Wednesday, March 27, 2013

A Restructured Paper Tutorial




Our Paper Traders yahoo group recently hosted a 
restructured paper swap based 
on an article from Cloth Paper Scissors Magazine
 by Frankie Fioretti and Susan Pickering Rothamel
 and then reviewed at the old Gingersnaps blog

As our members started experimenting with the various ways of creating this paper,
 we thought we would put together a step by step and share our tips, 
successes and what to stay away from.  


As we found out, the base that you start on is very important. The Gingersnaps blog 
recommended a non-sticky craft mat. Some craft sites said that a kitchen cutting mat 
would work as well but our member Beckie H. stated that when she tried this, her paper
 stuck to the mat and would not peel off. The next time she used her silicone craft mat
 and it worked perfectly. I used Reynolds Freezer Paper as my base and it
 worked very well, the restructured paper peeled off without a hitch.
 Other members just clued their scraps to white copy paper and so did not have to 
worry about peeling anything off and had good results with this as well. 

Types of glue to use: I used a 1 to 1 mixture of Alene’s Tacky Glue and water. 
Other recommended glue was Perfect Paper Adhesive , a mixture of Mod Podge and gel 
medium or Golden Glazing Medium/matte. 

Supplies: Tacky glue, Scrap paper, freezer paper 

For my first step, I glued down six sheets of vintage paper to make 
a paper size of about 12”x12”. You could have your first base layer 
be anything you want but I wanted some of the text to show through 
as I was going to be using some tissue napkin scraps in my design. 


Start arranging your scraps of paper from your
 “I can’t throw it away” stash and play around with some designs. 

Tip: When you are happy with your arrangement, take a picture of it with 
your cell phone or digital camera. Once I started lifting and gluing pieces, 
I sometimes forgot where I wanted certain pieces to go.




Apply your glue with a brush to the backsides of your scraps 
and start layering. I used a heat gun to speed the drying process up. 
I’ve basically finished my restructured paper here and only needed 
to go back and add some little embellishments to flesh it out. 



In this photo, I’ve gone back and added some paper flowers, hole punches 
and a little bit more scraps. 



Some close-ups of the restructured paper. 




After your paper has dried you can peel it off the freezer paper
or craft mat if that is what you are using,
 and use it in a variety of ways. 

Tip: You can iron your paper if is a little bumpy and 
curling up. I glued a piece of mine to a manila tag and stuck it under 
a weighted book and it took care of the curling problem.

Tip: If you used slick paper scraps (magazine) in your design, you 
will need to coat your restructured paper with a coat of clear gesso 
if you will be doing any stamping on it. 

The tag I created with a section of my restructured paper. I layered 
a piece of white tissue paper onto my tag to soften and mute the colors 
with some gel medium. 


I applied some silver pigment ink around the edges and 
across the top to bring out some definition. 


Finished tag: 

A card using a section of the paper: 

I hope you will give this fun technique a try. I think you will 
really enjoy the process and be happy with your results.

Leave us a comment with a link if you'd like to share
your restructured paper adventures.

Cathy C.
Paper Traders

5 comments:

  1. I love this! I have a HUGE bag of scraps I just couldn't throw away and now I know what I'm going to do with them!!!!! Thanks for the tutorial!!!

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  2. Thanks Cathy....you have made a collage, not just restructured paper...I love it.

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  3. This is great. Thank You for this.
    The wheels are turning now.

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  4. This is great! Thanks so much!!!
    ~Elizabeth

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  5. Absolutely love this project, and can see so many hours of creative fun. Thanks so much for sharing this am definitely going to give it a try.
    :) Chris / CS Designs

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