So the title explains it all really, hehe…
I’ve been reading the blog Lil’ Blue Boo by Ashley Hackshaw… partly for chicken stuff since Tim and Kelly got chickens recently and the whole family has been invested in their care and involved in the Building of The Chicken Coop, and can I just say… wot a saga… but also because I’ve found Ashley to be the most inspiring and creative lady! And I especially loved a little book she’d made recently, and it got me thinking again how I would like to make a book. Just yet another of those things that I’ve wanted to have a go at for years… I have a huge list, btw.
Anyway, her adorable little notebook got me revved up to actually take scissors to paper… I googled for how-to’s and found Lee (Crafty Loops)’s amazing tutorials on YouTube. I pretty much followed her method, with the exception that my own book is made entirely from scraps, rubbish, and leftover bits and bobs.

We have a whole lot of scrap paper in our house… old, partially filled notebooks, scrapbooks, graph paper and lecture pads from the children’s days at school etc; that I’ve kept just in case I ever need scrap paper. I semi-roughly cut stacks of various sorts… I went for sort-of neat but not perfectly neat, because I really like the imperfectly, imprecise handmade look in a book. Like Lee did in her demonstration book, I cut eight signatures with five pieces of paper each… which gives you eight little booklets of ten pages. Since you’re glueing the frontmost and backmost pages to the cover, this means I ended up with a little book of 78 pages in all…

For punching the stitching holes… I don’t have an awl and was too impatient to run out and buy one. However necessity is the mother of invention, as they say; and I found a dried up ballpoint pen actually works as a pretty good substitute… for backing I used a dried-up old foam squeegee block #whenhoardingpaysoff

For binding; I used a small scrap of bias-cut white linen, and for stitching I used a leather needle and cream-coloured Gutermann’s upholstery thread.

spine all glued up and drying… I used regular ol’ PVA glue

My cover is cut from a discarded cardboard box that I rescued from our recycling bin… I covered it with white paper first… this too was scrap actually! an un-needed page of a new pdf clothing pattern I recently printed. And made. And have not yet blogged, oops, I’m so lazy…


The final cover for my book is linen; this was a piece of indigo-dyed linen leftover from a natural dyeing workshop, run by Trudy Pollard. I attended the workshop with Nicki, Sue and Megan a few years ago. Long term readers of my blog may remember that I made this dress from the linen. I’ve kept the leftovers all this time! well, natural indigo is kinda precious and nigh on unavailable here, and I thought the scraps might come in handy one day. And they did!

Et voila!!

I’m so ridiculously pleased with my little blue book! And it was so much fun to make too… like being in kindergarten again! have no idea what I’m going to write in it yet.. maybe poetry? artsy doodles? a journal? or maybe a little sewing book, to keep track of fabrics and haberdashery requirements? So many options… I need more books, obviously 😉
Later edit: Also, completely beyond the level of an amateur … but if you’re interested, check out the amazingly beautiful work of artisan bookbinder Glenn Malkin


Bet you can’t guess where I am here… Yeah, I know, it’s a tough one. Some locations are just so obscure and far off the beaten track, but I do like to seek out these especially quiet and sleepy, tucked-away little spots to highlight here on ye olde blog… GO me.
















Voila! Jacket made the same way you’re supposed to, and using the forbidden fabric to boot! Ha!



On the “news” * the other night they had a little segment where Kmart introduced their new range of $5 bras, which is insanely cheap… and all over again I got to thinking about why I make my own in the face of the ever plummeting prices of rtw clothing. See, a lot of people I know think I’m completely bonkers (source; they tell me) for making my own when it’s so cheap to buy a perfectly pretty and well-made bra, and without the angst of sourcing all your own bits and pieces and spending the few hours it takes to put it all together.











Now, remember how I mentioned pretty recently that I was looking out for this pattern?? Well, Evie, of
Please note; I did receive this pattern gratis, however there are no affiliate links in this post. I will always notify my readers if there is an affiliate link in my posts. Also on a tangential yet related note, I read somewhere that people think bloggers are raking in the money through affiliate links, well! that may be true for some types of bloggers, like maybe fashion bloggers? but sewing bloggers… NO.
I used a contrasting white thread here because I found you could barely make out a single thing in my pictures with the matching thread! anyway:


Trim away the raw edge as close to the 2nd stitching as you can.

















Like most bloggers, when taking my pictures I usually try to pick some nice location as a backdrop to my creations, something that has the colours and the “feel” and/or just some general overall appropriateness in subject matter or whatever, that I think enhances whatever it is I’m showcasing.




Self-explanatory, really. #endblogpost 😉
Pattern; Vogue 1384. It’s a vintage pattern, hailing from 1984, sorry. Yeah, it’s annoying when people make things in vintage patterns that you can’t get a hold of anymore. But I’m sure this is not particularly aspirational actually, it’s a little weird in that 80’s way. That high, slightly floppy collar combined with a billowing pirate-y blousiness is giving me serious 








































