How to Choose Safe Adhesives for Your Craft Project

How to Choose Safe Adhesives for Your Craft Project

Clean, reliable and non-toxic glues for paper, fabric, and embellishments

When you’re creating something beautiful with your hands, you shouldn’t have to worry about chemical fumes, harmful residues, or long-term damage to your health — or to the materials you're using.

At Scrapbooky, we believe that beauty should never be toxic.
So here’s a guide to safe and non-toxic adhesives, based on material type and craft need.

📝 Paper to Paper (Photos, Cards, Journaling, Designer Paper)

For paper projects, especially if they’re archival (meant to last), you need:

Acid-free

pH-neutral

Non-toxic

 

Best options:

🟢 Glue stick – Look for labels like acid-free and archival-safe (e.g., UHU, Pritt archival versions)

🟢 Liquid archival glue – Like Lineco Neutral pH Adhesive or Tombow Mono Liquid Glue

🟢 Double-sided adhesive tape – solvent-free versions (e.g., Scrapbook Adhesives by 3L)

Avoid white school glues and cheap craft glues – they often contain acids and will yellow or degrade paper over time.


🧵 For Fabric & Textiles (Flowers, Ribbons, Lace)

Hot glue is not the safest option – it emits fumes and can burn delicate materials.

Safer alternatives:

🟢 Non-toxic fabric glueBeacon Fabri-Tac is a classic, but always check for "non-toxic" certification

🟢 Sewline Fabric Glue Pen – perfect for light fabric placement, dries clear and safe

🟢 ECO textile glues – water-based options that are solvent-free (search for GOTS certified adhesives)


📦 For Chipboard, Heavy Paper, Bookbinding

If you’re gluing thicker materials like chipboard or album bases:

Safe and strong choices:

🟢 pH-neutral bookbinding glue – e.g., Lineco Bookbinding Adhesive, Kola

🟢 Aleene’s Tacky Glue – labeled as non-toxic, acid-free and flexible

🟢 Wheat paste or methylcellulose glue – 100% archival, used in conservation


For Metal, Acrylic, Small Embellishments

Here it gets trickier — many strong glues (like E6000 or hot glue) are not safe: they contain industrial solvents, strong VOCs, and release dangerous fumes.

Safer options:

🟡 Use only when necessary, in well-ventilated areas, and always wear protection

🟢 Glossy Accents by Ranger – safe for small accents, dries hard and clear

🟢 Mini glue dots – great for attaching metal charms or sequins without liquid glue


🎨 Mixed Media & Journals (Layering, Texture, Fabric & Paper)

Top safe picks:

🟢 Gel Medium (Matte) – water-based, acid-free, non-toxic

🟢 Mod Podge (Water-based Sealer & Glue) – look for the “Non-toxic” label

🟢 Eco glue sticks – for lightweight layers, paper napkins, and journaling bits


❌ What to Avoid (even if it’s popular)

Product Why to avoid
Hot glue High temperature, VOCs, unsafe for children, not archival
E6000 Industrial, contains carcinogens, toxic fumes
Super glue (cyanoacrylate) Fumes, bonds skin, not suitable for porous surfaces
Standard PVA (white school glue) Acidic, yellows over time, not archival


✅ Safe Adhesives Summary

Material Recommended Safe Adhesives
Paper Acid-free glue stick, pH-neutral liquid glue, archival tape
Fabric Fabric glue (non-toxic), textile glue pen
Chipboard Bookbinding glue (Lineco, Kola), tacky glue
Metal Glossy Accents (small items), glue dots
Mixed Media Gel medium, Mod Podge (non-toxic)


🧡 Final Thoughts

Choosing the right glue isn’t just about holding things together – it’s about doing it responsibly. For your own safety. For your customers. And for the longevity of your creations.

Look for:

  • Acid-free

  • pH-neutral

  • Non-toxic / solvent-free

  • Archival-safe

 

At Scrapbooky, we test and select every material with care – and adhesives are no exception.
Because true artistry deserves to be safe, strong, and timeless.

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