Homemade Traveler’s Notebook

I’ve been intrigued by all the images of Midori Traveler’s Notebooks on Pinterest and Instagram. Intrigued enough to look into buying one, but then a little scared off by the price. It’s a lot of money to pay for something I wasn’t sure that I would use.

So then this happened: a homemade travelers notebook from mostly recycled materials.

First up I checked out the brilliant video tutorial by Ray Blake – Making your own Midori-style Traveler’s Notebook. This video walks you through the whole process – cutting the leather, punching holes, threading the elastic, and more.

I gathered my supplies – a grotty, dusty, folded piece of leather that came off an old lounge chair, some elastic for the bands (the only item I purchased), paper from a couple of half-used notebooks, colourful pages from an old childrens book, embroidery thread remnants to bind the notebooks.

I spent a day scrubbing the leather clean (it really was disgusting!) and stretching it out to dry flat. It cleaned up beautifully. Once it had dried I whipped up the leather cover as per the video instructions above and then used the paper and thread to make some inserts. It turned out reasonably well. Certainly well enough to give this style of notebook a whirl and see if I like using it.

Homemade traveler's notebook coverThe photo doesn’t show the colour up accurately. It’s not brown, it’s actually a lovely deep maroon colour with a red interior.

Tasks list insert - coverTask list insert - inside viewThe Task List insert has pages I printed onto scrap white paper.

Task list insert - back cover, and grid notes insert - front cover

Notebook inserts back-to-back. I love the colours.

Grid notes insert - inside front coverI couldn’t avoid including the punched holes in the grid paper, but figured that’s what using recycled materials is all about 🙂

Lessons learned

  • The scrap leather I used wasn’t the best choice for something that needs to take a fold. It’s showing signs of tiny cracks along the spine. Not a problem for a first attempt though.
  • The elastic could have been a fraction thinner.
  • The inserts are easier to bind first and then cut to size with the guillotine.
  • The inserts I made are only 20 pages. They could easily have been 40 to 60 pages. Thicker inserts would also give the notebook more rigidity.

Do you use this style of notebook? Did you purchase yours, or did you “roll your own” as I did?

Sunday Six – 25 Nov 2012

Six interesting articles, images or what-nots I’ve come across on the web this week.

  1. Love these Be A Healthier You printable pages from The Project Girl. They’re US letter paper sized, but I printed one out on A5 so it would fit my organiser and it’s perfect!
  2. Would love to make a quilted cover for my moleskine a journal. Checking out these for inspiration: Bloom Journal Cover Tutorial, Sew Me Something Good Patchwork Quilted Journal Cover and right down the bottom of this post from Diary of a Quilter is a cute journal cover, inspired by the All People Quilt tutorial (link to PDF file under the image).
  3. On Pinterest? Check out this great collection of Mail Art pins.
  4. Also discovered via Pinterest, these absolutely gorgeous lavender-filled vintage postcard sachets.
  5. Some printable writing paper – cute Bunny Love paper by tho-be on Deviant Art.
  6. Looking for Christmas themed writing paper? Here’s some winter paper to print from PinkWool.com and some beautiful Letters to Santa from A Little Delightful blog.