How to Antique Paper

By: Diy maven Feb 02, 2007

I saw Martha "antique" paper a few years ago, and although I don’t remember her technique, I do remember that it was complicated. I played around with the general idea, though, and came up with an easy way to get the same aged look.

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What You Need

A piece of paper you want to age. (I used regular 24lb laser paper. Of course, print your poem, passage of writing, and etc. to the page before you attempt to antique it.)

1/4 cup of hot, black coffee. (Although I’ve only used coffee, I’m sure tea would work.)

A teaspoon or so of instant coffee. (I haven’t used fresh ground coffee or tea leaves, but they might work too.)

A baking sheet larger than the piece of paper you want to antique.

Sponge brush, or soft bristle brush.

Paper towels.

An oven.

What You Do

Pre-heat oven to lowest setting. For me it was 200 degrees.

Crumple up your piece of paper into a ball, then smooth it out and place in your baking sheet.

Pour hot coffee over your paper. Spread coffee over/around your paper with a sponge brush. (I puddled a little too much in the lower left corner in the picture below.)

Sprinkle instant coffee over your paper.

Let stand for a few minutes, letting the coffee crystals "blossom."

 

Using a couple of paper towels, dab the coffee up so none is pooled on the baking sheet or paper.

Slide sheet into oven. Keep a watch on your project just in case of flame ups.

"Bake" sheet for about five minutes or until paper is dry. You can tell it’s drying when the edges of the paper start to curl up.

What To Do With It

Frame your antiqued poem or passage for a great-looking piece of cheap art; or use it to make your sweetie a heart-felt Valentine. Antiqued paper also looks great as a backdrop for photographs, serving as recessed matting. (I’d only use copies of treasured photos for archival reasons, however.)

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Comments

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I used a jar of dried up instant coffee (way in the back of the cupboard) and it was perfect for this. While looking for something to hang the wet paper on (as suggested by the first commenter) I found a roll of screening. I rolled it out onto the picnic table on lanai put the papers down and "painted" them with the strong coffee. As I was doing it, I weakened the coffee some with water and ended up with 2 different strengths. I found that using the weak one in the center and the strong one on the edges gave me the look that I was looking for; it matched the paper that I had torn out of an old book, where the edges were more yellowed then the paper in the center.

Hmm ive been aging papers for years now. I usually make a large portion of strong coffee and then i just dip the papers in it for 5-10 sec and hangs them to dry.

If the ink runs when you get it wet, tryaging first and then print on it after the paper is dry.

i ve tryied to do this but it smears the words, so enoying

One of the easiest ways I have found to age paper is to First crumple paper then straighten back out. Second paint paper all over in a baking pan front and back with soy sauce (first paint a small corner if you think it is to dark then dilute with water). Third dab paper with a paper towel to get access sauce then put in 250 oven for a minute or two just watch. Fourth and final section is to burn a few areas around the edges of paper then take a damp paper towel and wipe the burned edges this will make a smoother edge. This by far is the easist way I have found and works great.

This worked great!  And it was quick and easy too.

Thanks for sharing. I will be doing it to my french newspaper for my next project. Hope it works!

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It makes things look very antique on paper Thanks :D

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works well

Hello Angela,

I just did a quick search on Google and found a website called zazzle.com. They have several different "antique" looking stationary paper sets. Hopefully you will find something there you like. Here is the exact link for the page with the stationary:

http://www.zazzle.com/antique+paper+stationery

Hope this helps!

Jennifer

Anyone know where I can just buy some paper that looks old? I would have to do over 350 sheets! Need them to print my wedding invitations, any ideas?

Thanks,

As for smudging ink...I found a great trick recently for mod podging ink jet printer images, and I wonder if it would work for this as well.  I spray a very light coat of clear spray paint over the top.  It completely seals the ink and doesn't smear at all, no matter how wet it gets.  I'm sure if you were to crinkle up the paper, then spray a light mist and allow to dry, you could then add the coffee and tea without smudging the ink.  You could test it first on another piece of paper.

Hello There!

I am just letting you know that I link to your tutorial at the end of an article I wrote on aging paper, on my blog. If you would like me to remove the link, I would be more than happy to!

Visit it here:
http://stormbloodcuriosities.blogspot.com/2011/09/aging-paper-goods-making-not-so-old.html


Mademoiselle Stormblood

Stormblood Curiosities
http://stormbloodcuriosity.etsy.com

If you would like you can also singe the edges of your paper, this isn't necessary but some people like the look. After you're finished you may notice the paper is a little too wrinkly if so touch it up with an iron on the dry, medium heat setting.
Some people use tea instead of coffee. Different teas will produce different effects. People sometimes use flavoured teas due to the aroma while baking. The paper on the left was made using orange spice tea while the paper on the right was made using peppermint. Have fun making your antique paper!

This websight could be very useful but it could be crossing the line for Fakes and forgers

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I think you so much for this idea I would of  never known what to do for ageing paper for ny projects.:] (hint:burn the edges for some more aged look.)

i love this idea, but i doubt it would work on this handwritten note my friend gave me, would it? she wrote an excerpt of Romeo and Juliet on the paper, but i think the ink will smudge. oh well, shall find something else to make antique :D 

I never thought of sprinkling instant coffee! What a great idea!

thanks man i need to write a book about romeo and juliet and this will make it lokk sweet as hell thanks a lot man.

We do this for our kids every now and then but with tea instead of coffee.  We take the paper, draw a pirate map on it, crinkle it up, rip a few corners and then antique it.  Voilà...authentic pirate treasure map for the kids to take on an advernture.  Sometimes we then laminate it so it lasts longer and holds up to rolling it up and unrolling it 20 times a minute.

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