One thing I like about binding my own sketchbooks/art journals is the ability to include pages of different sizes. It allows for interesting and unplanned juxtapositions, often fodder for new ideas.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: my favorite art supply is randomness.
The (human) eyes at the top here are actually a glimpse at the drawing on the next page:
I worked on these pages separately and only saw how cool they looked together once I was finished.
These two pages were originally a vintage magazine page (I’m guessing an old National Geographic, although I can’t really tell anymore), and a misprint of a greeting card I designed a couple of years ago. The first page was made with acrylic paint and a white pencil; the second page with wax pastels.
By the by, this weird person above was inspired by an image in yet another art journal, where the pages are rice paper, albeit all the same size. This paper allows plenty of bleed through from page-to-page; the resulting marks are the basis for another image. (This is my interpretation of a process taught by Henrik Drescher in this class. )
In fact, this may be my key motivation for keeping these books to begin with — the pages I find most satisfying are the ones that lead to other pages, other projects.
Here’s another one from my current art journal:
This first page was originally a page from some sort of a vintage directory. I purchased it ripped like this, from the bulk section at the amazing Center for Creative Reuse in Pittsburgh. (You can fill a huge bag for like $10, enough material to bind at least five journals! A bargain and a creative bonanza.)
And this page was the back side of a map of Europe. I love working on vintage map paper (obviously unlaminated), it’s such high quality.
As I write this, I’m realizing that both of these page “duets” I’m sharing were made with one page in my studio (the paint) and one page on my couch-side “studio” (the wax pastels). And they were also made on different days.
I’m also realizing that both of these “peek-a-boos” were a result of ripped pages, an aesthetic I happen to like, and which creates the most unexpected juxtapositions.
But you can also achieve this just by binding together pages of different sizes. In fact, if you do this thoughtfully you can end up with multiple “peek a boos” in a single spread, with many different potential page compositions. Here’s one more example, a spread from a 2022 art journal:
You can see four pages in total, three on the left —and one on the right. Let’s turn the (little) page backwards.
That little page was originally — yes — another map! I’m going to guess the dessert theme on this collection of pages wasn’t entirely random, but it’s hard to remember exactly now.
To give you a better look at the last visible page on the right — the one with the gold stripes — I had to flip back a number of pages, as this was made on one of the widest pieces of paper in this journal. That means it was visible and influencing many spreads on either side of it. (Which I’m not going to show you here right now, I have to stop somewhere!)
Although many if not most of the pages I bind into my journals started life with another purpose, I also will include brand spanking new paper of different kinds and provenances. This one was extra special — I got it at the famous paper room at New York Central Art Supply (R.I.P.) — at least seven years before I made this journal,
Of course there are other ways you can achieve this type of juxtaposition in your art journal, besides varying the page size or taking advantage of random tears.
Some ideas I’ve experimented with:
Folding pages. Due to the binding, you can only fold on one direction. (Vertically, in a side bound book, horizontally in a top bound book.) The size determines how many times you fold = a really wide piece of paper can yield an accordion. But you can also fold from the corners — triangles are unexpected and interesting!
Cutting into the page. Many different possibilities here. Simple windows, complex shapes. You can cut with a blade or you can tear.
Adding to pages. You can increase the size of the page in any direction that isn’t bound with tape, and then fold it back into the book. (Ok, technically this a variation on folding, but it’s additive.) You can also tip in pages to an already bound book, but that’s just a variation of binding a book with pages of different sizes.
Paper engineering offers many more possibilities, starting with pop-ups! I periodically get really into making these. The two books I have on my shelf are both old and by Paul Jackson: The Pop Up Book and Cut and Fold Techniques for Pop Up Designers.