Notebooking Pages (& More!) - Spiral Spines for Notebooking





Welcome to my little spot in Homeschoolblogger!
Come visit with me as I share "more than notebooking" including my thoughts
on family, homeschooling, the Christian walk, and more!


Monday, October 2
Spiral Spines for Notebooking

Category: Notebooking

This is one of the greatest little tools I've found for notebooking.

I thank "Angi B" for introducing it to me!  It's called ProClick and it's a binding tool.  Basically, it's one long hole puncher that punches little holes all down the side of your paper to fit into the special ProClick spiral spines.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What is awesome about these spines is that you can easily open and close them.  So you can start your new notebook with just your front/back cover (designed by the author of course, your child!) and then as they create their pages, they simply slide the puncher down the side of their paper, "unzip" their spine, put in the page, and zip it back up.  The spines come with a little plastic "zipping" tool that opens and closes the spines.  You can do it manually, but the zip tool is so much more fun! 

 

You can make just about any size notebook that you want because the spines are very easy to cut.  You can even create a landscape-style notebook!  We're doing this for history this year and I love it!  The kids enjoy making mini-scrapbooks with all of our scraps and leftover supplies.  The only downside is that the largest spines do not hold much more than 85-100 sheets of regular paper, so even less if using cardstock.  What I do for our bigger notebooking subjects, like history, is to either keep separate notebooks for different time periods or put the pages into sheet protectors at the end of the year into one big 3-ring binder. 

 

We used to use the big 3-ring binders for all of our notebooking, but they became so cumbersome for little hands.  I LOVE the ProClick spines because the notebooks are easier to handle, they lay flat so you can keep your pages in the notebook while you work on them if you like, you can easily put pages in and take pages out, and unlike "unprotected" sheets in your 3-ring binders they don't rip out so easily. 

 

It's also great for combining the mini-books that you do for lapbooking with notebooking.  If you're used to putting your finished notebooking pages in sheet protectors, it's a little hard to view the minibooks.  Since these spines are better at keeping your pages intact, you really don't need the extra protection of a sheet protector and so the mini-books are more accessible.  Of course, a lot of hands-on contact will begin to show without the protection of sheet-protectors, but that's just the sign of a well-loved notebook, isn't it?  Oh, I also have used it to punch through transparencies without any problems.  I don't know that it's recommended, but just thought I'd tell you it works for me!

 

The best place I've found for purchasing this tool is at Amazon (let me know if the link doesn't work), but you could certainly do an online search.  I search online for the spines and buy them in bulk for a better deal.

 

You can view a close-up of one our kids' notebooks here to see a close-up of the spines.


Comments

Wednesday, October 4 - Bravo!

Posted by Anonymous

So glad to see that you started a blog. I've enjoyed the notebooking page packages and the samples of your children's work has inspired me. I have 6 (K-college) and look forward to peeking into your world.
Anne

Permanent Link


Sunday, October 8 - Me Too!

Posted by

I think this will be lots of fun! It's such a joy to be able to share what I'm learning and I hope it will be a blessing to others!
Debra :)

Edited by NotebookingPages on Sunday, October 8, 2006 at 11:56 AM

Permanent Link


Saturday, October 28 - This sounds really good.

Posted by REInvestor

I came to you blog from the CMason group. I really appreciated your post today (well maybe it was yesterday, but I get it in digest) about schedules and came over to look at your schedule. I am also blogging over at REInvestor. Stop by and visit if you have time. Looks like you have a great family.
And I might check out your link on the notebooking things. That looks very helpful.

Permanent Link


Free & Affordable Homeschooling and Notebooking Resources!



Click to Join the Notebooking Group
Click to Join
the Notebooking Group



We LOVE Our Tapestry of Grace!








Habit Training: Sowing Seeds of Character Cards
TAG: Indulging Angi!
Taylor's Art: Cow
Seventeen Dollars and Thirty Cents!!
Our New Home is Almost Ready!...Update - We're Home!
Kindness - What an Awesome Gift!
Our Little Cowpokes
Nature Study - Eastern Hog-nosed Snake (Dead or Alive?)
Dad & Daughter Date
Nature Study - Swallowtail Emerges!


Handicrafts
Home and Schooling
Nature Study
Notebooking
Transforming Moments



Free Resources for Your Homeschool!


Home
View my profile
Archives
Email Me
My Blog's RSS










Bryant



Taylor



Jessie



Austin



Alexander



Elizabeth



Allison






Tapestry Blogroll



Prayers for Noah




UndertheSky
TOSPUBLISHER

JeannieFulbright
Kellyque777
PeakmoreAcademy
MySmokyMtnHomeschool
TEACHmagazine

hmschlmomto2
amtell
FreeStuffForHomeschoolers
knowledgequest
daddysgirls
KimMC
REInvestor
genamayo
SpinningMommy
JacqueDixonSoulRestES
MarlaMom
Canadagirl
mama5boys
andijeane
SarahLynne

Rejoice
CarmenRosales
carolina
smokeybutter
westward
glutenfreefamily
FruAstrida
milksuds
eclecticeducation
gidget
indexcards

NotebookingNook
ltjewel
ReviewsbyHeidi
kllepc
MarilynRockett1
ITeach4Him
Jaynee
momof6blessings
pottershand
gnjlopez

jkestes
StephG
joyfulmomy
hip2homeschool
lahbluebonnet
BreezyTulip
myschoolnotebook
ilovemy3angelbabies
karenskorner
Waldens
ichuzchrist
JessieMarie
susanmhall5

rksut1
Queenbrownshuga
rebeccahuff
jdorrferball




Entry 34 of 36
Last Page | Next Page