Saturday, August 3, 2013
Laughing Lola Club Cards
Here are the August cards for my Card Club members. I love the colors and papers in this kit. I used Laughing Lola papers, Assortment, and Complements, as well as lots of stamps.
Laughing Lola Club Pages
These are the pages we'll be doing for August Scrapbook Club. We are using Laughing Lola--love the colors and chalk feel. If you aren't a member of my scrapbook club, contact me for more details.
The bottom two layouts are from the Workshop on the Go, and the first is made with the extra paper. I just love the first one. These pictures of my boys with their cousins are so fun! I used the Laughing Lola Workshop on the Go kit with the Laughing Lola Assortment and Laughing Lola Complements Dimensional ELements.
The bottom two layouts are from the Workshop on the Go, and the first is made with the extra paper. I just love the first one. These pictures of my boys with their cousins are so fun! I used the Laughing Lola Workshop on the Go kit with the Laughing Lola Assortment and Laughing Lola Complements Dimensional ELements.
New Idea Book and FREE Stamp of the Month
The new Fall/Winter Idea book is now available. You can order online or contact me for a copy of the book.
If you spend $50 in the month of August, you get the fun Stamp of the Month, A Chocolate Affair, FREE! Contact me for more details.
If you spend $50 in the month of August, you get the fun Stamp of the Month, A Chocolate Affair, FREE! Contact me for more details.
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Buzz and Bumble Cards
When I first received my Spring Summer Idea Book, the Buzz and Bumble kit was my least favorite. I didn't care for the bees, and that affected my judgement of the whole kit. Fortunately, I ordered the WOTG kit anyway. I soon fell in love. I love the colors and the stamp set that came with this workshop. I also used the Buzz and bumble Assortment, Quick Card Dragonfly, June SOTM, Pun Fun, Honeycomb, and Card Chatter--Sympathy.
The bee card was inspired by this card by Angela Tutton. I loved her use of the July SOTM, but I don't have that set yet.
The dragonfly card was inspired by this card on Pinterest.
Monday, July 1, 2013
Surf's Up Club Pages
Our June Pages use the Surf's p pack. I LOVE this paper!! The My Stickease and Surf's Up Assortment are pretty great, too.
The first layout was completely scraplifted from my uplink, Michelle Snyder. We had a team training/creative day last month and these were the pages she had for her project. I had to use them for my club this month. They are A LOT of cutting, but so worth it!
Layout two was from the Surf's Up Stickease. Did you know that every sheet of My Stickease features a layout on the back. With each pack of Stickease, you get two layout ideas. I love the colors of this one and how well the Stickease tie in.
Layout three also uses the My Stickease. I borrowed this layout from the Studio J layout in the idea book.
The first layout was completely scraplifted from my uplink, Michelle Snyder. We had a team training/creative day last month and these were the pages she had for her project. I had to use them for my club this month. They are A LOT of cutting, but so worth it!
Layout two was from the Surf's Up Stickease. Did you know that every sheet of My Stickease features a layout on the back. With each pack of Stickease, you get two layout ideas. I love the colors of this one and how well the Stickease tie in.
Layout three also uses the My Stickease. I borrowed this layout from the Studio J layout in the idea book.
I don't have photos on these layouts because I know they will be perfect for our Puerto Vallarta pictures later this month.
Sunday, June 30, 2013
A few Thank You Cards
I'm feeling bad that school has been out four weeks and I STILL haven't sent out thank you cards for all the lovely gifts I received at the end of the year. All 31 cards are made and addressed, and now I just need to finish writing them! For the cards, I used last years scrapbook special, Dotty For You papers with Hurray Bouquet (the flowers) and the May SOTM Pinwheel. I also used a couple different thank you sets.
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
For Always Club Layouts
These were the layouts we did for May's club. The first two layouts are straight from the workshops on the Go.
I wish I would have taken photos of the layouts one of my ladies did. We substituted Pacifica (royal blue) and silver glitter paper for the colors to match her daughters prom dress--GORGEOUS!! I love how versatile these papers are. I'm looking forward to stocking up and using lots of this paper to scrapbook my brother's wedding next year! Their colors are gray and yellow with a pop of red. These will be perfect.
Monday, June 24, 2013
A few Father's Day Cards
I used retired papers for these cards. THe first two use Cruisin' papers and Stickease. This kit is perfect for these cards for my grandpas. I love the colors and accents.
This last one uses Superhero papers. I made two more with these papers, but didn't take photos.
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Later Sk8r Cards
Here's a few cards using Later Sk8r papers and stamps. Having two boys, I always need boy cards, so these are perfect! I love the colors and papers in this pack. If you love them, make sure you get them before August 1st. This set is not carrying over into the next catalog.
Saturday, June 15, 2013
Claire Layouts
These were our club layouts from way back in March. The Claire papers are fun, but I'm still waiting to find the perfect photos for two of the layouts.
I tried to make this one less girly by using the orange. Many of my club members used pink instead.
Friday, June 14, 2013
Claire Cards
I designed this set of cards around the Claire Complements Canvas Shapes. I love these stickers so much that I ended up buying several sets just for cards. I used too many different stamp sets to name, but if you see something and want to know where it came from, I'll be happy to help.
Thursday, June 13, 2013
My (Long) Response to an Article About the Future of Scrapbooking
A friend posted about this article on Facebook today. I started to repost there, but felt like I needed a longer response, so here goes. You can find the article here on the Scrapbook Update website, www.scrapbookupdate.com
The article discusses the decline of the scrapbooking industry due to digital cameras and social media. People are taking more photos, but sharing them instantly, not scrapbooking them. SHe also commented that she still scrapbooks because how will her kids know which of the 4,000 photos taken a year were important. What were the stories behind the photos? She also mentions Ali Edwards' approach to storytelling and Becky Higgins' Project Life, two people and methods I have integrated into my scrapbooking in recent years.
I believe the stories behind the photos are what I want to preserve. I've definitely evolved as a scrapbooker over the years. I no longer feel like every photo has to be scrapbooked. When I first started scrapbooking, I felt pushed to scrap every photo and I was always "behind" in my scrapbooking. I didn't always tell the stories, either. I have lots of layouts with just a title and maybe a date. Then with digital cameras, I was taking way too many photos and there is no way I could scrapbook all them. I would stress myself out and do 10 pages of one event or try to fit 20 photos on a page. There wasn't much sustenance there. I wish I had taken the time in my wedding scrapbook to document conversations and feelings instead of cutting photos into silly shapes. I wish I would have included the birth story for each of my boys, not the gory details, but the memories and feelings, instead of just the basic information.
My scrapbooking now is a hybrid of lots of ways of thinking about it. I still hold monthly scrapbook workshops that are paper based, traditional, scrapbooking. I scrapbook those photos which are a) important to me, b) I have a handful of photos from, or c) photos I have that match the monthly papers (I'm being honest here). These pages represent the more artistic, creative side of me. I admit it, cutting paper and creating something tangible makes me happy. I will NEVER give up the actual papercrafting side of scrapbooking. It's just too much fun! I don't, however, have time to scrapbook everything that way.
I also digital scrapbook on Studio J. I love that format because they match my regular layouts, and I don't notice the difference in my albums. I also am starting to use Studio J for events I have lots of photos of. I can upload all of them and separate them onto the pages as I go. A few months ago, I scrapped 400 photos of our trip to Alaska into one beautiful album. I did it in a couple of weeks. Traditional scrapbooking would have taken me months or I never would have gotten around to it. I still have all of our photos from our Washington DC/Pennsylvania trip we took our years ago not scrapbooked. I also have a Project Life album that documents more of our daily lives and those events where there are only a few photos.
I started out with Project Life really well. The first year I did it, I kept up on it and it was great. My current one I started last summer and dropped off at the end of last summer. I'm now trying to go back and document the last ten months. It's fast, but would have been easier as the year progressed. The stories would have been easier to tell. I think for the next little while at least, I want to focus even more on the stories. I am a writer at heart, but I don't always tell the full stories in my scrapbooks. I want to challenge myself to create more photo less pages or one photo pages with the full story.
No matter how I put them together, I truly feel scrapbooking and telling our stories is so important. Even more so in this digital age. I can't imagine my kids and grandkids ever sorting through the thousands of photos on my hard drives and figuring out who people were and what was happening, and why great grandma took 300 photos of one day at Disneyland. I get a huge satisfaction not only from the process of creating pages and completing albums, but also from the finished product. I love when my kids sit there looking through albums and giggling at the stories and photos. They will sit therewith separate albums and constantly interrupt each other to share and laugh and tell their own memories. I love it! They don't get on the computer and do the same thing. There's just something about those big books!
For another great article on the scrapbooking industry, check this one out. It's from Close To My Heart CEO Jeanette Lynton. It looks at the industry from a retail point of view. I admire Jeanette, and this reenforces my reasons for being a CTMH consultant.
The article discusses the decline of the scrapbooking industry due to digital cameras and social media. People are taking more photos, but sharing them instantly, not scrapbooking them. SHe also commented that she still scrapbooks because how will her kids know which of the 4,000 photos taken a year were important. What were the stories behind the photos? She also mentions Ali Edwards' approach to storytelling and Becky Higgins' Project Life, two people and methods I have integrated into my scrapbooking in recent years.
I believe the stories behind the photos are what I want to preserve. I've definitely evolved as a scrapbooker over the years. I no longer feel like every photo has to be scrapbooked. When I first started scrapbooking, I felt pushed to scrap every photo and I was always "behind" in my scrapbooking. I didn't always tell the stories, either. I have lots of layouts with just a title and maybe a date. Then with digital cameras, I was taking way too many photos and there is no way I could scrapbook all them. I would stress myself out and do 10 pages of one event or try to fit 20 photos on a page. There wasn't much sustenance there. I wish I had taken the time in my wedding scrapbook to document conversations and feelings instead of cutting photos into silly shapes. I wish I would have included the birth story for each of my boys, not the gory details, but the memories and feelings, instead of just the basic information.
My scrapbooking now is a hybrid of lots of ways of thinking about it. I still hold monthly scrapbook workshops that are paper based, traditional, scrapbooking. I scrapbook those photos which are a) important to me, b) I have a handful of photos from, or c) photos I have that match the monthly papers (I'm being honest here). These pages represent the more artistic, creative side of me. I admit it, cutting paper and creating something tangible makes me happy. I will NEVER give up the actual papercrafting side of scrapbooking. It's just too much fun! I don't, however, have time to scrapbook everything that way.
I also digital scrapbook on Studio J. I love that format because they match my regular layouts, and I don't notice the difference in my albums. I also am starting to use Studio J for events I have lots of photos of. I can upload all of them and separate them onto the pages as I go. A few months ago, I scrapped 400 photos of our trip to Alaska into one beautiful album. I did it in a couple of weeks. Traditional scrapbooking would have taken me months or I never would have gotten around to it. I still have all of our photos from our Washington DC/Pennsylvania trip we took our years ago not scrapbooked. I also have a Project Life album that documents more of our daily lives and those events where there are only a few photos.
I started out with Project Life really well. The first year I did it, I kept up on it and it was great. My current one I started last summer and dropped off at the end of last summer. I'm now trying to go back and document the last ten months. It's fast, but would have been easier as the year progressed. The stories would have been easier to tell. I think for the next little while at least, I want to focus even more on the stories. I am a writer at heart, but I don't always tell the full stories in my scrapbooks. I want to challenge myself to create more photo less pages or one photo pages with the full story.
No matter how I put them together, I truly feel scrapbooking and telling our stories is so important. Even more so in this digital age. I can't imagine my kids and grandkids ever sorting through the thousands of photos on my hard drives and figuring out who people were and what was happening, and why great grandma took 300 photos of one day at Disneyland. I get a huge satisfaction not only from the process of creating pages and completing albums, but also from the finished product. I love when my kids sit there looking through albums and giggling at the stories and photos. They will sit therewith separate albums and constantly interrupt each other to share and laugh and tell their own memories. I love it! They don't get on the computer and do the same thing. There's just something about those big books!
For another great article on the scrapbooking industry, check this one out. It's from Close To My Heart CEO Jeanette Lynton. It looks at the industry from a retail point of view. I admire Jeanette, and this reenforces my reasons for being a CTMH consultant.
Chantilly Cards
A few Chantilly cards to enjoy. I used the papers and Chantilly Complements Dimensional Elements, as well as various stamp sets.
The fist card in this design is from the Chantilly card kit. I changed up the colors for the second one. I love the cake stamp that came with this kit!!
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Later Sk8r Pages
I can't believe how behind I am on posting club projects. These were our club pages from April. I love the Later Sk8r pack. It's so perfect for boy layouts. I'm sorry about the poor photos. I really need to get better at taking pictures on my phone. I'm going to try to post past club projects every day this week.
Layout One--Summer Fun
Layout #2 Bruneau Sand Dunes
Layout #3 A day at the park
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