conclusion to ….. DIY bookmarks

July 2, 2015

IT IS HEARTENING to read the comments lavished on me for this little project, and to see no one asking me ‘why bookmarks when we have Kindle Readers?’

heh heh….I do own one.  And I do have a Google Reader app loaded onto my cell phone. And yes, I do occasionally (like at the dentist’s) have need to continue reading the free download of the 19th C. contemporary of Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins’ “The Guilty River” (a mystery).

And, because I didn’t want to undergo surgery for a crushed rib cage attempting to read the kazillion-page ‘War and Peace’ in bed, I did read that on my Kindle.

HOWEVER, reading ‘War and Peace’ on a Kindle, though less cumbersome, brings no satisfaction whatsoever when, many grey hairs later, one finishes it.  Why?  Because those kazillion pages simply vanish into thin air.  You don’t get the ego satisfaction of hefting the giant tome onto a bookshelf and nodding at it whenever going by, thinking, “I read that — the whole damn thing — every damn page of it.”

LIKEWISE,  young misses into the third week of dating a diehard Kindle devotee–invited to the apartment for coffee, waiting for it to be served–don’t get to peruse the bookshelves to get a good glimpse as to what this person is REALLY like.

THE CLINCHER FOR ME was when Kindle and Google started charging as much for their so-called cloud download of electronic nothingness, as a bookstore does for an actual, substantial, lap-filling, real-and-in-your-hands, BOOK.  Uh-uh.  If I’m gonna pay $20 for a book?  I WANT A BOOK.

THUS, the bookmark DIY project.  Because there are still alot of I-want-something-for-my-money book readers like me, who see Kindle as the garment of the Emperor.  So if a kindred spirit is going to have to pay $20+ regardless, not only do they want a real book, they’d enjoy receiving a bookmark gift to go with it.

So let’s finish it up…..

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….the remains of the painting reject get chopped into pieces, the largest one measuring wider than 2 widths of the bookmark, because it is going to serve as a sleeve holder…..the smaller piece will become the gift giver’s  “To:/From:” tag

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….the larger piece gets chopped down further, with the top part cut on the bias, and glue applied to the side and bottom edges.  This is then folded shut, and placed under a flat, heavy weight (I recommend ‘War and Peace’, snigger)….

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….meanwhile, start your tassel by winding your choice of yarn(s) around the width of two fingers, thereby choosing how big or small you want the finished tassel to be….

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…..thread the tassel loop through with a length of remaining yarn…..

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….there are a few ways to handle the rest of this, and I prefer tying a simple knot and then adding a touch of glue to keep from having to knot it twice, thus making it too bulky-looking….

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…..wrap a length of yarn below the knotted top to serve as the tassel’s ‘noose’, and secure that with another dab of glue, setting it all aside till the glue has soaked in and dried clear….

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….the frayed ends are trimmed from the knot and the noosed yarn, then the looped bottom is sliced completely across to create the tassel…..

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…..the gift sleeve is removed when dry and a complimentary-sized gift card/tag is glued to the front of it…..

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….the completed bookmark, with tassel is inserted into the gift sleeve, accompanied (in this case) with a business card, ready for display and selling…

12 Responses to “conclusion to ….. DIY bookmarks”

  1. […] via conclusion to ….. DIY bookmarks — weisserwatercolours […]

    Liked by 1 person

  2. It is great to hear this from you ‘debiriley’, and thank you, and yes, there are a number of times when it just makes sense to get something electronically. There are many free ones, like classics.

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  3. Wonderful! Helpful information..a great post. Thank you. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  4. debiriley said

    beautiful creative imaginative!! love your bookmark with its layers of textures & subdued colours. 🙂 I’ve always been a ‘Real’ book fan, I prefer the texture and feel of the papers. But, dragged myself into the Techno age – reluctantly. I do read on kindle, mainly as the cost of books in Australia is 2x 3x the cost of in the US 😦

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Thank you for that tip, Carl…..and I DID! I ordered the WONDERFUL novel “The Signature of All Things” by Elizabeth Gilbert, filled with stories and knowledge about plants as seen through the eyes of an early 19th Century American girl. As you say, it was a song, and all I paid was shipping. The cover is water damaged is all. Otherwise it is in mint condition. Love your cartoon for today, Carl. Happy 4th to our American cousins!

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  6. You can order used books from amazon. Received many almost mint hard cover and paperbacks too. Most just a dollar or two so order a bunch for just one postage charge.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Oh Cynthia, I couldn’t agree more, and doubt (dare to doubt) that actual books will get phased out, partly because these electronic tablets can’t begin to convey illustration. And you and I aren’t getting phased out either. If anything, we’re heading for some kind of recycling (smile). Thank you thankyouthankyou!

    Liked by 1 person

  8. Barry, I truly hope those reading this will head on over to view your work. You’ve got what many of us strive for–style.

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  9. Dear Zambini, I hope everyone pays your site a visit and reads about Frugal Frau and Treeman, DormGirl and ShockBoy(among others) and sees all the great things they can make!

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  10. Barry Comer said

    You are something else sir

    Liked by 1 person

  11. I don’t read much kindle stuff because it creates eye strain. And you’re right about the fact that a physical book is somehow more whole-istic, whereas the ebook is always bits and pieces suspended in time. The book becomes an idea only, an abstraction. And of course nowadays, everyone and his dog is writing a book…

    Maybe the era of the good book—both in terms of literature and of beautiful binding, paper, and design—is a thing of the past, but since I also am getting there, I’m not worried that it will all vanish before I do.

    Bravo to you, Lance, for this lovely gift idea. I think many of my friends would treasure it. I know I would.

    Liked by 1 person

  12. This is so nice looking, I love the addition of the gift sleeve. I like solid hefty books too, especially when they have pretty bindings to match the contents!

    Liked by 1 person

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