Kris Bunda Design

Kids Activities: Holly Makes 2 New ‘Quiet Books’

SO MANY ACTIVITIES - Max gets a new Quiet Book and demonstration

SO MANY ACTIVITIES - Max gets a new Quiet Book and demonstration

Sew Nice

Holly taught herself to sew about a year ago, and she’s since channelled some of her incredible creativity through the medium.

One project Holly’s been making iterations of is the “Quiet Book,” with felt cloth pages and sewn or fabric-glued components.

Each page or spread presents a game or activity to keep a toddler entertained, engaged, and even learning. For example, our little Max would point to the letters and say what they are. That kept him engaged in conversation (he didn’t start talking until later than our other two, so any talking was good to hear). Max–just turned 3–still gets the books out of his own volition, and sits to do the various activities.

Max gets a new Quiet Book and demonstration

Photos of In-Progress and Finished Pages from Holly’s Latest 2 Quiet Books

See below for photos of the latest 2 books Holly made (one for Max, and one for his friend Piper).

Some of the pages are Holly’s take on ideas found in Google Image search and from Etsy quiet book sellers. Others are wholly original concepts.

Enjoy the photos, and send an email if you want Holly to make a custom activity book for you.

Pages Ready for Assembly:

Next page: See the finished books and how to bind them

2 Books, Assembled & Bound

Unlike previous Quiet Books Holly made, when she sewed the pages into a cloth binding, she tried binder rings on these two. Using the largest rings she could find at the office store, and purchasing a leather punch tool, she was able to hold the large books together functionally.

Buy the Right Tool for the Job

Leather punch tool, strong enough to cut through doubled felt pages

 

Careful, not every punch is up to the task. Holly first bought a Martha Stewart brand punch, thinking it’s usually a good quality bet. It wasn’t (she said it could barely punch the cardboard it was packaged in). Either way, unless you’re a dedicated leather crafter, you probably don’t need an expensive punch for a felt book with double-sided pages, although they’re still formidable enough to require a tool. You can get a decent one for $10-$25.

The Finished Books

Want Holly to make a custom activity book for you?

Email us with your ideas, Holly will get back to you on whether she can do it and how much it will cost. Books start at $25/page.

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