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Fabric Book Tutorial - Part 3
Learn how to sew a fabric book to showcase your favorite fabric prints. I used my favorite Liberty Art Fabrics in this tutorial with the exception of the quilting cotton used for part of the cover and to make the pages. This is part 1 of the 3 part tutorial. Part 3 details how to bind the book together and create the side binding.

Posted by Vicky Published See Vicky's 7 projects »
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You Will Need

See materials listed in my Fabric Book Tutorial Part 1
  • How to make a journal. Fabric Book Tutorial - Part 3 - Step 1
    Step 1

    Place the back side of the cover and the the front of the first page side by side. Try not to leave any gap. Use a wide zigzag stitch to connect the 2 pages. Do this for the remaining pages 2 and 3 and 4 and 5. Make sure the back of the previous page is on your left and the front of next page is on your right when you are doing the zigzag stitch. This is what the zigzag stitches will look like when the book is open.

  • How to make a journal. Fabric Book Tutorial - Part 3 - Step 2
    Step 2

    When you’re done you should have 3 sets of pages connected with zigzag stitches. Now comes the fun part of hand sewing these 3 sets of pages together. I started by connecting pages 2-3 to pages 4-5. Use a matching thread color and hand sew them together. See how my stitches are joining just the bottom of page 3 and the top of page 4 together.

  • How to make a journal. Fabric Book Tutorial - Part 3 - Step 3
    Step 3

    When you are done connecting these 2 sets, hand sew the cover/page 1 set together. This is the end result of the 3 sets of pages hand sewn together.

  • How to make a journal. Fabric Book Tutorial - Part 3 - Step 4
    Step 4

    The inside of the book where the pages were hand stitched looks like this. Since the thread is a matching color it’s hard to tell my hand stitching are not evenly spaced =)

  • How to make a journal. Fabric Book Tutorial - Part 3 - Step 5
    Step 5

    To make the binding strip, I used leftover fabric from the heart template and sewed them together. My strips were cut 1.25″ wide but you can adjust the size according to how much fabric prints you want to use. Just make sure the length will cover the spine of your book excluding seam allowances. I added a piece of tan quilting cotton so I could have a solid border on the spine to match my book cover. With right sides facing, sew the top and bottom seam together ( noted with blue boxes ) so you have a tube.

  • How to make a journal. Fabric Book Tutorial - Part 3 - Step 6
    Step 6

    Now measure the tan strip and mark it in half using a fabric pen ( left ). Cut on the line you just drew and make sure you don’t cut the bottom fabric since your fabric is a tube. You end up with a piece of tan fabric evenly divided between the top and bottom ( right ).

  • Step 7

    Measure the thickness of your book and add 1″ and seam allowance so you can fully cover the spine the book. If it ends up too wide you can always stitch it in later. Mine was about 1″ thick so I cut 2 strips 2.5″ wide assuming .25″ seam allowance. Ignore the fact my tan quilting cotton is longer. I trimmed it later on but didn’t take a picture. Sew both fabrics right sides together leaving a gap at the bottom. You can slip stitch the gap closed or if you’re lazy like me you can use fabric glue.

  • How to make a journal. Fabric Book Tutorial - Part 3 - Step 8
    Step 8

    Dot fabric glue or use glue stick along the front and back of the book and then attach the binding strip. The one thing I didn’t account for was the bulk in the corners of the pages so it pushed up the binding a bit on the top and bottom of the book. You may want to make your binding strip wider and then sew it narrower afterwards.

  • How to make a journal. Fabric Book Tutorial - Part 3 - Step 9
    Step 9

    To make sure the binding was attached, I sewed along the edges of the binding strip on the front and back. The stitching will show on the back of the front cover and the back page so just keep that in mind. My last page was not blank so the stitching ended up running through one of the Liberty fabrics I had on the page. One way to adjust for this is to leave about a 1″ margin on the left side of the cover and all the pages.

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Comments

Vicky
Vicky · 7 projects
Part 2 of this tutorial shows how to sew half of the pages together using a sewing machine before connecting with a needle and thread. Happy "mad" sewing!
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The Sewing Maven
The Sewing Maven · Des Moines, Iowa, US · 45 projects
Awesome project! I've got to try this. Can you machine sew the pages together? So glad to have discovered your tutorial because I've been wanting to make a fabric book as a stitch journal and to practice embroidery.
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