The scrapbooking craze is spinning off into a different phenomenon if you judge this year's books by their covers. Decorating with paper — whether it's hand-dyed lokta harvested from shrubs in Nepal or your standard white copy-machine variety — is definitely an emerging category.
"Home, Paper, Scissors" by Patricia Zapata (Potter Craft, $20) shows readers how to use all sorts of paper and a few simple tools to alter mere sheets into light fixtures, clocks, mobiles, table runners and picture frames. The Houston-area graphic designer and blogger even uses a black and white page ripped from a phone book to make a keepsake box.
"I've been playing with paper since I was a kid," Zapata said in a phone interview. "I'd get excited by new notebooks when school started. When scrapbooking came around, I loved all the papers, but I wasn't into scrapbooking."
Zapata's projects detailed in the book and on her site, ALittleHut.com, contain clean lines similar to modern architecture (not the embellished look of Victorian-style decoupage). She's used scraps from her paper shredder, including junk mail and billing statements, to make nesting bowls as catchalls for keys and mail in her home.
"People have this preconceived idea that paper is very fragile, but it can be very sturdy and durable," Zapata said. "Especially when you use layers upon layers."
Zapata often uses recycled white and brown kraft papers. She sees paper, which extends to cardboard, used for furniture.
"My brother made an awesome side table with a rolled up sheet of cardboard that's quilled," she said. "He used tack nails to seal it and put a piece of glass on top. It looks so nice."
Zapata thinks people are turning to paper in decor not only because it's everywhere but also because it's inexpensive. When Nicole Parigo of Lexington, Mo., was decorating her infant daughter's nursery earlier this year, she found a pad of 12-by-12-inch scrapbooking paper by designer Amy Butler for $10.29 at Urban Arts and Crafts in Kansas City, Mo.
"The original idea was to frame the paper," said Parigo, a photographer who runs Parigo Studios in Kansas City, with her husband, Brandon. "But the paper looked great on its own."
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