I prefer "found object" bookmarks over the intentionally designed kind, like if I get a book at a brick-and-mortar store, I usually end up using the receipt as my bookmark. Here are a couple of my favorite bookmarks right now.
My extremely cool in-laws slipped this little note into the birthday card they gave me:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEguJQrISpxul8Ktzc3_Ygu-EXpsqG8LAbIKxn4ao_d4vbZNW_DjM9LZRhoNUyiHBW1OAAhE7Oq2uZtxNHNNk18GxD1S09SA_3xF-qBZFQ2mD4rGiT8OuYjFgV26nBvb1bxPxY93Ag/s280/bookmark1.png)
Like most rectangular slips of paper I've requisitioned for these purposes, I fold it in half down the longer axis when in use.
Here's the bookmark I've been using lately for larger books:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgSo5WPVRT2tq2t8T-m64Mu5rlkj7amIvGhDK4ndIj3xz1hS-zd33AN1qY6Jjm2wNBL_3ZdshMhg35T3NX9lELFfrJUI6bTWSB_SzPsq110Lc8gS7BimnzjaZfQ8F3Uw3z84jWSHA/s400/bookmark2.png)
That looks like several playing cards, but it's actually a packaging element for
a fancy-pants electro-gizmodic edition of Uno![](http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=jefsgam-20&l=as2&o=1&a=B0000205XH)
. I don't think it's any better than the regular version of the game, but the string of fake cards on the box is kinda cool.
The in-laws message is great. :)
ReplyDeleteI found that cutting the clear strip of plastic that comes in a new dress shirt's collar gives me a perfectly durable, clear, 4cm wide bookmark.
ReplyDeleteHaha, I think I'm getting more obsessive as I age, but I love having these uniformly clear bookmarks poking out of the multiple books I'm reading.
I have to say that I like these bookmarks of yours much more than the bookmark character sheets that are all the rave these past few days. Much more functional too. ;-)
ReplyDeleteIt's all about the strange business cards and promotional fliers you find in your windshield wipers.
ReplyDeleteAs an avid diner at Chinese restaurants, I submit that chopstick wrappers make the very best bookmarks. Although I used to repurpose my Farside daily desk calendar pages as bookmarks.
ReplyDeleteI sometimes use found items (mostly receipts) as bookmarks, but mostly I use actual bookmarks.
ReplyDeleteThe book mark that marks my place in the current novel being read is one of those cardboard that's almost fabric ones with a tassel. It's got Garfield (the cat) on it. The bookmark and tassel are rather raggedy and beat up. This book mark dates at least back to the early 80s, I don't remember if I had it before going to college or if I got it while in college.
I also have a stash of paper bookmarks acquired from various places. I have a big stash from my college student union. Then there is a stash advertising an SF convention that collected pre-registrations then never actually happened (and no refunds of course). Then various bookstore bookmarks and other random bookmarks round out the collection.
If a novel gets sidelined for another more interesting one, the Garfield bookmark will move to the new book, and one of these random paper ones, or sometimes a found object one, will go into the book.
Oh, and magazines often acquire a piece of (clean) toilet paper as a bookmark...
Frank