1 First of all, we should prepare material paper, and be careful not to choose too thick and too hard, just ordinary forest paper, sulfuric acid paper, lace paper, post-it notes and so on. Here, we can also use Sydney paper and fiber paper to package flowers, while hard paper is used for the cover to protect the inner pages.
2. Tear off this page by hand. Tear the selected material paper into a rectangular piece of paper with the same size as the inside page of the bean book. Since it is torn by hand, there is no need to insist on neat edges and the same size. It is definitely impossible. What matters is this original ecological beauty.
3. Make the spine of the book with rope. Find an ordinary rope, punch three holes in the middle of the aligned paper with a pencil sharpener, and directly pass through the rope from the inside.
4. Collage is the same as ordinary collage. Just paste things directly on this adzuki bean book, as long as you pay attention to composition and scene design. After all, the size is limited and there is not much room for play. It is usually used for salt collage.
Handwritten accounts originating in Japan are written as "Handwritten Accounts" (Handwritten Accounts てちょぅ), which means notebooks for taking notes. In Japan, most people carry a notebook called "Manual" with them.
Take it out anytime, anywhere, or write something on it. The handbook can not only remind your family and friends of their birthdays and appointments, but also arrange your daily work. Many people think they are short diaries.
Manual culture
In Japan, men, women and children will carry hand accounts with them and take them out anytime and anywhere to check and record them. Manuals are indispensable daily necessities for Japanese people. They not only have the function of memos, but also are important tools for planning life. Most of the manuals are beautifully made, and different pages have super sorting function to meet different needs such as work, study, life and travel.
But in fact, people in ancient China had the habit of keeping handwritten accounts, which was called "handwritten books". As the saying goes, "a good memory is not as good as a bad pen." Later, the Japanese called this China tradition "handwritten account" and carried it forward, forming Japanese culture.