We’ve been reading to J at bedtime since he was about 2 months old in an attempt to establish a solid bedtime routine, since in my new mom naivete, I thought that a solid bedtime routine = more sleep for mommy. Well, that didn’t really work out, but we HAVE established a love of reading and associating of objects in the house.
For example:
kindle = Bob the Builder
laptop = Grandma on Skype
Daddy sitting down = Skyrim
book = crawl onto Mommy’s lap for a bit of a cuddle.
We have recently moved beyond Pajama Time and Moo Baa LaLaLa to an old alphabet book that I must have picked up at some yard sale somewhere. I thought it would be a great way start teaching J the letters that go with the things he points to and blabbers about. Once through the book, however, I knew it was not to be. Seriously? D for daddy and “do-it-yourselfer”? R for rat? Um….no. So, I made my own alphabet book, complete with pictures of objects J is familiar with, like his own shoes, toys, and his own face!
I wanted a board book, since the little man still has a tendency to want to destroy paper. I looked for options online, but most publishers don’t offer board books, and the ones that do, don’t offer board books with 13 full spreads in it. After rooting around in his board book collection, I found a book that I bought for almost nothing at a yard sale that he never seemed to have an interest in, and Voila! – it had EXACTLY 13 full spreads, just enough for an alphabet with one letter on each page.
Then, I spent WAY TOO MUCH time going through old photos, taking new photos, and designing each page, but it’s what I like to do, and I’m particularly particular about it. Each image is the size of the page on the board book. I printed it out in a full spread, on 11×17 paper since the full image was legal size and I did not want the printer to resize the images.
I cut out the first page, held it up to the board book and realize the book wasn’t square. Fine. I cut the image down to each individual page and trimmed the edges to match the non-square-ness of the book, and then realized that if I glued the page all the way to the far inside fold, the paper will interfere with the fold and make a bloody mess. So, the paper is only glued to the edge of where the inside fold begins, which leaves for some trimming on the outer edge. So much for my anal retentive measuring of each page.
The pages were glued onto the board book using an acid-free glue stick, and it worked really well. There was no warping or bumps in the paper. I did have a damp rag nearby to clean my hands after every page because I felt like the kindergartener who has glue all over her fingers and smearing it everywhere she didn’t want glue.
The cover is two separate pages plus a spine, which I had cut to be about an inch larger than the actual spine, in order to create a bit of overlap when gluing everything in place.
Once all the pages and cover was glued on, I stacked some cookbooks on top to set the glue. Then I walked away, because ENOUGH already with the glue.
Then, I trimmed the edges and the rounded corners with an exacto knife. The edges aren’t perfect, and you can see the book underneath at the inside folds, and I think Josh might destroy my efforts in a couple of days, but for now, it looks pretty nice. I hope to spray on a clear gloss seal, and maybe cover the outside in contact paper, just to protect my investment a bit.
Here are some shots from the inside:
We’re hopefully going to take this book for its debut sometime this week, so hopefully the little man likes it!
Wow- that is an amazingly impressive effort!!!
This is absolutely fabulous. I’m a reading specialist and a mommy to a two year old and I love this. I’m pinning this. Thank you so much for stopping by http://www.thenymelrosefamily.blogspot.com and checking out my office chest. I’m so glad you did. I’m your newest follower. Thanks for sharing!
OMG! I am in LOVE with this idea!!! We are your newest followers! Would love it if you shared this on our linky:)
Wow . . . this is just about the coolest thing I’ve ever seen. It looks so beautiful and will be so fun for him to read! I love it!
That? Is awesome. You did a great job and the photos are just gorgeous!
For some reason I can’t see the link to comment, only the reply one 🙂
Anyway, your book is gorgeous – you took such care and attention with it and the result was so worthwhile! I really love it!
What an amazing book! I wish my kids were still little and I could make them one 🙂
Chiwei yet another amazing craft from you! You are so awesome!
The book is amazing!! I love how you made it into a board book!
That is amazing. I’m sure your young man will love it. I agree that ABC books can have some rather abstract weird examples. I must admit I love all the Letter land people that my boys learnt at school
Ahh, that is super cute! My daughter LOVES looking at photo books of herself and all the people in our family. She would love this so much. I’ll have to start taking photos.
Thank you for linking up to A Pinteresting Party! 🙂
This is ingenious! I’m definitely going to have to try this with the little one, minus the curse words:)
Wow! I love this! I made a board book a while back and the glue dried with the pages open so now it doesn’t closed. I should have stacked some books on top. Now I know!
What an incredible book! I hope it survives as it would be such a great keepsake from his babyhood in years to come. I’ve been getting ready to make some personalized board books for my son. This will help a lot. I’m pinning it. Thanks!
This is such an adorable idea! This will be something that your son will be able to treasure forever. Thank you for stopping by my blog the other day! I’m your newest follower, as well!
I just wanted to pop in to let you know this was one of the featured projects this week! {http://tutusandteaparties.blogspot.com/2012/02/pinteresting-party-week-26.html} Stop by and grab a button if you’d like. 🙂
Oooooh! I love this idea. I’m a kindergarten teacher and love seeing parents do projects like this!
I host a Home and Family Friday linky party. I’d love it if you’d link up your project.
becca-homeiswheremystorybegins.blogspot.com
Becca
awesome! I so want to make this for both of my kids…My daughter who is 18 months old and my s
on who will be born in a few weeks! What a great way to introduce letters with familiar objects. I am also going to do this with family members because we live at least 6 hours away from the closest relative and more than 14 hours away from the furthest. i want my kids to know who their relatives are and learn to love to read also! Thank you for posting!
Shanna
Too Cute!! I love it! Thanks so much for linking up!!
XO, Aimee
This looks great; what hard work you must have put into this!! I love it!
Wow, pinning it!
What a fantastic project! I’d been wanting to do something like this for my godson’s birthday and nothing I tried turned out quite right, but I think this idea is brilliant – definitely gonna have to copy it – and pinning it too!
this is really cute…i have to steal the idea
This is amazing! I’ve been wanting to create a board book for my daughter and I think I just found my inspiration! 🙂 I’m your newest follower!
Not sure how i missed this post, but i LOVE it! It turned out sooo great! I sure hope Josh hasn’t destroyed it yet. Fab idea!
This is really just so darling:) I love your layout! I going to pin this, thanks for the inspiration:)
This is such a great idea that yielded really cool results. I love it.
wow
This is so great! I love how the letters look like those books used to teach handwriting to little kids. How did it hold up?
Could you provide some more details on how you created the layouts? What software did you use? Fonts? Etc… I’m creating an alphabet book for my niece and I love how yours turned out!
Hi Sara, I created the layouts in Gimp – a free photo editing tool. I created an image the exact size of the book page, and then filled it with the pictures I wanted, then added the wording, all as separate layers. When I got the layout I wanted, I flattened and saved as a jpg. The font is Penmanship Print, and it can be found at dafont.com. Hope that helps!
I have to admit, the cover is coming apart a bit with the glue just giving up, and the gloss seal didn’t do much in terms of extra stickiness, so we’re just really careful with it!
This is so cute. I have wanted to make a board book of photos of my granddaughter, but like you said, no one has them; I’ll keep my eye out for an old one at a yard sale (or look through her own for neglected ones) to perhaps do a project like this! You did an AWESOME job on it, and it will be treasured, I am sure!
This is SO ADORABLE!! Spotted it on CraftGossip today!!
You photos are beautiful and the book is fantastic. I did the same for a friend a little while ago – http://www.madebybronwyn.blogspot.com.au/2009/12/personalised-alphabet-board-book-for.html – but like you had trouble finding a book to fit it all in – hence two letters per page. The idea of reusing an existing book was inspired.
I found the blank board books you can find suit the number books more – http://www.madebybronwyn.blogspot.com.au/2009/05/blog-post.html – as you don’t need so many pages for the numbers 1 to 10!
Gorgeous! Really neat idea! I did a personalized drawn alphabet for my son’s wall, but the pictures in your board book are super cool!
Beautiful job you have! Congratulations!
You did such a great job with this. I have been looking for a website that would print a custom board book, but they are all only 8 pages 🙁 Seriously considering this as an option. Did you print all the pages from your home printer? And did you use any special paper?
I was pretty pleased to uncover this web site. I wanted to thank you for your time just for this
wonderful read!! I definitely enjoyed every little bit of it and I
have you saved to fav to see new things in your website.
This is SO SO Gorgeous!!! And genius! Love it!
Thanks Amy! It’s crazy, it’s still intact and every once in a while, we’ll go back and look at the pictures.
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HI. Love this! What software did you use to create each page layout and do you mind sharing the letter with what word you chose (maybe a quick list of abc’s) so I can get ideas to do the same? Thank you!
Dalia, I used Gimp back then, which is a free photo editor tool, similar to Photoshop Elements, but available as open source software. For the letter representations, it’s really up to you to choose what fits best with your family. I started with photos that I had and picked letters from there.
Wow! This is absolutely darling! I’m so impressed. You totally need to clear coat/protect it however you can quickly. This is something that he could treasure for the rest of his life. Beautiful!
Thank you! Yup, my little one likes peeling the pages, so it’s out of reach until I can archive it 🙂
This is beautiful! I’ve been wanting to make a board book for my boys, but I never thought to do it this way! I was always just bummed that I couldn’t order one online somewhere. The internet is failing us! I ended up making our alphabet book at Shutterfly, and it is currently in rough shape, with lots of tape, haha. A board book would have held up much better!
I was so afraid of using a real paper book – those things get DESTROYED in our house. Board books are definitely tougher 🙂
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I think that is great! I love the idea and I would love to make it for my granddaughter – born two months ago 🙂
Please share more!
Thank you,
Lucy aka ..Gami
Hi, does Gimp give you the letter where it looks like it is on a notebook? Thanks, this is adorable!
Never mind,I realized the penmanship print you mentioned does that. By any chance, do you know of an app that has the font? Thanks again!
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Can you please show all the pages of your board book
So that it will me more clear to make one book for my ten month old baby ..
very hard work you did in this and different from all the other board book idea
It’s an obvious to love your idea
Hats off dear
My grandmother made my cousins and I our own little alphabet books when we were little, too. She printed on cardstock and spiral bound them herself, and being the careful child I was, mine are in nearly perfect condition 20-some years later. Mine had things like “V for van” (our minivan) and I, M, and S for our pets (Isis, Mocha, and Samson). I’ve never seen anyone else do a personalized ABC book other than in our family, so I’m so thrilled to have run across yours! Repurposing an old board book is genius, although I’m not sure I could bring myself to do so.