Cheree Heppe here:

This hollow book idea could be used for a number of creative purposes.  The 
outline on how one IPad user made a personalized IPad case from a used book is 
below.

 I think we could manage this pretty well with a bit of attention to details.

 

‘iBook’ project

. As I mentioned, I documented the process and now I’m here to post the guide in

case anyone else is interested in making their very own. There is definitely 
more

than one way to make a book safe, and if you have more appropriate tools, feel 
free

to improvise. The methods I selected were based on low cost and simplicity and 
will

at lease give you a good idea of the process. Let’s get started.

 

Project cost: approx. $10

Project time: this project can be completed in a single day, but you’ll 
definitely

want to set aside a large chunk of time for page cutting (might want to grab 
your

headphones for some music!)

 

Required materials:

A fitting book

Precision knife (Xacto, packaging knife, etc.)

Rubber cement

Scotch tape

Pencil

Patience (quite a bit of it)

 

Tips for book selection:

Local bookstores (or thrift shops) are likely to have very inexpensive used 
books. The one I used was $2. I bought three books of varying sizes to be sure 
I got the fit I wanted. I used one book as a practice first before doing the 
final one (lots of cutting!). I took

my iPad to the store to size up several books.

 

Things you want to look for in the book –

depth

, be sure that there are enough pages in the book that your iPad will fit all 
the

way in. This is probably the toughest part of the selection process because it 
can

be hard to judge. You may wish to measure how high your iPad stands off of a 
flat

surface before going to the book store, then find a book with page width that is

equally or slightly deeper than the measured value. Be sure that the book has 
enough padding around your iPad. That is, make sure that when you cut out the 
shape, the resulting thickness of the pages is enough to support your iPad and 
withstand a fairly intensive cutting process. You don’t want to try cutting the 
shape out with, say, 0.2” of padding, you’ll likely rip some pages during the 
process. There is about 0.75” of padding

in my final iBook.

 

Steps

1.

Remove the cover of the book (if it has one) and center the iPad face-down 
inside

the cover. (I am not clear here whether this author means to take the cover 
totally off, or fold it out of the way.  Since I prefer the cover on, I would 
opt to fold instead of remove.)

 

Use the pencil to trace an outline, you should hold the pencil perpendicular

to the paper so that the side of the pencil pushes against the side of the iPad 
as

you trace. The distance from the side of the pencil/iPad to the tip leaves a 
good

buffer in your outline and subsequent cut to ensure a good fit. If you cut it a 
little

too big you can always add spacers to increase the tightness, but if you cut it 
too

small, you’ll have a hard time figuring out how to re-cut all of the pages…. 
(Note

that the volume rocker and hold switch will be on the opposite side when the 
iPad

is face-up in the finished product, cutting around them specifically would be 
too

tedious, this is what the buffer is for.)

 

2.

You want your first several cuts to follow the rounded shape of the iPad’s 
corners.

I’d recommend cutting the rounded corners for 10-20 pages. After that you’ll be 
cutting

square corners (much easier!), but the top pages will give it a round corner 
look,

which will give a more custom-fit appearance. Use your knife to begin cutting on

your outline. I pressed very firmly with my knife to cut through several pages 
at

once, then pulled them out until I needed to cut again (early enough that I 
could

still see previous cut marks and knew where to cut). Finding the right number of

pages to cut through and pull out before making more cuts its probably the most 
challenging

part of this project. Just make your cuts carefully and eventually you’ll get 
into

a rhythm. Don’t forget to square your corners after the first 10 or 20 pages and

continue to cut them that way. Square corners are much easier to cut than the 
rounded ones. I used a paper clip to keep part of the cut

pages closest to the binding out of my way while I continued to cut. They don’t 
like

to fold back with the rest of the page because most of their support has been 
cut out!

 

3.

While cutting, do occasional test fits to ensure that the cuts are coming out 
properly.

If you aren’t through too many pages, put the iPad in face-down to get the best 
idea

of how it will fit (the rounded back makes this deceiving when it is face-up and

you don’t yet have a lot of depth.) Finding that you are having fitting problems

would be much better in the first 30 pages then after 200 cuts! As long as you 
were

careful with your outline (and added an appropriate buffer) and keep the cuts 
consistent,

you shouldn’t have an issue.

 

One thing to look out for. The more pages you cut and

fold back, the further the subsequent pages will be pulled toward the binding 
(slowly

misaligning the top cut from each one underneath). If you don’t correct for 
this,

your page cuts will have a distinct diagonal shape on the left and right. You 
can

adjust for this by slowly moving your cuts to the right to keep them in the same

relative position as the first cut (be sure to do this on the left and right 
sides

of the cut.)

 

4.

Once you’ve cut deep enough to fully fit the iPad, you are going to use your 
tape

to hold the pages in their closed-book positions. The first thing you want to do

is to hold the cover of the book at a 90 degree angle (or prop it against 
something)

while you use scotch take to make small wraps around the pages. In the picture 
above,

I colored on the tape with sharpie so it could be easily seen. I picked up the 
whole

of the pages and slid a piece of scotch under them to begin, then set them down 
and

wrapped it around the outside to the top (do this for each piece of tape 
applied.)

I folded the tape back on itself at the end to make a non-sticky tab that I 
could

use to grip to remove the tape easily.

 

5.

When you are satisfied with the way the pages are being held, flip open the back

cover and apply rubber cement to the back of the very last page (yes, over top 
of

the tape). Once it is covered all the way around, close the back cover, flip the

book over, and open the front cover. Begin applying rubber cement quite 
liberally

around the inside surface of the page cuts. Close the cover and rest some 
weights

on top of the book for at least an hour while it dries. When you return, remove 
the

tape (it’s glued in the bottom cover, you can cut it, or it’ll rip pretty 
easily.)

 

6.

Once the back cover and inside has been glued, flip the book face-down and slide

a piece of paper or two between the block of pages and the front cover of the 
book

to protect the cover and create a shelf for the rubber cement to rest on while 
you

glue around the outside of the page block. Don’t worry about getting glue 
against

the back cover as its already glued down to the pages!

 

7.

Once you’ve got it all glued up you should rest some weight (other books work 
well)

on top of it to keep everything firmly pressed down as the adhesive dries. After

a few hours of drying you can remove the weights and open up the front cover to 
allow

the inside adhesive to air out and dry. Depending on how tightly your fit turned

out, you may choose to add the bookmark/tab piece to assist in removing it from 
the

case.

 

8.

Enjoy your iBook case.

 

 

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