Scrapbooking Ideas

Scrapbooking ideas, free scrapbooking layout ideas, software reviews, quotes, supplies, paper, stickers, and die cuts. Learn how to create great scrapbooks.

Monday, December 19, 2005

Scrapbooking Gifts

For those of you who haven't finished your Christmas shopping -- join the club! Actually I haven't started shopping yet, but I've got 5 days left so I'm not worried. ha ha.

Anyway, I just wanted to suggest that you look for scrapbooking gifts as something which will be greatly appreciated and certainly used. Gifts such as scrapbook albums, stickers, paper, scrapbooking kits, ribbons and embellishments are great ideas. You may consider getting something which someone may not purchase for themselves -- such as decorative buttons, dried flowers, or small embellishments which add so much to scrapbook pages but can become costly.

Making a small photo album or a calendar for someone brings back great memories throughout the year, plus it's a more personal gift rather than just buying the latest DVD. Anyway, good luck with everything.

Happy Holidays and Merry Christmas!

Thursday, December 08, 2005

Scrapbooking News

If you're interested in reading about scrapbooking and the scrapbook industry in the news, check out my news page on my scrapbook site. It's at Scrapbooking News. You can read about other people who create great scrapbooks, new ideas from leaders in the industry. Anyway, just thought I'd make you aware of the news page. It's fun to read about what other people are doing.

Digital Camera and Photo Printer

I love my digital camera -- it's great because I can take as many photos as I want without worrying about using up too much film, the cost for developing, etc. Plus, I can just delete the photos I don't like. There is so much flexibility. And then I can use a service like Ofoto.com or Shutterfly to print out the photos I want printed.

However, I've been thinking about getting a photo printer where you can print your photos without using your computer. You simply put your digital camera card into the printer and select the images you want to print. There are also printer ports where you simply attach your camera on top of the printer and do the same thing.

Anyway, I just found a great deal at Walmart -- you get a digital camera PLUS the printer port for under $200.00. Kodak 4MP EasyShare Camera with Printer Dock. Only $198.88 at Walmart.com. I think it's a great buy and shouldn't be passed up.

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Scrapbooking Gift Ideas

Christmas time is a great time to focus on family and good memories. I believe the best gifts are gifts of time, and gifts of yourself. Rather than spending time shopping, why not use your talents and create a scrapbooked gift for those you love. You could create a mini album, or photo box. I saw on Scrapbooking Memories this past week a great idea for kids. It's a composition book customized for them.

Instructions:

You buy a composition book with hardcover. Glue scrapbook paper to the cover. Add some embellishments, a child's name, small flowers, ribbon, crimped paper, etc. You could put the child's name on the cover along with a photo, or make a theme such as horses, dogs, music, etc. Not only does this gift remind them how much they are loved because of the time and effort put into it, but it is something they can use throughout the year. It shouldn't be very expensive and is a great scrapbooking gift idea.

If you've given scrapbook type gifts, let me know and I'll include your ideas in my blog.

Sale on Holiday Cards, Business Cards

I found some great offers going on at VistaPrint right now -- if you want to get custom photo holiday cards or any photo gifts, address labels, magnets, business cards etc. -- this is a great deal.

50% OFF All Holiday Cards - Expires 12/31/05

Save 25% Off Custom Printed Products at Vistaprint.com!

Monday, December 05, 2005

Recommended Site

I have a friend with a great website I wanted to recommend. It's a site which sells rock polishing kits and everything you need to have in order to make gemstones. I think this would be a great educational gift for Christmas, or for children who love rocks. Could also be perfect for a boy scout. Anyway, take a look and see all of the different rocks and rock tumblers they carry. Let me know what you think.

Rock Tumblers

Online Checks -- Use Your Favorite Photos

I just found a really great service to buy online checks. You can get customized checks -- using your own favorite photos. This is such a fun idea. So instead of having the standard checks you can get checks with your children, fun memories, or favorite scene. Anyway, check it out.




Saturday, December 03, 2005

Preserving Traditional Values

Do you have a great family story about how your grandparents or parents influenced you? Do you have any stories about scouting for you, your son, your husband, or father -- and how the values learned in scouting have influenced your life or the life of someone you love?

Here is an amazing project which we all can support. If you believe in integrity, honesty, service, kindness, being prepared, and all of the other values which the scouting program espouses, please check out this new program and pass on the word to the scouts you know. There is so much out there competing for the attention of young men, this is a great alternative to keep them focusing on the power of positive influence they can have in the world.

Scout Media

My brother Mark Allen and Alan Osmond are working to protect, preserve, and pass traditional scouting values to the next generation. Many great people have participated including Stephen Covey, Elder David E. Sorensen, Michael Leavitt, Michael Ballam, Fraser Bullock, Mike Neider of the LDS General Young Men's Presidency, and many more.

Check out their new website and please feel free to add your comments and suggestions. Also, if you have a great story about scouting and how scout values have changed your life or the life of someone you know -- please submit it. They are also looking for stories about how a parent or grandparent has influenced your life.

The more stories they can include about heritage, honoring your family name, having a honorable legacy -- the better search engine rankings they can get and the more people can find their site.

This is such a great project and one we should support.

Thursday, December 01, 2005

Photo Storage

I just found some great photo boxes on sale at Target. I like them because they are not only sharp looking, but they have various sizes, so I can fit my larger photos rather than just the 4x6 photos. They look great on bookshelfs and fix nicely in the closet. Anyway, I'm not sure how long the sale will last, but check it out.


Photo
Box - Black

Scrapbooking goes Digital

Here's a great article about digital scrapbooking I'd like to share with you.

Scrapbooking goes digital
By Holly Ramer
ASSOCIATED PRESS
November 30, 2005

CONCORD, N.H. - Wendy Armstrong won't confess how much money she used to spend on scrapbooking supplies, but she does admit nearly putting her daughter out of her nursery to make more room for the piles of paper and decorative doodads.

    The baby kept her room, but "believe me, it was a very hard decision," joked Mrs. Armstrong, a stay-at-home mom who lives near Portland, Ore. "This was not so much a scrapbooking hobby as a collecting hobby."

     Two years later, Mrs. Armstrong is ready to get rid of her collection altogether.

     But she hasn't given up on scrapbooking. Rather, she's joining a growing number of "scrapbookers" who have gone digital.

     Mrs. Armstrong, 43, now creates all of her scrapbook pages entirely on her computer. No more physical cutting and pasting, no more agonizing over a layout to the point of paralysis.

     "I had two kids, a backlog of a gazillion photos, and I was just getting to the point where I'd literally have layouts that sat on my desk for months just not quite finished," she said.

     Switching to digital scrapbooking brought a huge sense of relief.

     "All of a sudden I didn't totally panic about finishing my layouts like I did with paper scrapping because I never really had to finish," said Mrs. Armstrong, who has completed 240 pages in just more than a year. "It just created so much more freedom than paper scrapping."

     Digital scrapbooking is a fast-growing offshoot of the $2.5 billion scrapbooking industry.

     Motivated by the same desire to preserve memories as their traditional peers, digital scrapbookers use photo-editing software and other programs to arrange digital or scanned photographs, text and embellishments on their pages. Finished pages can be printed and inserted in standard scrapbook albums, bound in hardcover coffee table-style books, put on CDs and DVDs or shared through e-mail.

     Last winter, Mrs. Armstrong created a batch of pages covering her family's activities of the previous year and printed two copies, one for herself and one for her parents in Florida.

     "There's no way I would've done a paper scrapbook to send them," she said. "Heck, I couldn't even do it for myself."

     Some digital scrapbookers strive for realistic pages featuring digitally created ribbons, tags and other embellishments, such as shadows that give an appearance of depth. Others adopt a more artistic style by blending photos together, or they go for the cleaner, graphic style of magazine layouts and advertisements.

     For many, the main appeal is flexibility: Photos and embellishments can be repositioned, resized or re-colored.

     And while printing pages can be expensive, digitally created "papers" and decorations can be used over and over, and many coordinated kits can be downloaded for free from dozens of Web sites.

     One of the most popular sites, Scrapbook-Bytes, has grown to nearly 40,000 registered members since it went online in 2003.

     Its 34-year-old founder, Amy Edwards, said she was looking to create a welcoming place for digital scrapbookers to find information and inspiration -- after noticing they were getting a cool reception on sites devoted to traditional scrapbooking.

     "I thought it was going to be just a little thing," Mrs. Edwards said. "It literally flew out from under my feet. The traffic is outrageous."

     The increase in users has been matched by an explosion in the number of people designing their own papers and elements to share or even sell.

     Dianne Rigdon of Bakersfield, Calif., started making her own kits after downloading a few free ones and now spends 20 to 30 hours a week designing.

     "I think scrappers are becoming savvy. They know their programs and they're starting to explore it as an art," she said. "It's not only about preserving memories."

     Mrs. Rigdon, 42, estimates only a small number of designers make enough to earn a living.

     "You're just happy getting any money for doing what you love to do," she said. "I enjoy the creative process ... and there's no mess. You can leave it at any moment and come back to it later, and no one's messed with it."

     Some traditional paper companies now offer digital kits on CD, and computer-generated layouts are making their way into scrapbooking magazines. Simple Scrapbooks magazine just published its fourth edition of Digital Scrapbooking, and about 15 percent of the layouts it publishes in its regular magazine are digital, reflecting the percentage of computer-generated layouts submitted by readers.

     "I think it definitely has broadened the appeal of scrapbooking," said Stacy Julian, the magazine's founding editor. "So many people think scrapbooking is perhaps a kind of kitschy-crafty thing. It's made it much more accessible to people who don't have that inclination for crafts, but maybe they work with a computer all day long and they feel much more comfortable with the technical aspect of it."