Make and bind a colorful flag book using paper, scissors, glue, and tape. Attach flip out flags to tell stories and explore patterns.


Step-by-step guide to make and bind a colorful flag book
Step 1
Gather all the materials from the list and find a clean workspace.
Step 2
Use the ruler and pencil to draw a long rectangle on the plain paper about 28 cm by 10 cm.
Step 3
Cut the rectangle out along your pencil lines to make one long strip.
Step 4
Fold the long strip accordion-style into six equal panels by folding back and forth.
Step 5
Cut six small rectangular flags from the colored paper about half the width of one panel.
Step 6
Fold each colored rectangle in half lengthwise so each becomes a little tabbed flag.
Step 7
Put glue on the folded edge of each flag and press each flag onto alternating panels so the flags stick out and can flip.
Step 8
Secure the glued edges with small pieces of clear tape where the flag meets the panel.
Step 9
Cut two cover pieces from colored paper or cardstock slightly larger than one panel.
Step 10
Attach the front cover to the first panel and the back cover to the last panel with glue or tape.
Step 11
Draw pictures or write a short sentence on each flag to tell a story or show a pattern.
Step 12
Fan the book open and make sure every flag flips out smoothly.
Step 13
Share your finished flag book creation on DIY.org
Final steps
You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!

Help!?
What can I use if I don't have clear tape, glue, or cardstock?
Use double-sided tape or a stapler to attach flags and covers, a glue stick or folded washi tape on the folded flag edges, and recycled cereal box or construction paper cut slightly larger than one panel for covers.
My accordion panels aren't even and the flags don't flip smoothly—how can I fix that?
Measure and mark the 28 cm strip into six equal panels (about 4.7 cm each), fold along the ruler for crisp accordion creases, and use less glue or place only small pieces of tape at the folded edge per the 'Secure the glued edges with small pieces of clear tape' step so each flag can flip freely.
How can I adapt this activity for different ages?
For younger children have an adult pre-cut the 28 cm by 10 cm strip and the six small colored flags and let them decorate with stickers, while older kids can increase the number of panels, use cardstock covers, write full sentences on each flag, or stitch the spine for durability.
How can we extend or personalize the finished flag book?
Before you 'Attach the front cover to the first panel,' personalize by laminating covers, punching holes and tying ribbon along the spine, adding photos or small glued objects to flags, or color-coding flags to create a sequence-based story.
Watch videos on how to make and bind a colorful flag book
Facts about bookbinding for kids
✂️ A flag book's flipping flags are usually glued to the folded spine so they peek out like tiny banners when you turn pages.
🎭 Flag books are perfect for storytelling — each flag can hide a short scene, character, or secret message.
🏷️ Hedi Kyle invented the "flag book" structure in the 1970s — it's now a classic papercraft technique.
🎨 Repeating patterns and bright colors make the flags look like animation when they flip in sequence.
📐 You can make a simple flag book with just paper, scissors, glue, and tape — no special tools required!


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