What Counts as ‘Junk’ in a Junk Journal? Everyday Items You Can (Safely) Use
💛 Introduction
If you are new to junk journaling, it can feel like everyone else has a secret rulebook about what “counts” as junk. One person glues in receipts and candy wrappers, another only uses vintage book pages, and someone else is happily tearing apart cereal boxes.
The truth is: your junk journal can hold almost anything – as long as it is dry, clean, and attached in a way that won’t damage the rest of your pages.
This gentle guide walks through what is usually safe, what is a bit risky, and how to prep everyday bits of life so they can live happily alongside your printable ephemera, clipart, and paints.
Table of Content
✨ Quick Overview ✅ Everyday Junk That’s Usually Safe ⚠️ What to Be Careful With (or Avoid) 🧼 How to Prep Real-World Pieces 🧵 Mixing “Real Junk” with Printable Ephemera 📂 Storing Your Collected Bits 🎁 Free Clipart Sampler 💎 All Access Membership✨ Quick Overview
Here is the calm, short version:
- Most paper-based items are fine if they are dry, clean, and not oily or sticky.
- Food, grease, heavy dyes and mystery plastics are where problems usually start (mold, staining, sticking).
- A little bit of prep work – drying, flattening, trimming, sealing – goes a long way toward keeping your journal safe.
- Your printable ephemera and clipart can act as a “buffer” layer, letting you enjoy the look of junk without taking on all the risk.
✅ Everyday Junk That’s Usually Safe
These are items many journalers use all the time. As long as they’re dry, clean, and not smelly, they’re usually good to go.
Paper Bits from Daily Life
- Tickets & stubs – bus, train, cinema, concert, parking receipts.
- Packaging paper – pretty tissue paper, kraft paper, paper bags.
- Junk mail & envelopes – security patterns, window envelopes, stamps.
- Flyers & maps – travel brochures, museum maps, city guides.
- Notebook scraps – to-do lists, handwritten notes, doodle pages.
Pretty Printed Things
- Magazine images & ads – especially from thicker, art-style magazines.
- Postcards & greeting cards – fronts or backs, depending on your layout.
- Business cards, tags & labels – clothing tags, café loyalty cards, labels from candles or tea.
Lightweight Non-Paper Pieces
- Fabric & lace snippets – cotton, linen, lace trims, ribbon off packaging.
- Flat buttons or charms – if they’re not too heavy for the page.
- Pressed (fully dry) flowers & leaves – especially when sandwiched between layers or sealed.
If something feels like it belongs in a scrapbook or on a postcard, it will probably fit happily into your junk journal too.
⚠️ What to Be Careful With (or Avoid)
“Junk” doesn’t mean anything-goes. Some materials can cause mold, stains, or page damage over time.
Food & Food-Adjacent Items
- Actual food bits – cookie crumbs, herbs, candy wrappers that are still greasy or sugary. These can attract insects and mold.
- Oily/greasy packaging – pizza boxes, fast food bags, anything with obvious oil stains.
- Waxed papers with residue – cupcake liners, butter wrappers, etc.
Highly Dyed or Unstable Inks
- Thermal receipts – they fade, turn black under heat, and some people prefer not to keep them long term. If you love the look, consider scanning/printing instead.
- Very cheap newsprint – can be brittle and shed ink onto other pages.
- Fresh marker-heavy pieces – alcohol markers and some pens can transfer to facing pages if not fully dry and sealed.
Unknown Plastics & Stickers
- Old stickers with mystery adhesive – sometimes ooze over time and cause pages to stick.
- Vinyl or plastic that feels rubbery – can transfer color or stick to other plastics.
None of this means you can never use these items – only that you may want to:
- Layer them on top of a base page or printable, rather than directly on your coffee-dyed page.
- Use a clear sealer (like matte gel medium) if you’re worried about color transfer.
- Or simply scan and print a copy for safer long-term use.
🧼 How to Prep Real-World Pieces
A few tiny habits can turn “maybe” items into happy, long-lasting ephemera.
1. Drying & Flattening
- Let anything even slightly damp (coffee-dyed tags, ticket stubs from a rainy night) air dry completely.
- To flatten, place between two sheets of plain paper and stack heavy books on top for a day or two.
2. Trimming & De-Bulking
- Trim away bulky seams from boxes or thick packaging – just keep the pretty panels.
- Remove staples, pins or safety pins unless they’re part of the look and won’t snag other pages.
3. Sealing Inks & Powders
If you love using paints, mica powder, or heavily inked pieces:
- Keep wet mediums fairly thin and diluted on paper so pages don’t crack or stick. (For shimmer ideas, see the mica powder guide.)
- Once fully dry, you can add a light coat of matte gel medium or sealer to stop rub-off.
4. Choosing the Right Adhesive
The glue you pick matters just as much as the junk itself:
- Dry glue sticks & tape runners – great for thin paper on thin paper; minimal warping.
- Fabri-Tac / strong solvent glues – better for bulky packaging, fabric, buttons.
- Double-sided tape – perfect when you want no extra moisture on delicate coffee-dyed pages.
If you’d like a deeper comparison, the article “Which Glue Should I Use? Adhesives & Fasteners for Junk Journals and Moving Pieces” walks through pros and cons of each option.
🧵 Mixing “Real Junk” with Printable Ephemera
Your journal becomes extra magical when everyday life and printable art sit side by side. A few easy formulas:
Layering Ideas
- Ticket + label + clipart – glue a bus ticket onto a printable label, then add a small floral or stamp clipart as a focal.
- Packaging tab – cut a neat strip from a cereal box or tea label and use it as a page tab, backed with a printable scrap for strength.
- Magazine + clipart clusters – layer a snippet of magazine text, a printable word strip, and a small image from a clipart bundle into one cozy cluster.
- Mica & paint accents – add a soft shimmer wash around your junk cluster with diluted mica or watercolor to tie everything together.
When in Doubt, Use a Printable as the “Base”
If you’re unsure whether a particular piece of junk is totally safe, you can:
- Glue it onto a printable journaling card or tag first.
- Then glue that card into your journal, rather than the junk directly on the page.
This way, if the item ever causes issues, it’s much easier to remove or cover without hurting the whole spread.
📂 Storing Your Collected Bits
Once you start noticing “good junk,” it multiplies fast. A simple system helps you actually use it instead of losing it in a mystery pile.
- Keep a small envelope or pouch in your bag for receipts, tickets, and pretty wrappers while you’re out.
- At home, give yourself one or two clear boxes or folders labelled “Tickets & Tags,” “Packaging,” “Words & Text,” etc.
- Mix these real-world pieces right into your main ephemera system so they’re easy to grab.
For more detailed ideas (shoe boxes, binders, over-the-door organizers, working trays and more), you can read “How to Organize Ephemera for Easy Access in Journals”.
🎁 Free Clipart Sampler
If you would like to pair your real-life bits with high-resolution printable ephemera, you can try a free sampler from WondersArtist.
Sign up below and the sampler will arrive gently in your inbox, ready for tags, pockets, clusters and cozy junk journal pages 💌
💎 All Access Membership
All Access Membership is a simple way to always have printable “friends” ready to sit beside your everyday junk.
- ✨ 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
🌷 Final Thoughts
The best junk journal is not the one with the fanciest supplies – it’s the one that actually holds your life. Bus tickets, tea labels, scribbled notes, printable florals, mica shimmer… they can all live together if you give them a little care.
If you:
- Choose junk that is dry and clean,
- Prep it gently so it won’t bleed, mold, or crumble, and
- Let printables and journaling cards act as a safe “home” for the riskier pieces,
…your journal will grow into a cozy, layered record of your days – part scrapbook, part diary, part treasure box. And nothing about that needs to be perfect to be precious. 🧺📖🧡