In 2004, I wrote the first English-language article about gluebooks, Discovering Gluebooks, which is still posted over at Go Make Something.

Ten years later, I wrote a second article, How Discovering Gluebooks Changed My Life, which is also now posted at Go Make Something.

Reading those articles will give you the gluebook basics, and might put what’s written below into context.

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I’ve been gluebooking for over a decade. Even though my art has progressed from simple collage to drawing and painting my own images, I keep coming back to my gluebooks. I work in them when I need a mental break, or when I’m knee-deep in non-creative work, and need something easy to nourish my creative brain. For me, gluebooks are the arty version of comfort food.

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So, why should you be working in a gluebook? Here’s what you might learn:

Gluebooks can show you how to work with limitations.

When I was in school, one of my teachers took away all but three tubes of my watercolors, and sent me home to design costumes for a show. I explored tones, textures, and patterns to get the most out of those three tubes. Sometimes, having all the colors in the crayon box can be a bad thing, and inhibit your creativity.

If all you have to work with is three magazines and a couple of flyers that came in the mail, you have to get creative to put together a set of gluebook pages. You may find yourself looking at photos for blocks of color, rather than what’s depicted in the image. You may start turning magazines upside down, to look for shapes and textures, rather than at words and photos. You may flip some creative switches that haven’t been turned on yet.

Gluebooks teach you to work without relying on products.

The arts and crafts industry bombards you with products every year: the latest pens; the coolest new printing tools; that one $100 thing you simply MUST have if you want to be one of the cool kids. It’s exhausting!

Gluebooks require three things: some glue, something to glue on, and something to glue down. Any glue you have. Any blank book or catalog you have. Any magazines, flyers, or junk mail you have. You can start gluebooking right now, with whatever you have laying around the house—and you can keep gluebooking forever with that same stuff, without ever having to buy any of those cool kid products that you probably wouldn’t have used. Once you’ve done a bunch of gluebook pages, you’ll find yourself being infinitely more selective about the products you buy, because in the back of your head, you’ll be thinking, “I don’t really need another thing to be creative.”

Gluebooks can improve your composition skills.

I teach a class called A Year of Art Journaling, and I use gluebooks to teach basic principles of composition. It’s very easy to cut out a bunch of elements, and arrange them on a page, and then rearrange them until you have a balanced composition. Learning those basic principles without wasting paint and paper makes it easier to keep at it until you’ve mastered each one—and then, what you’ve learned will go with you as you move on to your next piece.

Gluebooks can help you combine colors.

It’s very easy to cut out a pile of red things, and use them to create an interesting gluebook page. But what if you used an interesting color combination in an ad as the jumping off point for your gluebook page? That’s what I did with this set of pages:

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I can honestly say I never would have combined these colors on my own, but with the color spark from the ad, I was able to assemble an interesting group of images that worked well together. If you’re stuck in the same three-color rut, flip through some magazines, find a colorful ad, and whip out a set of gluebook pages using them as your inspiration. It’s an instant rut breaker!

So, those are the things I’ve learned from gluebooking. How ’bout you?

7 thoughts on “What You Can Learn From Gluebooks

  1. This is stunning! You make it sound so easy, but for a beginner like me, just trying to find those images would be a challenge, living a village in the UK!

    I do think that your work is absolutely awesome, and I so admire your talent!

    1. It really is that easy, Lottie. I’ve made gluebooks using no magazines, and just whatever freebie ads were laying around in my hotel room. You just have to keep cutting and rearranging until it clicks.

      1. Thankyou so much for your inspiration. I will definitely give it a try following your advice. Very much appreciated

  2. As kids on wet school holidays ,mum gave us a stack of old mags,scissors and glue and told us to play .Last year I want back to glue booking due to ill health,I find it so relaxing and fun without having to have the brain in high gear.
    This post is has had me nodding my head with yes I totally agree ,Yell thats exactly it……

  3. What’s the best glue for paper to paper, if you want to do something high quality, nice? I notice a lot of the glues I use leave the paper wrinkled or bunched kind of. Thx

    1. There is no “best glue”. There’s only the glue that works best for you, and that’s something you have to find through trial and error.

      Those wrinkles are texture. Learn to embrace them.

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