What Is Craft Paper and How to Use It
What Is Craft Paper and How to Use It
Craft paper is one of those supplies that feels simple… until you realize it can do everything. Cards, scrapbooks, journals, gift wrap, paper flowers, DIY home decor — the right paper can make your project look polished without adding extra tools.
In this guide, we’ll break down what “craft paper” actually means, the most common types (and what they’re best for), and how to choose paper that behaves the way you want.
Table of Content
✨ What Is Craft Paper? 📄 Different Types of Craft Paper 1) Cardstock (The Craft Room Staple) 2) Scrapbook & Patterned Paper 3) Construction Paper 4) Kraft Paper 5) Tissue Paper 6) Watercolor Paper 7) Specialty Papers (Vellum, Origami, Crepe) ✅ How to Use Craft Paper Effectively 💡 Project Inspiration by Paper Type 📚 Related WondersArtist Guides 🎁 Free Clipart Sampler 💎 All Access Membership✨ What Is Craft Paper?
Craft paper is a catch-all term for paper types commonly used in arts and crafts because they’re easy to cut, fold, glue, layer, stamp, and decorate. “Craft paper” can mean cardstock, scrapbook paper, kraft paper, watercolor paper, vellum, and more.
The key difference between craft paper and regular printer paper is usually durability — craft paper is often thicker, sturdier, or designed for a specific technique (like watercolor).
📄 Different Types of Craft Paper
Here are the most common craft papers you’ll see in cardmaking, scrapbooking, journaling, and DIY projects — plus what each one is best at.
1) Cardstock (The Craft Room Staple)
Cardstock is the foundation of most papercrafting. It’s thicker than printer paper, strong enough for card bases, and it holds up better under inks, stamps, die-cutting, and layering.
Why crafters love it
- Great “blank canvas” for stamping, stenciling, and ink blending
- Strong enough for cards, tags, and scrapbook bases
- Easy to cut, fold, and layer without tearing
Quick cardstock ideas
- Die-cut florals and stack for dimension
- Use colored cardstock as a “frame layer” behind a simple design
- Create clean gift tags with a punch + ribbon
2) Scrapbook & Patterned Paper
Patterned paper (often called scrapbook paper or designer paper) is typically sturdier than printer paper but lighter than cardstock. It’s perfect when you want instant color and pattern.
Tips that make scrapbook paper easier
- Choose double-sided pads if you like layered looks and coordinated backs.
- Use patterned paper as both backgrounds and embellishments (fussy cut motifs, frames, banners).
- Save scraps — small pieces make perfect label mats and clusters.
3) Construction Paper
Construction paper is a budget-friendly, kid-friendly paper with a slightly rough texture and bold color. It’s fun for quick crafts, but it’s not ideal for heirloom projects because colors can fade over time.
Best uses
- Kids’ crafts and classroom projects
- Simple cut-and-glue shapes
- Practice projects (before using your “nice” paper)
4) Kraft Paper
Kraft paper is that earthy brown paper you’ve seen in bags, wrapping, and rustic crafts. It adds instant “warm, natural” vibes and looks gorgeous with white ink, embossing, or bright colors on top.
Great for
- Rustic cards and scrapbook pages
- Gift wrap, belly bands, and labels
- DIY boxes and paper flowers
5) Tissue Paper
Tissue paper is ultra-thin and delicate (think gift bag tissue — not bathroom tissue). It’s perfect for soft layers, pom-poms, party decor, and lightweight paper flowers.
Easy tissue paper projects
- Pom-poms, tassels, and party garlands
- Gift bag stuffing and decorative layers
- Lightweight flower petals
6) Watercolor Paper
Watercolor paper is designed to handle water without warping. It’s thicker and has more texture (“tooth”) so paint grips and blends beautifully.
Three common types
- Hot-pressed: smoother surface for detail work
- Cold-pressed: medium texture for general watercoloring
- Rough: lots of texture for expressive washes
7) Specialty Papers (Vellum, Origami, Crepe)
Vellum
Vellum is semi-transparent and instantly makes projects feel elegant. It’s perfect for overlays, soft layers, and “fancy” sentiments.
Origami paper
Origami paper is thin and made for folding. It holds crisp creases and often has color or pattern on one side.
Crepe paper
Crepe paper is thicker than tissue and has a wrinkled texture — great for realistic paper flowers, streamers, and party decor.
✅ How to Use Craft Paper Effectively
The secret to “paper projects that look clean” isn’t talent — it’s matching the paper to the technique.
Choosing the right paper
- Lots of ink blending? Smooth cardstock.
- Watercolor or wet media? Watercolor paper.
- Instant pattern? Scrapbook paper.
- Rustic + warm? Kraft paper.
- Elegant overlays? Vellum.
Basic tools that cover most projects
- Scissors or paper trimmer
- Glue tape or tape runner + liquid glue for tiny bits
- Bone folder (or an old gift card) for crisp folds
- Optional: die-cut machine for fast shapes
Paper handling tricks that help immediately
- Cut first, then ink when possible (cleaner edges).
- Score before folding for smoother card bases.
- Use the right adhesive: liquid glue for intricate die-cuts, tape runner for big layers.
💡 Project Inspiration by Paper Type
Cardstock
- Layered die-cuts for dimension
- Clean card bases and panels
- DIY bookmarks and gift tags
Scrapbook paper
- Quick backgrounds and borders
- Cut-out motifs used as embellishments
- DIY “patterned” envelopes and liners
Kraft paper
- White-ink stamped florals
- Rustic tags and packaging
- Simple gift wrap belly bands
Watercolor paper
- Loose watercolor florals
- Hand-painted backgrounds
- Custom painted panels for die-cutting
Vellum
- Soft overlays on bold backgrounds
- Elegant sentiment strips
- Translucent tags and wraps
📚 Related WondersArtist Guides
- The Ultimate Guide to Cardstock Paper & Craft Paper
- Quick & Easy Guide to Cardstock Sizes & Paper Weights
- Cardstock Paper: Types of Cardstock & Easy Cardstock Crafts
🎁 Free Clipart Sampler
If you want printable art you can use on different craft papers (cardstock, watercolor, vellum layers), a free sampler is waiting for you.
Sign up below and the sampler will arrive gently in your inbox, ready for cards, tags, journals, and cozy paper crafts 💌
💎 All Access Membership
All Access Membership gives you a whole library of artwork to print on craft paper and turn into finished handmade projects.
- ✨ Unlimited access to clipart, digital papers, journaling pages, and cardmaking kits
- 🧺 New releases included while the membership is active
- ⚡ Instant downloads with clear, friendly licensing
- 🔁 Perpetual rights for everything downloaded during your active time
🌷 Final Thoughts
Craft paper is the easiest way to make projects feel intentional — because the right paper does half the design work for you. Start with a dependable smooth cardstock, add patterned paper for instant backgrounds, and keep kraft + watercolor paper nearby for texture and special techniques. Then experiment and let your supplies guide your creativity.