Monday, August 31, 2015

Tools: Folding Basics

One of the most fundamental of card-making tools is the bone folder. This handy tool allows you to fold even 120# card stock without it looking like a kindergartner folded a piece of construction paper against the grain and awkwardly pressed the crease.

My apologies if I offended any kindergartners.

Anyway, paper is made of fibers that, in the case of machine-made paper, generally line up either parallel to the short or long edge of the paper. That is called the grain. If you fold paper against the grain, it will look terrible...all crinkly and weird...unless you score the paper first with a bone folder and then smooth the crease with the bone folder.

Then, it looks just fine.

If the paper is thick, even folding with the grain looks better when you've scored.

So you need a bone folder.


Teflon folding tool, plastic folding tool,
 and a butter knife.
Most bone folders these days are not actually made of bone...but back in the good ol' days, they were made of real bone so the name stuck. You can find plastic bone folders like the middle one above that are very affordable at roughly $5, but that would, in my experience, be a waste of $5.

The best bone folders are made of Teflon and will cost you around $23. Given that you will use this tool on every single card you make, it's worth every penny.

Bone folders have two primary purposes.

1) Bone folders will SCORE paper, leaving an indentation that breaks down fibers and allows easy folding. You can score by running the bone folder over the paper using a ruler as a guide, or you can use a specially designed, grooved plastic panel such as the Scor-Pal (see picture below). Now, you don't really need a Scor-Pal (who am I kidding...of course you need one).

This is the older version I own.
The bone folder that comes with it is plastic and useless,
 and you should throw it away. The Scor-Pal itself is fabby though.
Basic scoring can very cheaply and easily be accomplished with a butter knife and ruler. I did this for several years when I was getting started. Occasionally, if I'm scoring really, really thick paper, I'll score first with my teflon folder and then go over the score again with the butter knife to break down the paper fibers even more. Also, I used the butter knife for scoring the vellum panel on this card. They are handy for sharp scores, and generally, everyone has one in their kitchen that hardly ever gets used. Why not put it with your craft tools instead?

2) Bone folders will also BURNISH paper. Burnishing smooths folded paper flat (especially important with the heavy card stock I use), and burnishing also bonds glued paper to mat board (generally only applicable for book binding). Now, here's why you need to buy a Teflon folder rather than a plastic one: plastic folders leave unsightly shiny marks on paper after burnishing. 

What is a crafter to do??!? Well, you could put a piece of waxed paper over the paper and burnish through that, or you could burnish the back of the card so the shiny bits won't really show. I did both of these things for years. Or you could spare yourself the anguish and inconvenience and buy a Teflon bone folder

And if you don't trust me, perhaps you should know that I first learned about Teflon bone folders from Her Royal Rubberness Julie Ebersole herself. Seriously, they are amazing.

Butter knives are not suitable for burnishing because the edges are too sharp.

The bottom line: For picky stampers, I highly recommend a Teflon folder and some sort of scoring board (I use the Scor-Pal, but others look basically the same). I use these two tools every single time I make a card.

Every.

Single.

Time.


7 comments:

  1. I never knew about a teflon bone folder... must have one! Always wondered how to avoid the shiny marks when I burnished with my plastic bone folder... thanks for the info!

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  2. I also never knew about the teflon folder. now I know I will get myself one. I use very heavy card stock for the base of my cards 300gsm (not sure what that is in your weights) but trust me its thick and loves to crack. I am off to order my teflon bone folder and grab a bread knife out of the draw. See I told you your hints are always needed.

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  3. I also never knew about the teflon folder. now I know I will get myself one. I use very heavy card stock for the base of my cards 300gsm (not sure what that is in your weights) but trust me its thick and loves to crack. I am off to order my teflon bone folder and grab a bread knife out of the draw. See I told you your hints are always needed.

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  4. Thanks for the lesson Susan - so glad I popped over from your Facebook post. I have held off from getting a Teflon bone folder thinking it was not that much different from my plastic one. Guess I need to go shopping now!

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  5. It is so fun to learn something new :) -- there is even a DUH moment in this - butter knife? HA! Never-would-of-thunk.

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  6. Have wanted a Teflon folder forever but was too cheap to let loose and buy one. But hey, with as much factual support as you've provided, no one could hold out against the purchase! Thanks for the kick in the pants.

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  7. It took me a while, but I got the Teflon bone folder, and I've never gone back to the plastic ones. I even have a bazillion of them from being an SU demo; they're in a box somewhere.

    Also, may I suggest the mini Martha Stewart score board? It's small enough to fit on a desk. I got mine to take to crafty play dates and I've never gone back to my full-sized one. The score tool on mine is washi-taped to the board, and I use my Teflon bone folder with it. On every. single. card.

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Thank you so much for taking time to comment!