Hi everyone, and welcome to my channel. Thank you for visiting me today! I am very excited to share my pressed flower journal with you 😍. I hope that I have designed the video so if you choose.
If you've ever wanted to keep track of the plants and flowers you collect, a herbarium journal is the perfect way. You can press, label, and arrange each specimen, turning your notebook into part science, part art. If you're wondering how to keep pressed flowers in a journal or scrapbook, then you'll love these ideas for your journal pages and ephemera.
Find and save ideas about how to make a flower journal on Pinterest. Creating a pressed flower journal is a beautiful and creative way to preserve nature's beauty while crafting a unique keepsake. The process combines both botanical art and journaling, making it an enjoyable activity for flower lovers and crafters alike.
Here's a step. Purchase a blank journal or assemble papers to make your own. Carefully lift the dried blossoms from the tissue with tweezers and adhere to the cover with an acid.
For garden flowers we write the year it was planted. I like adding relevant information in my journal as well including medicinal properties of the flower and where it originates from in history. Embrace the art of mindfulness with a DIY pressed flower journal, a perfect way to preserve nature's beauty while nurturing creativity.
This botanical journaling project combines elegant floral arrangements with meaningful reflections, making it an ideal stress-relief craft. Learn how to press flowers, arrange them artistically, and pair them with handwritten notes or watercolor accents. A pressed flower journal is a creative notebook where you combine journaling, scrapbooking, or art with the beauty of preserved botanicals.
It's a way to document memories, seasons, or nature finds by attaching dried flowers and leaves directly onto the pages. This blog is a gentle gathering of floral art journal pages - handpicked from across many different journals I've created over time. Each page holds its own mood and memory - sometimes soft and tender, sometimes wild and bursting with color.
I didn't set out to create a "floral journal," but over the months and years, these petals kept appearing.