Leah's Creative Every Day link, but have noticed that many people publish their CED posts at an earlier time. And since this only leaves me an hour or so before I post my weekly Summer of Color entry, I feel it's important to keep these two posts a bit farther apart so as not to confuse anyone. So until the Summer of Color is complete, I will be posting my Sunday AB lessons at 2:00 am CDT in the US. This is about the same time I normally publish my Silent Sunday post. Please check my right sidebar to see a few other time zones. I will let you know the week before I plan to resume my Silent Sunday posts and move my AB tutorials back to the later time of around 10:30 pm CDT.
Now that the minutia is out of the way, we can get back to the lesson. Can you believe it? We've just passed the halfway point in these lessons. All the hard lessons are behind you. From now on, it is smooth sailing and hopefully smooth dexterity. This lesson is going to be so easy, it is almost remedial.
We will be talking about adding pockets in our altered books. There are several types of pockets, but most can be categorized as either visible or hidden. Visible pockets can be broken down further into simple or complex. Since most of you come out of the scrapbook or paper crafting communities, you have more than likely been exposed to pockets. Those of you who make tags, will now have a place to store those tags, too.
Once again I'm not reinventing the wheel, but bringing out some tried and true examples of pockets from altered books I have created in the past.
Speaking of tags, here are a lot of them hanging out in vellum pockets in my Rocking Horses AB. Obviously these are NOT horses, but they all have rockers. Each animal is on its own oval tag.
The easiest way to create a pocket is to find an envelope and attach it to your page. For this spread, I used this charity envelope I found in my junk mail. It was perfect for my Money AB. All I needed was to add faux money to it, along with a genuine Oriental coin. You can glue or even sew your envelope to your AB page.
This clear envelope from my Asian AB includes "travel papers" that can be removed and viewed as part of an interactive page.Talk about using any pocket you can find. The tag holder pocket is a freebie sample of face cleanser. I merely washed the cleanser out, allowed it to dry, and colored it with Twinkling H20s to match the baby wipe background in my Asian AB. So think outside the box when you are adding pockets to your ABs.
As an aside, remember how I warned to NOT use Elmers or other wet glues with magazine images? All these ripples in the Singapore spread are a perfect example of what wet glue does to cheap magazine images.
The next easiest pockets are made using three (or the uneven number of your choosing) consecutive pages.
You will also need 3 (or the number of pages you intend to turn into pockets) different inks or acrylic paint. Remember the color lesson? Pick accordingly.
Start with the LAST page you sectioned off for this technique. I began with gold and placed a piece of butcher paper behind the page for protection. Alternately, you can use Press and Seal, wax paper, or even an old phone book page or newspaper. The idea is to protect the pages behind the page you are painting. I used a foam brush, but you can use anything you wish, including a faux credit card.
Using a ruler, gently tear the next page forward. Depending upon how many pockets you want and how wide your book is, determine the width of each of the pockets. TIP: If you want softer, more feathered edges, gently wet the area you want to tear. It will give a completely different look.
Place your protective paper behind the second page after the last page has dried. Using a different color, paint the page nearly to the center.
Repeat tearing and painting and this time, paint all the way to the center of the page.
When dry, apply your favorite glue (remember which one you preferred?) at the top and bottom edges of each of the page pockets to the page beneath it. Leave the outer length (long edge) open. You can also attach the pages using eyelets, brads, snaps, or sew fibers to the page.
Another really easy pocket is made by tearing (or cutting) the page half way down the spine.
Flip the page over and align. Glue the half page to itself.
Once aligned, crease with your hand or a bone folder.
You now have a simple pocket.
Repeat for the opposing page.
I colored my pockets so you could see what they look like before they are attached.
Then I marked where the glue would go on the page using a pink marker. Unless specifically shown or mentioned, the rest of the pockets demoed will be glued in the same way: both sides and the bottom only.
BEFORE you glue the pockets to the opposing pages, color or decorate the full pages that will go behind the pockets.
Here is another example of a folded pocket I made, this time for my Buffy AB. I used heavy card stock and flipped the bottom up to create the pocket, decorated it with Buffy images, then glued the entire assembly to the page. Finally, I placed the arch style altered tag in the pocket.
Although I didn't have time to make another set of these pockets from scratch, I hope I can walk you through the process with the photos that I have from my Money AB.
You may also post ANY previous assignments here. If you are showing any assignment prior to Lesson 10, just add the lesson number after your name, please.

I love pockets and these are brilliant, E!!!
ReplyDeleteThank you for always stopping by...
have a happy weekend!!
Amazing pockets, those hidden ones are so cool and the pockets in your money ab are fantastic, love those. xox
ReplyDeleteHi Elizabeth, Afraid I rather stalled in my AB this past fortnight. Bit concerned of the lack of pages left in my book and not sure what to do next for my theme. I did like your curled frame technique and wondered how it would fare in an AB which I weigh down with my Cuttlebug?!? So I opted to have a go at the technique combined in my Summer of Colour entry. I also understand that these two events do rather overlap and was just preparing my joint posting when I came across your early lesson 11 so have posted early too. Loving the pockets and now wondering how to incorporate them in to the dwindling pages of my AB. Thanks for the lesson. BJ
ReplyDeleteA heap of info and instructions here... thanks.
ReplyDeleteThinking there wasn't anything to learn, but wow, loving some of the ideas, the hidden pockets, pockets using the pages...color me impressed Elizabeth!! And what fun too, now I have to finish up my last assignment 'cause I can't wait to start this one! lol waving hi from the hills of North Carolina :)
ReplyDeleteAnother great tutorial. I am really excited about those coin envelop pockets, I have coin envelopes but haven't used them in that fashion.
ReplyDeleteDarla
Yay... pockets... my favourite type of thing to play with to add real estate to pages!! I will enjoy this class no end!!
ReplyDeleteHi Elizabeth,
ReplyDeletewow, what another fab lesson, thank-you. Already chomping at the bit to get stuck in. I thoroughly enjoyed playing with lesson 10 and hope you like what I have done. I still think the second page could do with some work around the edge of the backing page, any ideas/suggestions/advice would be gratefully received?
Hope you and Bleubeard are well?
Hugs x
Dawn
Outstanding lesson on AB pockets! I especially love the pockets made from the coin envelopes, and I have actually never seen these techniques for the 'invisible' pockets! so clever...so maybe I should be thinking of creating some pockets in my art journals...hmmm. thanks for the great post!
ReplyDeleteAs Promised my Lesson 10 spread with frames and magazine pictures. Perhaps I just needed to get some scrapping out of the way first - LOL
ReplyDeleteoye, somehow I have gotten out of step but I do have some magazine collaging and some frames done. You are doing good, Elizabeth!!!
ReplyDeletesorry, coffee hasn't kicked in and I have done two links to the same page!
ReplyDeleteYep - me again - must be on a roll (although a lesson behind)as I have just done another page! Don't you just LOVE the scent of the ROSES?? I'm even pondering my next spread now but wondering if I can stretch to pockets this time LOL. BJ
ReplyDeleteI missed some fun lessons while I was on vacation, but I am having a great time catching up! I had very limited free internet while I was away, but when I did, I actually kept up reading the lessons! They helped me with my "collecting" of travel brochures, ticket stubs, etc.--now that I know what I can do with them!
ReplyDeleteAmazing ideas here I will certainly be trying a few of them for sure
ReplyDeleteLove Chrissie xx