Category Archives: how to scrapbook

LOAD and Scrapbooking

LOAD and Scrapbooking

For the month of February, we’re going to be doing some intensive scrapbooking. I’m participating in this month’s Layout a Day Challenge, and I thought I could use this month’s challenges to show you how to use the basic principles from The Beginner’s Guide to Scrapbooking that help you get pages done.

Let’s start with the prompt, which was to scrapbook about a book you wanted to live in or a character you wanted to be. As I was listening to the prompt, I remembered a realization I learned when in college.

We are all the heroes of our own stories.

Immediately, I knew that was where I wanted to take today’s prompt. However, I wasn’t sure about which photo to use, if any. How do you illustrate the idea of being the hero of your own story? And then I remembered the photo I took of my niece this past summer of her running with a scarf/cape streaming out behind her. Perfect! I printed out a copy on my home printer. Love when that is working!

Next, I needed to decide how I was going to tell this story, so I wrote out a rough draft on some notepaper.

Then I started pulling supplies. I kept thinking I needed some orange paper for the background, and then I came across this Studio Calico piece of paper with the circle and rays coming off of it. It vaguely reminded me of superhero imagery, and the colors worked with the photo, so that got put on the desk.

I then pulled a couple of scraps from my scrap bin in orange and a darker teal to mat the photo on.

Now, how to add the journaling? Handwritten or computer generated?

LOAD1 superhero in progress|| noexcusescrapbooking.com

I decided I wanted to use the computer. I had a lot to say, and I wanted it legible. Some days, my handwriting is atrocious. I printed on vellum for two reasons. One, my wide-format printer died an ugly death, and two, I wanted to be able to see the patterned paper underneath.

I left a big space for alpha stickers, or die cut letters. I ended up using the Silhouette portrait to cut letters. I got tired of trying to figure out how I could adapt my existing alphabet letters to the letters I needed.

After taping everything down (commitment is the most important part) I decided it looked a little incomplete. Too much whitespace. I knew I didn’t want to add some superhero themed embellishments (I may not even have any!) but the space above the photo was too stark to leave alone.

That’s when I let the paper talk to me, and decided to emphasize the rays coming off the circular element with a few drops of pearl pen gold paint. Totally helps expand on the superhero theme.

LOAD1 superhero || noexcusescrapbooking.com

A few dots on the title, and the page was complete.

Now, how does this show some of the tips and tricks from the Beginner’s Guide?
First of all, the basic process is the story first process explained in the book. It also uses a bit of the color and design theory to create a page that’s unified and visually complete.

If you’re having trouble creating a scrapbook page, you should definitely try The Beginner’s Guide to Scrapbooking. You have a story to tell, and should tell it!

It’s Alive!

It’s Alive!

Won’t you please welcome to the world The Beginner’s Guide to Scrapbooking!

beginners guide to scrapbooking || noexcusescrapbooking.com

This is a strictly for beginner’s book! Really!

It breaks down the page creation process into simple steps, with three common starting points: your photos, your story, or your beloved scrapbooking supplies.

If you’ve made a page before, you’ll recognize all the steps. If you’ve tried but failed, it’s usually because you get hung up on design or journaling. If those are your problems, this has some quick and simple tips to help you work around them.

If you haven’t scrapbooked because you think you need to have all your photos printed and organized, and your supplies stored away in pretty baskets, that’s just not true. In order to preserve your memories, you just need paper, pens, maybe some photos, and some adhesive. Everything else is just icing on the cake.

Please, share this with all your non-scrapbooking friends! Memory keeping doesn’t have to be difficult, time consuming or intimidating. It just needs to be fun!

 

Exciting things on the way!

Exciting things on the way!

There are so many fun things heading our way.

truth scrap button black

First up, on January 31st is the next True Scrap production, Truth Scrap! This one day online, live event will focus on the hows and whys of scrapbooking your faith. I’ve seen a couple previews of class samples, and they look amazing! If you are into art journaling or faith-booking, this is the event for you.

This will be the first True Scrap production I won’t be able to attend. Which I am rather bummed about. But I’ll keep my ear to the ground and let you know which ones my scrappy friends really love!

LOAD215 1000x500

Also coming up real fast is the next Layout a Day challenge, which starts February 1st. The theme of this year’s LOAD is “Once Upon a Time… Celebrating the Stories and Books of Our Youth.” As an avowed book nerd from a very early age, I’m excited to see where February’s month of prompts will take us. Lain usually comes up with some great, thought provoking ideas. I’ll be posting my daily layouts here, as well as on Flickr, so you’ll get to see how creating a page a day works. I think you’ll be surprised at how quickly you start to scrapbook once you’ve gotten into the groove of creating a page daily.

My book is almost done. I’m doing one final edit to check for errors and unclear sentences. I want beginning scrapbookers to understand what I’m trying to tell them! This book is intended specifically for the beginning scrapbooker; it lays out the process for creating a page from start to finish based on three common starting points. It’s very definitely process based, rather than project based.

beginners guide to scrapbooking || noexcusescrapbooking.com

By the end of February, I should have a class based on the book ready for sale. That will include three process videos, worksheets and printable PDFs, and possibly layered photoshop templates for the digitally inclined. If I do include the layered templates, I’ll probably include another video on how to use them. Maybe. I’m still finalizing details on the class. Also, there will be a bit of instructor interaction, with review of up to three layouts that the student produces.

That’s a lot of excitement for one day, don’t you think? I think I’m going to go calm down by doing my December Project Life pages. Yep. I do find scrapbooking therapeutic, don’t you?

A Moment of Reflection

A Moment of Reflection

This blog has been up and running for two years now. How cool is that?

In the past two years, I’ve published 236 posts. That’s an average of a post every three days. Not too shabby.

The most popular post by far has been the post where I shared tools to help document a Week in the Life. A lot of people have been using it for inspiration for Project Life as well.

The most popular video has been the one that I made about how to cover an old vinyl binder with a large sheet of paper. Definitely NOT my best video. (So much time wasted, and so many goofy errors!) But it definitely has good information in it. My favorite videos are my very first– a start to finish process video, and a tool technique one, where I show three ways to use alpha stamps other than as titles or journaling. Also, the video I made for those who sign up for my email list, about ways to avoid making stamping errors is pretty awesome too. But that one you need to pay me with your email address.

I’ve made one mini-digital supply kit. You can find it here for free! I have plans to make more. I keep getting hung up on the idea that I need to be able to draw. I don’t really, but mental roadblocks are hard to work around sometimes.

I’ve done two full months of cards, in November 2013, and November 2014. I think that qualifies as a yearly tradition now, don’t you?

I’ve talked philosophy, and organization, and my favorite challenge, LOAD.

So many topics! So many posts! Each time I go through the archives I come across something I really like, either from a design perspective, or from a writing perspective.

Go ahead, pick a month from the archive list, I bet you’ll find something interesting!

Moving forward?

I hope to keep giving you inspiration that helps you avoid the excuses that get in the way of scrapbooking.

And for those of you who want to scrapbook but have yet to actually make a page?

I’ve got something coming for you:

beginners guide to scrapbooking || noexcusescrapbooking.com

I’m planning on releasing it on Kindle in January. Hopefully it will be the first of many. How’s that for exciting?

Where to Find Inspiration

Where to Find Inspiration

For many scrapbookers, the hardest part of creating a scrapbook page is the act of getting started. Just sitting down with paper and pen and photos can be very daunting at times. One of the easiest ways to give yourself the tiny push you need when you’re stuck looking at a pile of paper and photos and no idea what to do, is to start with a bit of inspiration.

The most obvious place to start looking for inspiration for scrapbooking is in the online galleries of stores like Scrapbook.com or Two Peas in a Bucket or Studio Calico. Browsing through an online gallery will give you tons of ideas to scraplift, from design and product use, to story and title ideas.

However, there’s a lot more out there than just scrapbook pages that can inspire you and get you scrapping.

As far as design goes, there’s tons of good design surrounding us every day. Magazine layouts, product labeling, beautiful websites–they’re full of strong structure that you can adapt to a scrapbook page.

Color inspirations are everywhere you look as well, from the front yard to your refrigerator, and every place in between. Have a favorite shirt? Use its colors and patterns to inspire a page. Love the mix of patterns and colors you see in an ad? You can totally turn that into a layout.

This vignette from Better Homes and Gardens' Color Made Easy 2014 magazine makes me want to create something with wonderful texture and color!

This vignette from Better Homes and Gardens’ Color Made Easy 2014 magazine makes me want to create something with wonderful texture and color!

How about texture? Love the way texture makes you want to touch a page? Use the textures you find on your pillows and walls and clothes to inspire your product choices and design.

Those are all visual or tactile ways of finding inspiration. You can also get your ears involved.

Yes, scrapbooking is a very visual hobby, but you don’t have to use your eyes to find inspiration.

Listen to the world around you. The things your family and friends say, the noises surrounding you while at home or work, the songs you hear while out shopping or driving or just hanging around, those are all great starting points for scrapbook pages.

Finally, don’t decide where you’re going to start. Let someone else tell you where to start. Participate in a prompt driven challenge, where someone else gives you an idea or a product or a technique to start with, and create your pages from there. Layout a Day is a great prompt driven challenge (Lain’s even got a free iPhone app for that!) but there are a ton of others out there. Rather than me listing them all here, why don’t you all add your favorite prompts/ challenge sites in the comments below? That way maybe we’ll all find something fun and new to us!

Today, I’m going to keep an eye (and ear) out for things that inspire me to create, and make a page based on that inspiration this week. Why don’t you try to do that too! We can share our creations on Flickr in the No Excuse Scrapbooking group.

(And if you’re looking for some non-standard inspiration, I love to collect things I find on the web on my Scraptastic pinterest board. Feel free to follow me there!)