Category Archives: journaling

Solutions for Photo-less Stories

Solutions for Photo-less Stories

You’ve seen how I used other people’s words to create a page when I did not have any appropriate photos. Now let’s check out some of the other ways I mentioned to create a photo-less page.

Sometimes you have memorabilia, but no photos. (In my case, I had taken some photos during a trip to Jamaica, but the camera died, and I lost the data disc.) Your mementos can take the place of photos to illustrate your journaling. Invites, business cards, tickets, maps, hotel notepads and room keycards, receipts, newspaper clippings are just some of the things from your life that you can use on a page.

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You can even create your memorabilia. This is especially easy to do with music, now that you can burn your own discs. Quick tip for you: when making pages without photos, make sure the paper and embellishments you use work to further your theme, as I did on these two pages.

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Sometimes, you don’t even have memorabilia. Instead of using photos or memorabilia, use words. Describe the pictures you have in your mind of the story you want to tell. With my example, I know my mother has photos from the numerous family Fourth of July picnics and flag-raisings my grandparents and their neighbors had each year. However, getting her to share them with me is like pulling teeth. I didn’t let that stop me from telling the story I wanted to tell. I used words to describe the events, and even designed the page as if the words were pictures.

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Sometimes, photos are completely unnecessary. This page was inspired by the product. No photos, but none are needed, since the point of the page was to both celebrate and poke fun at my love of scrapbooking.

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Feeling inspired yet? Good.

Now go tell that story you’ve been putting off because you have no photos. Don’t let anything stop you! (And show me what you made! I’d love to see!)

No Photos? No Problem!

No Photos? No Problem!

Sometimes, we have stories we want to tell, and we can’t find a photo that goes with the story. Either we can’t find the photo, because it’s mixed in with other photos (a photo organization problem we’ll tackle another time), or we just don’t have a photo of the event in question.

That’s no reason not to tell the story you want to tell, however. There are lots of ways to get your story told without a photo.

If you have memorabilia, but no photo, you can let that be the focus of the page. Postcards, pieces of maps, event tickets, hotel room cards, receipts, are all great ways to illustrate your story, even if you have no photos.

If you’ve got no photo and no memorabilia, you can still make a page. You can describe the photos you would use, if you had them. You can tell the story, and use stickers, stamps, and paper to embellish the story. You can use other people’s words.

Do you remember this page, from when I was talking about patterned paper?

Using that lovely, huge design

Using that lovely, huge design

Did you notice that it had no photos, but still told the story I wanted it to tell? By quoting my mother and grandmother, their presence and personality are definitely showcased on this page, even without photos of them.

You can make a photo-less page. Grab some paper, and write down a story you’ve been dying to tell, but haven’t found the photos for. Tell your story!

I’ll show you more examples of pages without photos later this week. You’ll have lots of inspiration to help you create a photo-less page.

Everyday Journaling

Everyday Journaling

I know journaling is hard for many people. Deciding what to say and how to say it is a huge mental roadblock. The thing is, most of us are writing all the time in our daily lives.

Do you chat and post updates on Facebook? Do you send emails to family and friends? Do you hang out on Twitter or Instagram or Pinterest? Do you make a list of errands to do for the day? How about shopping lists?

All these things can become sources for journaling on scrapbook pages.

Don’t believe me? Check out this page where I used some of a chat transcript as my journaling:

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Quick and simple, and captures quite a bit of the essence of my relationship with my sister. You could do the same thing with any social media.

Your errand and shopping lists? Excellent fodder for documenting your everyday life. Check out this list:

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This is a typical list my husband makes each week while going through the sales flyers. Add a few pictures from the grocery store trip, and maybe the receipt, and I’ll have a great slice of life captured.

It’s so important to document the details of your life. The conversations you have, the things you do and buy, the people and places in your life, they all change. Ten years from now, everything will be different, so document your everyday life. You won’t regret it!

 

10 Words: No More, No Less.

10 Words: No More, No Less.

How did you do with my challenge to you? Did you make a page with only ten words on it?

This is what I created:IMG_4320Do you see the small little tooth at the end of toothless? It’s actually a little piece of plastic that was stuck on my son’s new watch to keep the battery from engaging. He finally started to wear it yesterday, and of course left the little piece of plastic behind.

I found it while wiping down the bathroom counter today, and when I saw it, I immediately thought “tooth!” Since this same son had recently lost his two front teeth, it seemed appropriate to make a page about his gap-toothed grin.

I narrowed my choices to a single kit that my local scrapbook store had put together with Studio Calico products, and tried out a new punch I got for my birthday (thanks Mom!) and searched for a photo or two of him with his gap. These were as good as I could find. I was sure I’d gotten a good gap-photo, but no such luck. And both teeth are well on their way in now, so no re-creating photo possibilities.

A few distressed edges, a little pleated paper ribbon, some salvaged scraps (note the tiny hexagons, from the border punch!) and ten words later, and a page is born.

My ten words? “Toothless. Hopefully you won’t need braces like your Dad did.”

Quick, simple, and communicates more than just look at these crazy kid photos. You can journal. You really, really can.

 

 

It’s only words!

It’s only words!

I’ve taught a lot of in-person classes, and one of the most frequent problems new scrapbookers run into is the question of what to say, and how to say it. I remember when I first started scrapbooking, I was nervous and unsure of where to start as well. I even took a class on it. The class, however, was not very useful, since basically all the instructor did was read from the book that came with the class. There was one exercise that we did where I was supposed to write as much about a particular occasion as I could remember, using as many sensory cues (sight, smell, scent, etc.) as I could tie in. Of course, being the good student that I am, I sat right there and wrote as much as I could in the five minutes she gave me during class. When she saw how much I had written she said to me something along the lines of “I thought you said you were having trouble journaling?” Right then it clicked.

Writing for a scrapbook is no different from any other writing.

What would you write about the photos you want to use if you were sharing them on Facebook or Instagram? How would you share a funny family story with your long distance family and friends? Why are the photos you want to scrapbook important to you?

In the end, that’s all journaling comes down to. It can be simple who, what, where, and when details, or you can flesh out your story and tell the why and how.

That’s all it is. The secret to successful journaling is just to write. It’s only words. They are not etched in stone, and there’s no rule that says you can’t revisit the story at a later date to make a new page that tells even more of the story.

I have a challenge for you. Make a page this week with only ten words on the page, including title. No more, no less. I’ll make one too, and show it to you later this week.

Here’s a little inspiration for you, with only five words on it. (Eight if you count the date.)

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Let’s get scrapping! No excuses!