Strengthen Your Family by Spending Time Together
Strengthen Your Family by Spending Time Together

Library Card Notebook

It's easy to make a library card notebook. All you need are my free printables, card stock, lined school paper, scissors, and a stapler.

I have a granddaughter that LOVES notebooks. She loves writing in them. Drawing in them. Playing with them. Give her a notebook and she’s in seventh heaven!

After making the junk journal notebooks (which I gave one to that notebook lovin’ granddaughter), I thought I’d make another notebook. A different kind of notebook. A smaller one. One that looked like a library card! (One wonders if they have library cards now in this modern, electronic age . . .)

A library card notebook is super easy to make. And inexpensive. Yipee!

Here’s what you’ll need:

  • white card stock
  • scissors
  • lined school paper
  • a stapler
  • my free library card printables

Let’s talk first about the card printables. I made templates that will print out as a 6″ x 4″ graphic. You are free to download and use them for your personal use. (I’ll talk a little bit about the size of a library card notebook in a minute.)

I have several colors for you to choose from. Right click on the one(s) below that you want and save it. (At the end, there is a buff colored one and a vintage looking one if you’re interested.)

Free card printable.
Free card printable.
Free card printable.
Free card printable.
Free card printable.
Free card printable.
Free card printable.

Before I printed out the cards, I typed in the name of a book and its author on it. I added a due date (which was the birthdate of the child who received the notebook).

I found a free kids font that looked like a child’s handwriting and used that font to type the grandchild’s name. Check out the picture below to see what my grandchildren’s name looks like. I really like how they turned out!

Now print the library cards on white card stock and cut them out.

Cut out the cards.

I measured and cut the lined school paper to be a tad smaller than the cards.

Measure the lined paper.
Cut the lined paper.

I folded the lined paper in half and pressed it really good with my fingers so it would lay flat.

Fold the lined paper.

I folded the library card in half and pressed it really good with my fingers so it would lay flat.

Fold the card.

I unfolded the lined paper and stacked 7 pieces together. I unfolded the library card and carefully placed it on top of the lined paper. Then, I stapled them all together on the fold line.

Staple everything together.

A word of caution here. You can’t have more pieces of paper than your stapler can handle. I put 9 pieces of lined paper in one library card notebook and my stapler could barely go through all of the paper. That’s why I used only 7 pieces of lined paper for the rest. The stapler worked just fine with that amount.

Now let’s pause a moment to talk about the size of these cute little notebooks.

I didn’t want them to be 5″ x 3″ because I felt that that would be a tad too small. That’s why I made then 6″ x 4″.

However!

My stapler was too small!!!!!!!!!!

I couldn’t staple on the fold line because the throat space of the stapler was too short. What to do, oh what to do?

I could reprint everything and recut all of those sheets of lined paper.

But I didn’t want to. (I’m lazy like that . . . )

But then I had a brilliant idea. I called a friend to see what kind of a stapler she had. It was a Bostitch Office stapler. It was bigger than mine. Much bigger. She let me borrow it and it worked just fine. That stapler saved my lazy bacon. Phew!

So maybe before you print up your cards, see what size of stapler you have and print them accordingly. (Or maybe you have a wonderful friend like I do who has a big stapler that she’ll let you use.)

After stapling the pages inside the card to create the notebook, I folded it shut. I pressed the fold again. Really. Good. And I mean REALLY GOOD! Especially around the staples. This helped the notebook to lay as flat as possible.

Voilà! A whole flock of library card notebooks. I think they’re as cute as a bug’s ear (however cute that is).

And I think my grandkids will love getting them, too.

It's easy to make a library card notebook. All you need are my free printables, card stock, lined school paper, scissors, and a stapler.
It's easy to make a library card notebook. All you need are my free printables, card stock, lined school paper, scissors, and a stapler.
It's easy to make a library card notebook. All you need are my free printables, card stock, lined school paper, scissors, and a stapler.
It's easy to make a library card notebook. All you need are my free printables, card stock, lined school paper, scissors, and a stapler.
It's easy to make a library card notebook. All you need are my free printables, card stock, lined school paper, scissors, and a stapler.
It's easy to make a library card notebook. All you need are my free printables, card stock, lined school paper, scissors, and a stapler.

(NOTE: a reader asked me how to add text to the library cards once they are downloaded. I created 2 tutorials explaining how. This one is for people who use Mac computers and this one is for people who use Windows computers. Both use programs that are free.)

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

20 thoughts on “Library Card Notebook”