Archive for Motivation

Scrappers Block

Simple Solutions for Avoiding Scrappers Block

Have you ever sat staring at a pile of photos and scrapbooking supplies and wondered what now? If so, you could be suffering from scrapper’s block. Don’t worry! It happens to all of us, but there are some ways to overcome this. I have put together some simple solutions for avoiding scrapper’s block.

One cause of scrapper’s block is too many photos. You are feeling overwhelmed because you have a stack of photos, you are so far behind you just don’t know where to start. One way to overcome this, is to sort through your photos. Divide them into events, people, themes or however you like to scrap. Store in a photo safe box in their divided sections. Now concentrate on one set of photos. From this set, choose the ones you want to work with first. Whether you want to highlight one or work with several. Don’t worry about the stack you have stored away. Concentrate on the ones right in front of you and start chipping away at this one event. If you tend to use the same papers and embellishments for each event then you are ahead of the game. Finish your first layout from your selected photos and quickly move on to the next while the supplies are already out and ready to use.

Tools for organizing your photos:

Another form of scrapper’s block comes from poor quality photos. You have some photos that are out of focus, too far away, over/under developed or perhaps a busy background. However, you want to scrap them because it is all you have of that event/memory and you want to remember it. Stop complaining about the poor quality photo! Remember why you are scrapping to begin with. Do you scrap to showcase your professional photography skills? (if so, you are on your own here) Highlight the journaling and really tell the story there. You can also crop the photo and make the best use of it you can. Perhaps play around with the photo in your photo editing program, crop and enlarge and concentrate on a facial feature. Try sepia tones or black and white, you never know what might happen to that otherwise “bad” photo.

Ok, so now you have great photos but the wrong supplies. The colors and styles of paper you have on hand are just not right. Well, you can take your photos with you to the scrapbook store and buy what you need, shop online in the comfort of your home, or how about creating it. Do you have some old outdated paper lying around? Try sanding it down, then rub an ink pad over it and give it a new look. You now have a new distressed look, the color you need and some new supplies on hand. You can also try painting brads, label holders and other embellishments to get the color you need. Cover slide mounts, mini frames, chipboard with patterned paper to coordinate with your layout and supplies on hand. These are just a few ideas, get creative! Of course you can always set the photos aside until you have the funds needed to go shopping.

Try something new. Try a new technique, buy some new supplies, just play for awhile with no real “end” in mind. Use it on a small project such as a card. Get out the “cobwebs” and get the creativity flowing, then perhaps you will be inspired and ready to scrap.

Do you become intimidated by browsing through online galleries or flipping through magazines by the gorgeous talent out there? Don’t let this block you! First of all, it is your scrapbook. Express yourself, your style, your family-that is what needs to be remembered. Besides who says you can’t scraplift? If you see a layout you really like, scraplift it! It may not be exact anyway if you don’t have the exact supplies, but it will get you started on something you like. Just don’t use the layout in a contest. And I would suggest giving credit where credit is due if posting in a public venue.

Perfectionism-do you get caught up in creating the perfect layout? You want your layout to look like you spent hours on it, perfecting it, the colors blend, the design flows. But it doesn’t have to be perfect. Remember your why. Why do you scrapbook? Focus on that. We can easily get caught up in the “perfect layout” and forget why we scrapbook to begin with. Remember your whys. By remembering why you scrapbook the problem with scrapper’s block will vanish and your new layout is now perfect. Enjoy preserving your memories!

About author:

Dawn Stegall is a homeschooling mom of four girls and owner of www.FaithfullyYours.net a site dedicated to scrapbooking your faith!

Photo courtesy mai05

Scrapbook for Future Family

Scrapbooking for Generations
By: Vera Raposo

Generation scrapbooking is a wonderful way for different generations of your family to bond and share your family history. Spend some time to get everyone in the family involved in creating scrapbooks. Not only will you share pictures and stories, it will be a wonderful bonding experience as well.

Scrapbook For Your Child
Start a scrapbook for your child and get him or her involved in creating the pages. You can create a new book each year together with your child. Include artwork, homework as well as current pictures of your child and friends. Ask your child to help in creating layouts, choosing embellishments and adding descriptive titles and text. Depending on your child’s age, you may even want to let her do most of the scrapbooking and writing with a little assistance from your of course. You’ll be surprised how much you will learn about your child’s life outside of your home. The two of you will get to spend some quality time together and create a memento to remember it for years to come.

Scrapbook Your Family History
Record your family history in a scrapbook. Put your family’s story on paper for future generations. Create a special generation scrapbook that tells the story of your own childhood, teenage years, or how you and your spouse met. When your children are grown, they will appreciate being able to get a glimpse of what your life was like back then. Keep adding to the scrapbook over the years and get everyone in the family involved in deciding what should be added. You will create a book that everyone in the family will cherish and pass on for years, maybe even generations to come.

Share Old Photo Albums
Go through old photo albums that have been in your family for decades. Spend some time with older family members to look through these albums. You will gain an appreciation for your family history and the life your family members lived long before you were born. You may also want to discuss options to preserve these old pictures.
If you would like to incorporate some of these pictures in your current scrapbooks, have copies made, or scan the pictures in your computer, edit them and then print. You can correct faded color and even some small tears and nicks with modern photo editing software. Plus you will have a digital version of the picture that will last long after the original photo deteriorates.

Grab that fabulous scrapbook that you bought months ago and saved for a special occasion and start generation scrapbooking today about yourself and your family. You will enjoy the process of creating that special book just as much as being able to share it with family members once it is finished.

Article Source: http://www.scrapventurearticles.com

Vera Raposo has been scrapbooking since her oldest child was 5. With tons of scrapbooking tips and ideas, Vera is now sharing some of her best scrapbooking ideas on her radio show at www.ScrappersTalkRadio.com.

Choose Your Layout

Choosing Layouts for Your Scrapbook Pages

You bought all your scrapbooking gear, set up a space, researched scrapbooking techniques and now you’re ready to get started.  Before you can start your first layout, you have to actually choose one.  This seems like a simple task, but there are so many styles and options it’s hard to know where to start.  Here are some great ways to find possible layouts for your scrapbooks.

If you’re looking for possible layouts, the first place you should look is online.  There are hundreds of scrapbooking websites, many with free layouts and how to’s on how to make those layouts.  From simple to complex, affordable to expensive; there are ideas for every person and every occasion.

You can also find inspiration from message boards and galleries.  People can submit pictures of their layouts, and they do so on a regular basis.  This means there’s a constant supply of new layout ideas one pretty much every topic (and every budget) you can think of.  Plus people are usually nice enough to give you tips and tricks about how they put it together.  Two very active places to check out are Scrapbook.com and Two Peas.

Books and magazines are a great place to get started while choosing a layout.  With just a little searching, you can find books with hundreds of sample layouts.  But there’s so much more you can gather from books than just layouts to copy.  Many books help get you started on creating your own layouts by sharing scrapbooking philosophies and ways to spark your own imagination.  You may even find inspiration from a book that has nothing to do with scrapbooking, like a beautiful picture, poem, or quote. Books and magazines also tend to have the products used in the layout so you can go out and copy it exactly. Scraplifting is a great way to find layouts as long as you are not looking to publish them.

If you want more original ideas without pulling them straight from a book, why not have a get together with friends and family who scrapbook?  You can get ideas from their work, or they can give you tips on a layout you’re already working on.  You never know, you may just get inspiration from a random conversation, story, or shared memory.

Sometimes the best layouts don’t come from friends or web pages; they come from you.  Scrapbooks are supposed to showcase your life and interests, so why shouldn’t they come from your very own inspiration.  If you feel like you can’t seem to come up with ideas, just get out your supplies and start playing.  Soon you’ll find yourself with too many ideas for you to make.

Once you start working on layouts, be sure not to get carried away.  You don’t need to have every idea all slammed into a few layouts.  You can start simple with a picture, journal, and a small embellishment, then work your way up as you buy more tools and gain more skill.  Remember that scrapping is an art, and sometime simple is better.

More Reasons to Scrapbook

Scrapbooking for Generations

By: Vera Raposo

Generation scrapbooking is a wonderful way for different generations of your family to bond and share your family history. Spend some time to get everyone in the family involved in creating scrapbooks. Not only will you share pictures and stories, it will be a wonderful bonding experience as well.

Scrapbook For Your Child
Start a scrapbook for your child and get him or her involved in creating the pages. You can create a new book each year together with your child. Include artwork, homework as well as current pictures of your child and friends. Ask your child to help in creating layouts, choosing embellishments and adding descriptive titles and text. Depending on your child’s age, you may even want to let her do most of the scrapbooking and writing with a little assistance from your of course. You’ll be surprised how much you will learn about your child’s life outside of your home. The two of you will get to spend some quality time together and create a memento to remember it for years to come.

Scrapbook Your Family History
Record your family history in a scrapbook. Put your family’s story on paper for future generations. Create a special generation scrapbook that tells the story of your own childhood, teenage years, or how you and your spouse met. When your children are grown, they will appreciate being able to get a glimpse of what your life was like back then. Keep adding to the scrapbook over the years and get everyone in the family involved in deciding what should be added. You will create a book that everyone in the family will cherish and pass on for years, maybe even generations to come.

Share Old Photo Albums
Go through old photo albums that have been in your family for decades. Spend some time with older family members to look through these albums. You will gain an appreciation for your family history and the life your family members lived long before you were born. You may also want to discuss options to preserve these old pictures.
If you would like to incorporate some of these pictures in your current scrapbooks, have copies made, or scan the pictures in your computer, edit them and then print. You can correct faded color and even some small tears and nicks with modern photo editing software. Plus you will have a digital version of the picture that will last long after the original photo deteriorates.

Grab that fabulous scrapbook that you bought months ago and saved for a special occasion and start generation scrapbooking today about yourself and your family. You will enjoy the process of creating that special book just as much as being able to share it with family members once it is finished.

Article Source: http://www.scrapventurearticles.com

Vera Raposo has been scrapbooking since her oldest child was 5. With tons of scrapbooking tips and ideas, Vera is now sharing some of her best scrapbooking ideas on her radio show at www.ScrappersTalkRadio.com.

Teen Memories

Scrapbooking Teen Memories by Rachel Paxton

By the time your teen is in high school, you probably aren’t taking as many pictures of them as you used to. I have to keep reminding myself that I only have a couple of years left and no time to waste trying to capture fleeing teenage memories.

You might be thinking that I’m really organized to be already working on scrapbooking my daughter’s high school memories. To be honest, I have a shoe box full of pictures of my daughter waiting for me to get to someday.

But if I wait until “someday” to continue taking pictures because I already have so many pictures I haven’t done anything with, then my daughter’s teenage years will come and go while I try to catch up.

I don’t want to chronicle every detail of my daughter’s life (nor would she want me to!), but I was trying to think of some memories that she might want to laugh about and maybe even treasure someday. So how do you do that without ending up with pages and pages of memories?

I decided to do two large (12×12) pages (facing each other in the album) for each year of high school. I will challenge myself to use this space creatively to tell the story of each year. When I started thinking of all the the possibilities, it really inspired me to start getting organized and collecting some great memories. And don’t limit yourself to just photographs, your scrapbook pages can really be accentuated by other types of memories. Here are some ideas to get you started:

Photograph Ideas:

High School Dances
First Date/Boyfriend
School Building
Church Events/Retreats
Braces (the day they’re removed)
Hair Styles
Clothing Fads
Learning to Drive
First Job
First Car
Best Friends
School Plays/Concerts
Family Vacations
Favorite Family Pets
Babysitting
Sports/Band/Cheerleading
Musical Instrument Practice

Other:

CD Covers (scanned)
Favorite Song Lyrics
Drivers’ Permit
First Pay Stub
Programs from Play/Concerts
College Brochures
School Newspapers
ASB Card
Awards/Certificates
Ticket Stubs (concert, movie, sporting events)
Report Cards

You can be creative when you’re arranging your layouts. Don’t be afraid to cut pictures down or cut out portions of play programs or school newspapers. Just cut out enough to accentuate the other items on the page. You will create the overall effect from the entire page, not necessarily from an individual item.

Have fun and don’t worry if you don’t get it done all at one time. I figure if I can do one every summer for the previous school year, by the time she finishes high school (she’s a freshman this year), all of her high school memories will be recorded in the family archives.

Rachel Paxton is a freelance writer and mom of four. For scrapbooking, card making, gift-giving ideas, and more family memory-making activities, visit http://www.crafty-moms.com.

Article Source: http://www.wahm-articles.com

Top 10 Reasons to Scrapbook

Top 10 Reasons to Scrapbook

Number one is the most important aspect of scrapbooking to me.  The others in the list are in no particular order.  Sometimes my all time most important reason to scrapbook however, is to get together with friends.  Remember that this is an important aspect for some of us in scrapbooking.  When you are in need of motivation, make a list of why you scrapbook.

1. Save the incredible stories only you can tell.

2. Tell who, what, when and where about the photos you took.

3. Get together with friends.

4. Collect pretty paper and embellishments.  :)

5. Make memorable gifts.

6. Pages unique to you and your style.

7. Save stories for future generations.

8. Get pictures out of boxes and envelopes.

9. Communicate with family while looking at photos and layouts.

10. Relaxing and self-gratifying.

~ Val Selby  www.littlescrapbookshop.com

10 Ways to Get Motivated

10 Ways to Get Motivated to Scrapbook

1.  Take a favorite photo out of a box or frame.  Decide today is the day you will show it off.

2.  Pull out some patterned papers or embellishments you have bought.  Remember the photos you were thinking of using them with?

3.  Set out photos from one event.  Now journal all your feelings, the facts (ie. where, when), and any quips you remember someone saying at the time.

4.  Buy a new magazine.

5.  Scope out a new technique book.  There are many at the local library.

6.  Get your friends together for a crop.

7.  Visit online message boards.  Chat with other croppers and look through the online galleries for scrapbook ideas.

8.  Try to schedule time each week or month to scrapbook.  It is easier to keep the creative ideas flowing if you are using them regularly.

9.  Take some new photos and get them developed right away.

10.  Show your completed scrapbook pages to everyone.  Nothing like a confidence boost to get you in the mood to scrapbook once again!

~Val Selby  www.littlescrapbookshop.com