Sunday, November 4, 2012

Making Mail

I might have spent far too much time playing Dragon Age yesterday, but I also had a lot of paper and pen fun.

A sampling of my new envelopes. 

Envelope making is a great recycling project. I used an old map and some magazine pages for some of the envelopes, and I used a spirograph on some large thrift store envelopes. The labels were cut off of sheets that had jammed up the copier at work and were being thrown out.  

I started out by making envelopes using the Kuretake Handmade Envelope Template  purchased from jetpens.com.  I traced the shape onto the page then cut it out.  

I used the Kuretake Handmade Envelope template to make several of my new envelopes.
The pages are folded along indents.

Cut and folded envelope just before I glued it with my Kuretake Craft Glue Pen.
I used the Kuretake Craft Glue Pen on my envelopes.  An ordinary glue stick would have worked, but I love this little glue pen. It's far stickier than a glue glue stick, and the ink squeezes out blue. This was my first time using it, and I learned to dot the glue on instead of drawing ink lines with the pen. It's very strong, and a little bit goes a long way.

These envelopes require address labels if they're being mailed.


Then I pulled out my spirograph. 

I have a partial spirograph set from the late 50s/early 60s. I purchased it on eBay. 
The box came with some of the circles, the pins, two outer circles, and two long sticks. I haven't figured out how to use the sticks properly. I think they might require the pins. The box also says that it's a great way to get children interested in math, but I've checked with some math professors and teachers, and nobody knows why it says that on the box.  

Look! An orange and pink spiraled envelope!

I needed very large envelopes for my spirograph. 

Finding paper that could fit inside my map and magazine envelopes was difficult. The envelopes are small because I didn't have large enough paper to make larger envelopes. I don't have any paper that will fit inside my large spirograph envelope.

The smaller template envelopes were a bit easier. I discovered that one of my notebooks is great. It's a gorgeous notebook with a cover that's been decorated with snipped electrical wire. It's too small for use as a journal and too large for a quick jot pad. I picked it up on a lark at  Antigone Books  in Tucson, and the high quality paper is great for writing letters!

I purchased this journal from Antigone Books in Tucson.  The cover decoration is a great example
of re-purposed materials (electrical wires snipped and glued into place).

The notebook pages are not not lined or perforated. I yanked them out at the wire binding then trimmed off the edge bits.  Then I placed washi tape along the top edges to disguise that they weren't perfectly even, and voila, pretty paper!

Some samples of some of the paper I decorated yesterday.

Future envelopes will be more customized; I plan to play with lining the envelopes for more variety. I'll make some solid envelopes with spiffy inserts or add solid linings to my spiffy envelopes. I think it will be even easier to line envelopes made by template because then I can add them before I even fold the page! Oh the fun that I'll have.

1 comment:

Estivalia said...

Yay for you for getting creative! :) There's not much stationery where I live either, so I manage by customizing things, as you saw on my blog.

I also noticed you have one of the Kuretake templates (I have the Japanese version), isn't it awesome? Making envelopes had never been easier for me, I loved doing some with Scrapbook paper I just had lying around :)