How To Make A Flag Book

The outer fourths are the covers and the center half (two fourths) becomes the accordion spine of your flag book. Now begin to make your accordion spine by folding the center half into "mountain" folds. I've made two mountains here. Now I've taken one of those mountains and divided it into two smaller mountains.
I did have to turn some folds the opposite way from their original folds. My goal here is to turn that entire center half into four mountains of the same size. Now I'm done. I've got my two covers on the sides and four equal mountains in the middle. I've completed folding the base for the flag book.
Here is the base from a top view. And this is what it looks like closed. Here I hold it at a slightly different angle to show you the accordion folds inside. Since the base of the flag book is complete, let's move to the flags! Use the measurements of a cover (one of those original fourths we first folded our paper into) to determine the size of your flags.
You need to cut four pieces of paper because in this example we have four mountains. Cut them slightly smaller than the cover measurement -- 1 cm smaller in width and length is about right. For my tutorial, I chose to use two colors of paper to make the flags stand out.
Now cut your papers in half so that you've got eight flags. Four mountains need eight flags. Here's a layout of all the pieces of our flag book. We've got a base folded with an accordion spine and eight flags --four for the top and four for the bottom. Here is another very important photo.
Study this. Maybe even mark your flag book like this. The marks won't show because you'll be affixing the flags on those areas. I wrote L for left and R for right. I look pretty silly, don't I, writing LEFT on the right side of the mountain, I'm going to start with my bottom flags that point to the right.
I simply affix a flag to the left side of each mountain fold on my Rs. Be sure to keep them all lined up neatly. We are using Elmer's Glue here, but we've used rubber cement or double sided tape with equal success. Choose whatever adhesive you like best. Now that my bottom row of pink flags are done, I can move on to my top row of blue flags. The procedure is the same, but attach them to the other side of each mountain fold.
Here is the completed book, closed. And here it is if I open the cover without pulling out the spine. Stretch it all the way out! Our flag book is complete. If you'd like some printable directions, try these flag book directions in PDF. If my directions left some gaps for you, try these other sites with photo directions --Scrapbook Crazy, Explosion Book and My Studio.
In preparing for our upcoming school year, I made several blank books and simply store them until we need them. Making Books That Fly, Fold, Wrap, Hide, Pop Up, Twist it's a great book. No, but I will now! No, I don't care for it. See results Your comments, questions, and relevant links are welcome.