CRAFTS Index
Baskets
Beading
Boxes
Candles
Children's Room Decor
Clay
Clothing
Dolls
Faux & Other Finishes
Flowers & Foliage
Furniture
Garden & Patio
Glass
History
Holidays
Jewelry & Accessories
Kids Crafts
Lamps & Shades
Linens & Fabrics
Memory Crafts
Metal
Natural & Homemade
Needle Arts
Organizing & Storage
Painting & Staining
Paper
Photo Projects
Quilting Techniques
Recycled Objects
Ribbons & Bows
Rubber Stamping
Scrapbooking
Special Days & Gifts
Stenciling
Storage
Tabletop Decor
Toys & Games
Walls & Floors
Wedding
Wirework
Wood & Leather

BEST OF CRAFTS
Puttin' On the Knits
Knitty Gritty
Creative Juice
Sewing for the Home
Scrapbooking: Flowers
Scrapbooking Basics
Scrapbooking: Holidays
Scrapbooking: Vacations

SPONSOR LINKS

  • Book Wall Pocket
  • There’s something new inside these books.
    From "B. Original"
    episode DBOR-203

    PHOTO

    These storage pockets give new meaning to a book’s "table of contents."
    Thanks to Michele Beschen, there’s no limit to what you can find in books. The B. Original host shows how to turn unwanted hardbound books into handy wall pockets that can store any small items—craft materials, office supplies, even other books!

    Michelel Beschen shows how to create a pattern and sew a lining to turn your unwanted hardbacks into easy storage. Look for hardbound books at thrift stores, yard sales and the "give away" in at larger used bookstores—you’ll want to make a bunch of these pockets.

    advertisement


    PHOTO

    Figure A
    PHOTO

    Figure B
    Book Wall Pocket

    • Using a sharp craft knife, carefully remove the books’ pages from the cover (figure A).

    • Lay the book’s cover flat on a piece of felt or other fabric and cut the fabric to the same size as the open cover. This will be the pocket’s lining.

    • Lay out the cardboard to mark the dimensions for the pocket’s sides, which will be a trapezoid shape.

    • Measure the width of the book at the spine and the distance from the spine to the opposite edge of the cover. Draw lines to these dimensions on the cardboard; you should have an L shape where the shorter line is the spine width and the longer line is the distance from the spine to the edge of the cover.

    • Decide how wide you want the pocket to open and mark this measurement on the cardboard (figure B).

    • Connect the sides to complete the trapezoid shape and cut out the pattern (figure C).

      Photo

      Figure C

      Photo

      Figure D


      PHOTO

      Figure E

    • Cut out two pieces of fabric using the cardboard pattern. Stitch these sides to the lining you already cut to create the full pocket lining (figure D).

    • Glue the completed lining to the inside of the book with fabric glue. Try to make the fabric lay as smooth as possible (figure E); clamp the lining to the cover while the glue dries.

    • Hang the completed pocket on the wall with brad nails or small screws.


  • ALSO IN THIS EPISODE: