessary compromising the integrity of the binding. Some books are also notorious for having different numbers of leaves in each signature. Personally I like all my signatures to have an equal number so I count and recount my leaves several times before I start removing pages.
Hi there. That is GREAT advice on pulling out the signature. I admit those threads can be a pain. I always admire people who have perfectly symmetrical signatures but I haven't got anything like the patience and somehow I manage to get it wrong all the same. Now I just skip that part and hope for the best. 🌞😁😸
So glad I found you!!! Such excellent and important tips. I’ve been learning by creating several altered books with lots of hits and misses. The skies have opened up and thank you.
Thank you so, Josie. Book altering is a little pond but I am delighted to be swimming in. And yes, the best way to learn is by making several books and being willing to learn from what works and what doesn't. Alter on! Kelly
Thank You so much you have explained everything so well! I personally like to pull out each page separately as i get into trouble with my books if i stretch those signature threads when i pull out pages. It definitely is a trial and error craft and with each book i learn new things, you have made the learning so much easier! I want to make pockets with the extra pages instead of pulling them out, so off to watch your linked video😉😄
Hi Kiki. Boy are you right about the trial and error. I do this for a living and one out of say, three books comes apart on me for reasons unknown. Gremlins? I like a variety of pockets, some self-pages and some from cards or whatnot. Keep me posted on how it is going!
I'm baaack... Yes! I would love to see how you repair busted spines, Kelly This vid was chock FULL of terrific suggestions and ideas! Long ago, when I first started doing altered books, I always thought (usually) the older the better, and more interesting. As you pointed out, it ain't always so! Also back then, I also purchased a pretty inexpensive big hymnal. Ugh, to thick, too tall and the pages are tissue thin. It still sits on my dusty shelf. But it'll get used for something someday. And as you said, you can ALWAYS use most every part of these old, or new books for something!! So never toss them out. Thanks for all you share with us, Miss Kelly. 'Twas a great video.
Lynn, interesting fact - in prisons, bibles are likely to be stolen as their super thin onion skin papers are valued for rolling contraband cigarettes. But somehow I doubt you will have much call for that with your hymnal. But that thin paper might make a good addition to collage, no? I cannot tell you how many books I made "wrong" before I got the hang of it. And I was going to add the mending to this video but I like to keep them short and punch. Look for the mending one in the next couple of weeks, sweetie.
I haven't done that many altered books although I have acquired several top five it a try. this was very helpful in reminding me what I need to watch out for. thanks, Kelly! I will look up some of your other videos on the subject.
Robyn, it is crazy. After all this time and yes, a ton of experience, a book can still make a fool of you half-way through altering. All I can do is give advice on how to make this less likely. It is an imperfect science.
You could still use those gorgeous covers - take off the spine and make a new one and add signatures… I have a great hollow back book binding process that makes all the pages lay flat.
@@BookandPaperArts look up Nik the Booksmith. I purchased her class on how to make your own hollow back book binding. I use old book covers and make my spine which lays completely flat! I have an amazing second hand book store where every book is $1. !!!
Hi there, Nola. I do indeed. Sometimes I use them as canvases for collage work that I then hang. Sometimes I fill them with blank pages and use them as imperfect journals. But as I said, I also go ahead and practice new art techniques in them so I can see how it will look on the page, and that is kind of fun, too. 🌞🌼🌻🌷
@@BookandPaperArts Do you ever add a new spine and salvage the covers? I'd love to see how that is done. I've been researching how to do that, but find very little on how that's done. I have a number of them that I'd love to use not only as canvases, so I need to figure it out, ha! Anything you can share on how to do that would be wonderful. I'm going to start playing around to figure it out. My books are family books so I do want to use them for some journals. Love your videos and newsletters and always learn so much. Thank you!
Kelly, thank you for starting me on this journey. Is there such a thing as too well made? I bought two books this week and I'm having a hard time with pages tearing and leaving little bits behind. Then I tried using tweezers and small needle nose pliers, but couldn't get it all out. I'm thinking of gluing pages together to cover it. What am I doing wrong?
@@TheSuedobbs Ha, that was my first question. You can always leave some of the torn bits in the centre and embrace it as texture. Or cover with gluing the pages as you say. If you want you can send me a photo but at the end of the day it is so much trial and error and learning from that. kelly@bookandpaperarts.com
Hi Sandra, the link is in the text below the video but if you don't see it, you can find it here at my website. If you are looking on a PC the sign-in fields are on the right; on a mobile phone, scroll allllll the way to the bottom and you will see the subscriber fields there. Or let me know and I will be happy to add your email address by hand. bookandpaperarts.com/
Hi there, Cynthia. So glad you asked: I have a whole video about making perfect, flat pages and here is the link. ua-cam.com/video/15P6kw-Cs_0/v-deo.html The short answer, though, is that I use an acrylic gel medium. It is more thick than craft glue which leads to less buckling, although craft glue is also a possibility. I buy whichever one is on sale, usually Golden or Daler Rowney. The flatness comes from putting some kind of craft or greaseproof paper (I use baking parchment) between newly glued sheets in a section then weighing the sucker down and leaving it for a few hours or overnight. It works but it is one of the reasons that (for me) an altered book takes sooooooo long to prepare. I try to have two in the pipeline so I can work on one while pages are drying on the other. Let me know if this answers the question! Kelly
Thank you for your great hints n tips for bringing life to old books. Take care❤
Just found your channel, absolutely love it. Thank you for sharing your insight. I’m bingeing all your videos.
Why thank you, Jessica. It truly makes me happy to hear from folks out there making and learning stuff, touching base and comparing notes. Hope you have a creative weekend! 🌷🌼🌻Kelly
I absolutely love how you do your videos!!! Your explanations and the pace at which you move thru them is great(at least for me). Thank you for sharing your wisdom 🤓
Why thank you. This is truly nice to hear. I hope you are going to make gorgeous pages. Keep me posted! Kelly
I'm not yet very far into this video just yet.... but just have to say, my God, but you have some stunning old books covers! ... I'll be back!
Ha. And you haven't even seem my stack of 19th century Welsh bibles. The truth is that we have not had a flea market in over a year and the second hand bookstores have only been open for a few weeks last year and I am very very short on new old books. I know how it is about time! You can always add this video to "watch later". I keep a stash of videos to watch, anytime I am tempted to watch the news. Arts, crafts, and adorable kittens. 😸
Really enjoyed your instruction. I started my first altered book journal and after decorating four pages it fell apart. I was heartbroken. You give many great tips. Thanks.
Hi Kathy. If it helps, I make altered books for a living as well as for love and have been making them for over 17 years and at least ONE out of three breaks apart or otherwise ends in disaster. It hurts. Often, however, I am able to take those pages out of the broken book and put them in another art journal so the work isn't all lost. I also sometimes use the broken books for making crazy art experiments in so that eventually I have a fun, distressed, messy book of stuff I learned from and that helps, too. Keep me posted and don't give up on making those altered books! Kelly
@@BookandPaperArts exactly ^^ never throw stuff away. You can Always use it for a Junk Journal :)
I actually watched your video all the way through which sometimes I don't for certain people because they talk and go off on tangents and whatnot but you stuck to it what you were talking about and I love the hand movements talking with the hands it was definitely informative and I will subscribe thank you so much
Wow Lani, thank you for that feedback! Really, because I am been a little worried that I don't meander enough like other (very nice) videos that do seem to get off the beaten track. I prefer to get to the point then get off so we can all make new stuff and be inspired but with less screen-time. So thank you for confirming that hunch.
Pausing at 10 minutes in to say what valuable information I’ve learned in the last 10 minutes !! Thank you, thank you, thank you !! And, this is silly, but, I’m proud to say that I knew what a “signature” is/was. So I feel like I am on the right path !! Lol. And when you said, “this book is ‘gorgeous’”, you almost sounded like me….a New Englander….😂😂🥰
Dear Cheryl, Funny about all of your message. When I first started preaching the gospel of the altered book, I assumed that I would be asked about manifesting vision, the mysteries of how art reveals itself, and so on but nope. By FAR the question I get the most is: How do you get your pages so darn flat? (Serves me right.😎)
Re accent - I am from Mississippi and around age 17 trained myself out of my accent. Now I am sorry I did but I was 17 and prejudiced. Later I spent ten years in Boston and my son was born in Cambridge, Mass, so there.
And you?
Kelly
@@BookandPaperArts I did hear you mention Mississippi when you spoke about your yellow and black scissors…(apparently you have multiple pair), one lives at your son’s, and a pair in your “flat”. Which is so much nicer to hear than the word apartment. I grew up on Cape Cod (paradise) and now live in Virginia. Spent a few years in Boston, (definitely not a city girl), although Boston never felt like a big city to me. I am not a world traveler, but have been to London- sadly during the awful Grenfeld apartment (see, there’s that word) fire. That was devastating. Also love Toronto. I love vintage things, and books are just a part of that….my partner and I have talked about (daydream is an apt word) moving to Europe….maybe one day….🤍🤍🤍
@@BookandPaperArtsI also trained myself out of my southern accent as a teenager. We moved from my hometown of Columbia, SC at 14 to Oregon which is the tv/news anchor neutral for American accents. I got a lot of attention due to the accent. Not necessarily bad attention. People thought it was cute, but I was shy and didn’t want any attention. We had a section on accents in drama class and I used that to unlearn. Plus Australian mother, dad from Chicago and spent summers with cousins on Long Island, so people can never place my accent now. 😂 Thank you for such informative videos! Beautiful work on your finished projects. 💖🤗
@@AndreaCrisp Hi Andrea. Makes you wonder how many of us are out there. I wish I had my southern accent now that I live in a place where it is considered charming but how was I supposed to know that when I was 17 and angry? (Hmmm, pretty much apply that to everything and repeat.😺) Thanks for touching base and comparing notes! Kelly
Thank you for describing which books make the best substrate, Kelly.👏👏👍
Thank you for your helpful feedback, dear Alicia. 🌞
This was a very informative video. One thing I do differently when I tear out my pages is to pull the leaf with both hands. I hold the right side of the leaf with my right hand and the left side with my left and then gently pull apart making the leaf tear down the middle. This way I am not putting too much pressure on the threads which could break and stretch out more than necessary compromising the integrity of the binding. Some books are also notorious for having different numbers of leaves in each signature. Personally I like all my signatures to have an equal number so I count and recount my leaves several times before I start removing pages.
Hi there. That is GREAT advice on pulling out the signature. I admit those threads can be a pain. I always admire people who have perfectly symmetrical signatures but I haven't got anything like the patience and somehow I manage to get it wrong all the same. Now I just skip that part and hope for the best. 🌞😁😸
I tear mine like you, it definitely saves the threads.
So glad I found you!!! Such excellent and important tips. I’ve been learning by creating several altered books with lots of hits and misses. The skies have opened up and thank you.
Thank you so, Josie. Book altering is a little pond but I am delighted to be swimming in. And yes, the best way to learn is by making several books and being willing to learn from what works and what doesn't. Alter on! Kelly
Thank You so much you have explained everything so well! I personally like to pull out each page separately as i get into trouble with my books if i stretch those signature threads when i pull out pages. It definitely is a trial and error craft and with each book i learn new things, you have made the learning so much easier! I want to make pockets with the extra pages instead of pulling them out, so off to watch your linked video😉😄
Hi Kiki. Boy are you right about the trial and error. I do this for a living and one out of say, three books comes apart on me for reasons unknown. Gremlins? I like a variety of pockets, some self-pages and some from cards or whatnot. Keep me posted on how it is going!
I'm baaack... Yes! I would love to see how you repair busted spines, Kelly This vid was chock FULL of terrific suggestions and ideas! Long ago, when I first started doing altered books, I always thought (usually) the older the better, and more interesting. As you pointed out, it ain't always so! Also back then, I also purchased a pretty inexpensive big hymnal. Ugh, to thick, too tall and the pages are tissue thin. It still sits on my dusty shelf. But it'll get used for something someday. And as you said, you can ALWAYS use most every part of these old, or new books for something!! So never toss them out. Thanks for all you share with us, Miss Kelly. 'Twas a great video.
Lynn, interesting fact - in prisons, bibles are likely to be stolen as their super thin onion skin papers are valued for rolling contraband cigarettes. But somehow I doubt you will have much call for that with your hymnal. But that thin paper might make a good addition to collage, no? I cannot tell you how many books I made "wrong" before I got the hang of it. And I was going to add the mending to this video but I like to keep them short and punch. Look for the mending one in the next couple of weeks, sweetie.
Your experience shines through.
Thanks bunches, Gabriel.
I haven't done that many altered books although I have acquired several top five it a try. this was very helpful in reminding me what I need to watch out for. thanks, Kelly! I will look up some of your other videos on the subject.
Robyn, it is crazy. After all this time and yes, a ton of experience, a book can still make a fool of you half-way through altering. All I can do is give advice on how to make this less likely. It is an imperfect science.
As always, generous and informative ;thank you
Thank you so much, Regina. 🌼🌻🌷🌞
Thank you for this very helpful video!
Mary, it is my real pleasure. So glad you touched base! Kelly🌷🌷🌻🌻🌼🌼
Helpful video thank you -Louise and Emily ❤
It is my real pleasure, Emily. Thanks for stopping by! Kelly
You could still use those gorgeous covers - take off the spine and make a new one and add signatures… I have a great hollow back book binding process that makes all the pages lay flat.
Hi Margaret. I would love to know more. I definitely have to improvise when it comes to the hollow/curved spine thing.
@@BookandPaperArts look up Nik the Booksmith. I purchased her class on how to make your own hollow back book binding. I use old book covers and make my spine which lays completely flat! I have an amazing second hand book store where every book is $1. !!!
Thank you, try glueing the first and last pages of each signature together to strengthen the binding.
Great advice!
Thank you, Vanessa. I hope you make gorgeous pages! Kelly
Thanks SO much Kelly! Very informative! ~~Catherine
Thank you for checking in, Catherine! This is one talky video, something I try to avoid but - it is the only way to explain it. 🌞
Thank you for this! Just what I needed!!!
Great information, thanks for sharing.
These are great tips; thank you!
Hey Patti, glad you liked them!
Thank you for this! Very helpful. 💕
You are so very welcome. Thank you for stopping by!🌷🌻🌼
Those are magnificent old book covers! If the books begin to fall apart, do you save the covers for use in other journal projects?
Hi there, Nola. I do indeed. Sometimes I use them as canvases for collage work that I then hang. Sometimes I fill them with blank pages and use them as imperfect journals. But as I said, I also go ahead and practice new art techniques in them so I can see how it will look on the page, and that is kind of fun, too. 🌞🌼🌻🌷
@@BookandPaperArts Do you ever add a new spine and salvage the covers? I'd love to see how that is done. I've been researching how to do that, but find very little on how that's done. I have a number of them that I'd love to use not only as canvases, so I need to figure it out, ha! Anything you can share on how to do that would be wonderful. I'm going to start playing around to figure it out. My books are family books so I do want to use them for some journals. Love your videos and newsletters and always learn so much. Thank you!
Those covers xould be uswd for great junk journals :) so they dont need to be "forgotten"
Excellent, thank you
It's my pleasure. 🌞😸😁
Kelly, thank you for starting me on this journey. Is there such a thing as too well made? I bought two books this week and I'm having a hard time with pages tearing and leaving little bits behind. Then I tried using tweezers and small needle nose pliers, but couldn't get it all out. I'm thinking of gluing pages together to cover it. What am I doing wrong?
PS yes I am pulling pages from the center of each signature.
@@TheSuedobbs Ha, that was my first question. You can always leave some of the torn bits in the centre and embrace it as texture. Or cover with gluing the pages as you say. If you want you can send me a photo but at the end of the day it is so much trial and error and learning from that.
kelly@bookandpaperarts.com
Thank you very much, it's really interesting !! I will follow you ;-) Natalie
Why thank you, Natalie. Have a creative weekend. 😁😸🌞
Do you have a link to the newsletter subscription? I can’t find it. Thank you.
Hi Sandra, the link is in the text below the video but if you don't see it, you can find it here at my website. If you are looking on a PC the sign-in fields are on the right; on a mobile phone, scroll allllll the way to the bottom and you will see the subscriber fields there. Or let me know and I will be happy to add your email address by hand. bookandpaperarts.com/
Could you tell me what glue you use on gluing pages together? Also, what is the secret to keeping your glued section flat?
Hi there, Cynthia. So glad you asked: I have a whole video about making perfect, flat pages and here is the link.
ua-cam.com/video/15P6kw-Cs_0/v-deo.html
The short answer, though, is that I use an acrylic gel medium. It is more thick than craft glue which leads to less buckling, although craft glue is also a possibility. I buy whichever one is on sale, usually Golden or Daler Rowney.
The flatness comes from putting some kind of craft or greaseproof paper (I use baking parchment) between newly glued sheets in a section then weighing the sucker down and leaving it for a few hours or overnight. It works but it is one of the reasons that (for me) an altered book takes sooooooo long to prepare. I try to have two in the pipeline so I can work on one while pages are drying on the other.
Let me know if this answers the question! Kelly
Jyst found your channel..I'm a Kelly to
Get to the point
Fabulous !! 🤍🤍🤍. Did you just say subscription “thingie” ? 🤣🤣. Not only are you talented, but you are FUN !!