Easy Craft Idea: A Custom Board Book for your Grandchild
These days, you can buy all sorts of customized board books by searching online. But I think it’s extra-special when you make your own custom board book for your grandchild. This is an easy craft idea to try. I fashioned some for my own children when they were little and now I’m making them for the next generation.
These board books aren’t very slick, but they serve a purpose: they help babies to identify the most meaningful people and objects in their life, and to recognize the name for each one.
What you Need
- White cardboard
- Paper cutter or box cutter and ruler
- Close-up photos
- Sharp nail scissors
- Heavy-duty glue stick
- Alphabet stamps and ink pad
- Clear self-adhesive film, such as Con-Tact Paper
- Regular scissors
- Hole punch
- 2 loose-leaf binder rings
Make the Pages
Determine the dimensions of your book. Mine were 7 inches by 8 inches. Cut cardboard to size with a paper cutter. If you don’t have a paper cutter, you could use a box cutter, using a ruler as a straight edge. (Be careful not to cut yourself!) My books consisted of six cardboard rectangles. With images back and front, you’ll have a 12-page book. Use scissors to round off the sharp corners of the book pages.
For a summer activity with you grandchildren, have a go at water play, where kids “cook” with water.
Prepare the Images
Now take photos of baby’s most important people and favorite things; get prints made or print the photos yourself. I use a compact Canon Selphy portable printer that my son and daughter-in-law gave me for Christmas. Next, using nail scissors, cut out the backgrounds from your photos. The background is a distraction for baby and makes it harder to focus on the subject. Finally, glue the photo images onto your pages with a glue stick and use alphabet stamps to name each image.
Assemble your Book
Now you’re ready to trim the self-adhesive film to the size of the book pages and adhere the film over the photos on each page. This ensures that the photos stay permanently affixed. Use a hole punch to punch two holes on the left side of the book. Secure the pages with the loose-leaf binder rings.
Have fun reading to your baby!
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I think this is where Miss T and Master N learned many of their first words.
You may be right! We certainly “read” those books to them when they were very young. 🙂
I like what you said about leaving the backgrounds clean – “The background is a distraction for baby and makes it harder to focus on the subject.” – I had not thought of that before. Makes sense and is a great tip!
Thank you. The photos really “pop” when the backgrounds are eliminated.