![]() where they still use the old-school Manila folders, every few months/years some of those generally get thrown out because they're no longer in date and you can save up a stash of them quite easily. ![]() That said, crinkling up construction paper results in durable "parchment" that can be rolled, glued to just about anything (so easy scrolls etc.), can be drawn on easily afterwards and you can even print on it first before crumpling it! In terms of time and effort it's a bit more intensive than the alternatives, but you can do a few sheets at once to speed things up and then weigh a whole pile down at once for flattening to further bring out the texturing (thicker ridges in one sheet can emboss onto the sheet below, meaning you get both raised and debossed texturing!)Īs an added bonus: if you know someone who works in an office/school/etc. I've done a heap of variations on coffee-staining, charring/toasting and otherwise discolouring paper all of them are time-consuming and have potentially catastrophic "breaking points" (coffee-soaked paper becomes irresistible to cockroaches etc. making it very hard to store for later, and can easily tear while being made toasted paper becomes brittle and crumbles to dust over time.) Then get some water on your hand and sprinkle a few drops on the page to look like stains. Use tan construction paper and crumple it slowly and for a long time. ![]()
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