How to Organize Ephemera for Easy Junk Journaling
💛 Introduction
Ephemera is the heart of junk journaling — little bits of tickets, packaging, postcards, die-cuts, printable pieces, and lace that tell a story on your pages. The only problem is that all those beautiful scraps multiply fast. One day you have a tidy box… the next day your desk is buried under paper avalanches.
So the big question becomes: “How do I organize ephemera so I can actually find it, instead of losing it in a pile?”
This guide walks through simple, real-life ways to organize ephemera for journals — without needing a giant craft room or a label-maker obsession. We’ll keep things gentle and practical, so your stash becomes a cozy little library you love to pull from.
Table of Content
✨ Quick Overview 🧺 Step 1 – Quick Declutter & “Love Pile” Sort 🎨 Step 2 – Choose a Simple Sorting Style 📂 Step 3 – Storage Ideas That Actually Work 🧺 Working Trays & Grab-and-Go Bins 🚗 Small Space & Travel-Friendly Setups 🧾 Storing Printable Ephemera & Fussy Cuts 🌱 Simple Maintenance Routine 💖 Final Thoughts 🎁 Free Clipart Sampler 💎 All Access Membership✨ Quick Overview
Here’s the short version of this whole article:
- Sort once using a very simple system (by theme, color, or type).
- Use clear containers or pockets so you can see what you own at a glance.
- Keep a tiny “working stash” next to you just for your current journal or project.
Everything else is just finding containers that fit your space, budget, and crafting style.
🧺 Step 1 – Quick Declutter & “Love Pile” Sort
Before you buy a single box, give yourself 15–30 minutes for a gentle declutter. Nothing extreme — just clearing obvious clutter so the good pieces have room.
- Spread your ephemera out on a table or bed.
- Make three piles: Love, Maybe, and Let Go.
- Love = pieces that make you smile instantly. These deserve easy access.
- Maybe = things you kind of like but aren’t sure about. These can live in a less-reachable box.
- Let Go = torn in the wrong place, badly printed, duplicates you’ll never use, colors you truly dislike. Recycle, donate, or share with another crafter.
You don’t have to be ruthless. Just make enough space that your storage will hold what you actually want to reach for.
🎨 Step 2 – Choose a Simple Sorting Style
Next, pick one main way to sort your ephemera. This is what stops decision fatigue every time you clean up.
Option A – Sort by Theme
Perfect if you craft seasonally or in story “chapters”:
- Spring • Summer • Autumn • Winter
- Florals • Nature • Vintage • Travel • Kids
- Holidays (Christmas, Halloween, Valentine’s, Easter)
- Words & quotes • Numbers • Tickets & labels
Option B – Sort by Color
Lovely if you love color-coordinated spreads:
- Neutrals
- Pinks & Reds
- Blues & Aquas
- Greens
- Yellows & Oranges
- Purple & Mauve
Option C – Sort by Type
Great if you use a mix of found pieces, printables, and packaged ephemera:
- Fussy cuts & die-cuts
- Tags & journaling cards
- Envelopes & pockets
- Tickets, stamps & labels
- Doilies, lace, napkins & tissue
You can absolutely combine systems (for example: boxes by theme, with little envelopes inside by color), but try to keep one “main rule” so putting things away is almost automatic.
📂 Step 3 – Storage Ideas That Actually Work
Below are storage solutions that many journalers use in real life — plus a few tips to make them work even better.
1. Clear Plastic Shoe Boxes
- Cheap, stackable, and easy to label on the front.
- Great for bigger pieces: envelopes, large tags, 6"×8" printables, book pages.
- Assign each box a category: “Vintage Florals,” “Tickets & Numbers,” “Kids & Whimsy,” etc.
2. 12" × 12" Scrapbook Paper Boxes
- Perfect for full sheets of scrapbook paper and printable ephemera sets.
- Use large envelopes or file folders inside to divide seasons or collections.
- Stacks beautifully on cube shelves or under a desk.
3. File Crates with Hanging Folders
- Add pendaflex/hanging folders and give each one a label (e.g. “Autumn,” “Numbers,” “Vintage Neutral,” “Bright Florals”).
- Slip clear pockets, large envelopes, or sheet protectors inside each folder for smaller pieces.
- Feels like a mini ephemera filing cabinet you can flip through quickly.
4. Binder System with Clear Pocket Pages
- Use regular binders with pocket pages (photo sleeves, trading-card pages, or multi-pocket sheet protectors).
- Perfect for tiny bits: stamps, labels, word strips, small fussy cuts.
- Label binder spines clearly: “Words,” “Florals,” “Vintage,” “Bright & Fun,” etc.
5. Latching Boxes, Tins & Drawer Inserts
- Use small latching containers for chunky items: charms, buttons, wax seals, clips, fabric scraps.
- Drawer inserts or cutlery trays are great for keeping these near your workspace.
- Label with a label maker or washi + pen so you don’t have to reopen everything to remember what’s inside.
🧺 Working Trays & Grab-and-Go Bins
Even with a big storage system, you’ll get overwhelmed if you dig through every box for each page. That’s where a working tray comes in.
- Choose a shallow box, basket, or tray.
- Fill it with a curated mini-selection:
- 10–20 of your favourite tags and journaling cards.
- A handful of florals or focal pieces that match your current journal.
- Word strips, numbers, tiny labels, and a few neutral backgrounds.
- Refresh it whenever you start a new journal or theme (for example, “soft spring,” “moody vintage,” or “Christmas stories”).
This way, when you sit down to craft, you’re choosing from a tiny buffet instead of your entire craft room.
🚗 Small Space & Travel-Friendly Setups
No dedicated craft room? Here are options that work beautifully in small spaces or for couch-journaling.
1. Over-the-Door Shoe Organizer
- Choose one with clear pockets so you can see everything.
- Assign each pocket a color or theme.
- Keep journals, scissors, and glue sticks in the bottom row for easy reach.
2. Zipper Pouches & Pencil Cases
- Group ephemera into pouches like: “Neutrals,” “Bright Florals,” “Words & Numbers,” “Vintage Bits.”
- Store the pouches in a basket or pretty box; pull out only the ones you need today.
3. “Journal Picnic” Box
- Use a small lunchbox, makeup case, or storage caddy.
- Inside, add mini envelopes or smaller boxes for different categories.
- Pack your current journal, scissors, glue, a pen, 2–3 washi tapes, and a little ephemera kit — ready for the couch, garden, or car trips.
🧾 Storing Printable Ephemera & Fussy Cuts
If you use lots of printable ephemera (like WondersArtist sheets), you’ll often have both full pages and cut pieces. Keeping those together makes life much easier.
Full Sheets
- Store full pages in:
- 12" × 12" paper boxes, or
- magazine files / large binders with page protectors.
- Give each collection its own envelope or file labeled with the set name (e.g. “Pastel Patisserie,” “Vintage Letters”).
Fussy-Cut Pieces
- Use small envelopes, snack-size zipper bags, or little boxes.
- Write the collection name on the front so you know where each piece came from.
- Optional: tuck a tiny thumbnail print of the original sheet inside the bag so you remember the whole set.
- Keep “current favourites” in your working tray and archive older sets in your main storage.
🌱 Simple Maintenance Routine
The secret to staying organized isn’t more boxes — it’s tiny, gentle habits.
- At the end of a crafting session, spend 2–3 minutes putting loose pieces into the right container or pouch.
- Once a month, pick one category (for example “florals”) and quickly remove anything you no longer love.
- Keep a small “share” bag for extras. When it’s full, gift it to a friend, include it in happy mail, or donate to a local school / community group.
These micro-routines keep your system feeling light instead of heavy.
💖 Final Thoughts
There’s no single “right” way to organize ephemera. The best system is the one you can keep up with on a tired day, with glue on your fingers and tea getting cold next to you. If you:
- Choose one simple sorting style,
- Use clear, labelled containers, and
- Keep a small working tray for your current journal,
…your stash will start to feel like a friendly library instead of a mysterious pile. And most importantly, you’ll actually use all those beautiful bits you’ve collected — which is exactly what they were made for. ✨📖🧡
🎁 Free Clipart Sampler
If you would like to test high-resolution, clearly licensed clipart in your projects, a free sampler is available from WondersArtist.
Sign up below and the sampler will arrive gently in your inbox, ready for cards, stickers, journals, and wall art 💌
💎 All Access Membership
All Access Membership is a simple way to always know your clipart and printable ephemera are licensed for commercial use.
- ✨ Unlimited access to clipart, digital papers, journaling pages, and cardmaking kits
- 🧺 New releases included while the membership is active
- ⚡ Instant downloads with clear, business-friendly licensing
- 🔁 Perpetual rights for everything downloaded during your active time, even if you cancel later