
My daughters' artists books have become a place to express their thoughts, dreams, and creations.
The sites on this list are a selection of places and artists that will help to present altered books to young people. For the most part, the focus is to convey the basics of altered books to a younger audience, to get them excited about the format, and to say to the adults, “Yes, you can guide the kids on this creative journey.” As to the site or two that doesn’t fit into this category, I’ve included pages of artists’ work for examples, inspiration, and the “I can do that” response. Some altered books are masterpieces of engineering and extreme detail. Those art pieces are amazing, but not for this list. It’s more appropriate to highlight those works that look spontaneous, as though they came into being in a creative moment inspired by the soul. I love it when kids dive into the book that they are about to alter and as they proceed they are completely unaware of the chaotic environment of the library program, stopping only to share with the artist next to them about a newly discovered technique.
Altered Books
www.logolalia.com/alteredbooks/
The images of artwork on this site will help to eliminate any intimidation factor dealing with the altered book format. I really think that after viewing this page the first thing you will want to do is grab the nearest discarded book to alter. Just go with the impulse.
art-e-zine
www.art-e-zine.co.uk/
This page will work well for teens who appreciate a more edgy look. Artists share their work, ideas, resources, and free images.
Creativity Portal
www.creativity-portal.com/howto/artscrafts/altered.books.html
This site is exactly what its name implies. You’ll have links to tutorials, ideas, examples and more!
Incredible@rtDepartment
www.princetonol.com/groups/iad/lessons/middle/Linda-books.htm
Jump in and plan to stay a while to explore ideas, formats, supplies, resources, advice, and if you like standards and rubrics, they are there too.
Jenny’s Altered Books
www.jennysartspace.com/alteredbooks/
This site show’s the artist’s work (including her first attempt at altering), shares her favorite books on the topic, and has a brief how-to on getting started.
Karen’s Whimsy
http://karenswhimsy.com/altered-books/
There is quite a bit to explore on Karen’s site: altered books, collage, her thoughts about the creative process, and something we all love, public domain images.
Lemura Writing Sanctuary
Shoe-string Publishing
www.dailywriting.net/Renovate.htm
Given the current economic situation affecting our libraries, this is very appropriate and inspiring.
Rosemont Ridge Art Classroom Studio – Linda Kieling
www.rrms.wlwv.k12.or.us/kielingl/Altered_Books/index.htm
This ward-winning lesson plan has a multitude of basic and well-organized material. Also, check out the rest of this site for other information and resources about altered books for kids.

BOOKS
Altered Book Collage by Barbara Matthiessen
Altered Book Scrapbook by Susan Ure
Altered Books Workshop by Bev Brazelton
Altered Books, Collaborative Journals, and Other Adventures in Bookmaking by Holly Harrison
AlterThis! Radical Ideas for Transforming Books into Art by Alena Hennessy
Art of Fabric Books: Innovative Ways to Use Fabrics in Scrapbooks, Altered Books and More by Jane Bode Smiley
Artists’ Journals and Sketchbooks: Exploring and Creating Personal Pages by Lynne Perella
The Decorated Page: Journals, Scrapbooks & Albums Made Simply Beautiful by Gwen Diehn
The Decorated Journal: Creating Beautifully Expressive Journal Pages by Gwen Diehn
Montage Memories: Creating Altered Scrapbook Pages by Erika Ghum & Pamela Frye
Paint on Paper: Over 130 Quick and Easy Techniques to Decorate Paper by Angie Franke and Monique Day-Wilde
Pockets, Pullouts, and Hiding Places: Interactive Elements for Altered Books, Memory Art and Collage by Jenn Mason
New Directions in Altered Books by Gabe Cyr She has a wonderful section, pages 126 – 129, on “Working with Kids.” There’s a great quote from Gabe Cyr, “What they don’t need from you are any rules for making art.”
True Vision: Authentic Art Journaling by L.K. Ludwig

Also, for inspiration on creating journal pages check out the inaugural issue of Art Journaling by Somerset Studios.
If you have any favorite sites that you think are missing from this list, I would love to here from you! I will update resources as I come across new finds and treasures.

















