Monthly Archives: January 2013

Photo Printing Resources

Photo Printing Resources

IMG_4292Now that you have chosen some pictures to print, I thought you might like some ideas about where you can get your photos printed.

As I said earlier this week, I have been using Shutterfly for about three and a half years now. I keep all of my photos at Shutterfly so that they are archived (aka backed up) in some place that’s not my home, and they are all in one place, which makes it easier to keep track of what I have archived and what I haven’t gotten to yet.

Most of the time, I have Shutterfly print and mail photos to me, which takes a little bit of time, but is the cheapest option. I love their print quality. Their photo books are also wonderful. I occasionally have their local affiliates like Target and Walgreens print small batches for me when I want something quickly. The print quality from Target and Walgreens has been variable. Sometimes they are excellent, and sometimes the prints aren’t lined up correctly and have a tiny sliver of white showing on one corner. If you have a local Target, Walgreens or CVS where you love the quality of their printing, this may be a good option for you.

There are some other cool things about Shutterfly. Not only do they give you free photo storage, which makes them a great place to archive your photos, but they also have share sites, which makes it easy to share photos with friends and family who can then choose to print photos for themselves from the share sites. They’ve also got a wide variety of items that you can have your photos printed on; from calendars to mugs to greeting cards.

You don’t have to use Shutterfly just because I do, however. There are some other great photo printing services.

Many scrapbookers love to use Snapfish. It’s got unlimited photo storage as well, but to keep it, you need to place at least one order each year. If you scrapbook at all over the course of a year, you should be able to meet that requirement. 😉

My friend Danielle Taylor from Scrapper On the Street swears by their photo quality, and has used them for calendars and greeting cards with great success. Snapfish also has share sites and photo books and other photo printed items, and has print locally options with Walmart, Walgreens, Meljer, and Duane Reade.

Another well recommended printer is Persnickety Prints. They also have free unlimited online storage, and great print quality, and my friend Monica Bradford of Scrap Inspired says they are one of the fastest online shippers out there. They don’t have as much variety when it comes to photo printed items, but they do print 12×12 photos, which is great news for any digi-scrapper who wants to get their digi pages off the screen and into the real world. They are a great place to print your Instagram photos as well, and are also catering to the Project Life crowd. Additionally, they have a lot of digi-freebies for people who sign up for their services. I will definitely be checking them out. I have a lot of digi pages that I’d like to get printed.

There are also a lot of local options. If you’re lucky there’s still a dedicated photography/camera store where you live. That’s usually the best bet when you’re looking for quality prints. However, there are also places like Costco, Walmart, Walgreens, CVS, and Target that will print for you. (Some might even ship to you.) You will have to check out each store to determine whether their print quality is good enough for you. My local Target used to have excellent print quality, but recently has been very disappointing. I would recommend doing a small batch to check quality before ordering every print from the last five years from one of your local big box stores.

If you’ve got any other printer recommendations, please share! And if you haven’t printed anything yet, what are you waiting for? Pick one, and get printing!

Choosing Photos: Printing

Choosing Photos: Printing

One of the things that can interfere with scrapbooking is choosing which photos to print. If you are like me, you’ve got hundreds (or thousands! yes thousands!) of digital photos to sort through before you can even get to scrapbooking.

I can see you getting overwhelmed just thinking about it. 😉

Take a deep breath, and let’s keep this simple. Pick a set amount of time to work on your photos. Fifteen minutes. Half an hour. Last night, I decided to listen to a podcast while choosing photos to print. (Among other things. My ability to stay on task lately has been abysmal!) Then narrow down what you are going to look through. I chose to narrow my field to photos taken the first quarter of last year, when I realized I hadn’t archived most of the photos from last year. Then I started flagging the particular photos I wanted to upload so I can print or archive them. Here, let me show you:

(Click on the little tiny yellow square in lower right hand side of the video to go full screen)

Did that give you an idea on how to go about choosing photos to print?

I focus on choosing photos that

a: tell at least one story. more is better

b: show personality

c: make my heart go pitter-patter

I do NOT print every photo I take. Did you notice that I have 888 photos in just that quarter alone? I will never ever scrapbook all those photos. Never. And I am okay with that.

I don’t even print every photo I upload. Some of the photos I upload will not make the cut as far as printing, but because Shutterfly has free, unlimited storage, I use them as an additional place to archive the photos I love.

There are lots of other photo printing places out there. Choose one you love, and USE it. You’ll never get any scrapbooking done if you don’t have photos to use!

Don’t give me any excuses. You CAN do this.

 

You Are Inspired!

You Are Inspired!

No matter if you are just starting to scrapbook, or have been scrapbooking for years, there’s one thing you can do to motivate yourself to scrapbook. What is it?

Think about your “Why?”

Why do you want to scrapbook? Do you have a specific project you want to do, like a wedding album or a family history book? Do you like playing with paper and ink, or pixels and brushes? Or do you realize that time flies all too quickly, and that what is normal today, is all too far in the past tomorrow?

This is the most important thing you can think about if you want to keep yourself motivated and excited to scrap. Every single GOOD scrapbooking class I’ve taken has brought in this idea as part of the class material.

Let me show you some of my reasons (and I have many):

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Class assignment from Cathy Zielske’s Design Your Life class at Big Picture Classes

The following few pages are from the class album I mentioned in my previous post about making mistakes.

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The title page

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Capturing the everyday

reasons pg 10

Telling my story

reasons pg 9

Sharing family history

This is such a useful process, I often make pages to remind myself about why I scrapbook. A couple more recent pages :

LOAD 211 24 copy

100_7479In short, I scrapbook because there are too many wonderful things, too many everyday things to remember. It’s my creative outlet, my memory saver, and my celebration of life in general (the good AND the bad.)

So if you are stumped, or stuck, or wondering if scrapbooking is really for you, take some time today and think about WHY you want to scrapbook. If you’re feeling really motivated, make a page and share it with me.

I’d love to learn why you want to scrapbook.