Visitor logs, briefing registrations, etc. require flashing. This makes it impossible to exclude pages from them and add new ones. After flashing, the magazine is sealed.
It is necessary
- - needle;
- - awl;
- - thick white thread;
- - paper;
- - glue;
- - scissors;
- - a fountain pen.
Instructions
Step 1
Begin sewing the magazine by piercing two holes with an awl near the seam. The holes should be so close to the seam that the thread does not interfere with opening the magazine. Which pages to stitch depends on whether there is a form for entering information on the last page of the magazine itself (not the cover). If there is one, pierce all pages except the last page of the cover. If not, pierce the entire magazine, including the last page of the cover. The first page of the cover must be punctured anyway. The distance between the holes should be about two centimeters.
Step 2
If there is no form for entering information on the last page of the magazine (not the cover), write the information about the magazine (which one, the management of your organization will tell you) in pen on the last page of the cover. If there is a form, enter this information into it. Put in a date. The form must also be signed by the person responsible for keeping the journal.
Step 3
Pass the thread through the needle, and then pull it first through one hole from the last page of the magazine or cover (depending on where the form is) to the first page of the cover, and then through the second hole back. On the back page of a magazine or cover, pull the thread in a knot. Cut it so that after the knot there are approximately the same ends of the thread a few centimeters long.
Step 4
Cut a square out of the paper with a side of about two centimeters. Stick it so that it does not obstruct either the form or other information, covering both threads with it. Both the threads going to the knot and their free ends should look outward. Now put on the square the seal that the organization's leadership requires to put, so that part of it is on the square, and part of it is on the page itself outside this square. The magazine is now ready to use.