How to Make Books for the Grandkids
Looking back over five years of blogging, I can add more input to previous posts with the advantage of hindsight and experience.
So today, I’m revisiting the time I made board books when the grandkids were babies.

In this revised version, I’ve come up with two less-expensive options for making these books and provided more details about images to collect.
You’ll need cardboard, photographs, clear adhesive film, and binder rings to complete this satisfying, DIY project.
Check out the updated story HERE.
Benefits of a Board Book
A board book, customized with images of the child’s favorite people and things, is a good way to introduce a toddler to the concept of books. Book pages that are easy to manipulate and simple words to identify each familiar image, sets a child on the path to reading. And best of all, it’s handmade by grandma with love!

We all know that reading to your child offers many benefits, such as developing language skills, enhancing receptivity to learning, and building empathy. Learn about more benefits from Child Mind Institute.
Other “Call Me Grandma!” Book Ideas
In our family, we all love reading. We must have hundreds of books collected over half a century–art books, culinary books, history books, novels, classics, biographies–as well as e-books and audio books. We also make good use of our local libraries, borrowing books in person and electronically.
So, at “Call Me Grandma!” I’ve created a few other projects around books with–or for–the grandkids.
Books to Create with your Grandkids
- Make cut-and-paste books to encourage grandkids as young as three, to create their own stories. We start with a wide collection of magazine images that kids can examine. They are encouraged to order these images to tell a cohesive story. These simple books challenge kids to use their imagination and make logical connections from one image to the next.

- We created more complicated books with typed stories to prepare Little N for kindergarten.

Books to Create for your Grandkids
- I crafted a felt book for Miss T to pack on her first overseas trip as a toddler to entertain her on the long plane ride. The felt images are traced from cookie cutters. Velcro enables the images to adhere to the felt book.

- Make a book to preserve family stories. For example, Steve and I have collected Christmas ornaments over more than 50 years, and quite a few have stories about their acquisitions. I took photos of the ornaments and documented their origins in a book of ornaments using Snapfish.

- Make a binder of your holiday traditions and related recipes. I made one for each of my sons 15 or 20 years ago. It’s a low-tech project using basic, three-ring office binders. These binders include photos from Christmases past to illustrate the narrative.

Still to Do: a Book on Grandma Style
Miss T and I had a talk when she was six about why I want to make everything beautiful. I’ve always thought that one day, I would produce a bound photo book of my table settings and household decorations through the years, as a legacy to inspire them to create beauty.
I’ll use Google Photo Books or another such photo book service. I have the name for it already: “Grandma Style!”
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