Category Archives: beginning scrapbooking

Must Have Tools: Alpha Stamps

Must Have Tools: Alpha Stamps

There are some things every scrapbooker needs in their tool box: a decent paper trimmer, a good pair of non-stick scissors, adhesive (you can never have too much), journaling pens or markers, and a clear ruler. (You can see the items I recommend here.)

Then there are the tools that, while not absolutely essential, can be used over and over again, in many different ways.

Today let’s talk about alphabet stamp sets.

While I LOVE alphabet stickers, they have a couple really big drawbacks. You always run out of a letter you want before you’ve used up the set. You will not run into that problem if you have an alphabet stamp set. Nor will you find your stamped letters lying in the bottom of your page protector when you come back to look at your page in a year or two.

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A lot of people worry about messing up their titles if they stamp them, and while that is a concern, there are a couple things you can do to alleviate possible problems.

First thing you can do: adjust your attitude. You are stamping. You are making a handmade craft. Imperfection is a wonderful embellishment that shows your humanity.

That’s all well and good, but you still want to make sure your title is readable, right?

If you are using clear stamps, mount each stamp together on a single block. Fiskars (among others) even has blocks that have a gridline on them, which makes lining up your stamps even easier.

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If you are using wood mounted stamps, place a ruler along the lower edge of where you are stamping your word. Use the marks on the ruler to evenly space out your letters, and keep the lower edge of the stamp on the edge of the ruler to stamp in a fairly straight line.

Another trick you can keep up your sleeve: use a fine tipped color matched marker to fill in any missing spots. If you don’t have a color matched marker, you can take a very fine tipped paint brush or one of ranger’s fantastixs to pick up color off your ink pad and fill in any empty spots.

Some of my favorite inks to use for stamping are Memento, Archival, and Palette inks in black. Be careful if you use Tim Holtz’ Distress Inks. They are wonderful inks, but they can bead up more than the average dye ink when used on clear stamps. Most pigment inks also work really well, but since they are slower drying, you may smear them.

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One of my favorite things to do is to mix alpha letters with stamps, to create a really eclectic, texturally interesting title. Don’t be afraid of stamping! You can do it!

If you are still unsure of your ability to stamp, sign up for my newsletter. I’ve got a free video and .pdf all about common stamping mistakes and how to avoid them for newsletter subscribers.

Looking for more things you can do with alpha stamps? I’ll have more for you later this week!

 

Summer Album Supplies

Summer Album Supplies

After looking at my long to-do list for the summer, I decided to put together a quick digital template, so I can print up a little 5×7 photo book from Shutterfly at the end of the season.

Shutterfly has these helpful templates that take into account the trim and gutter around each page. They have a set for every size photo book they print. I downloaded the 5×7 version, and built a template to use, and to share with you!

Journaling page for each event.

Down load the zipped PSE journaling page: summer page.psd

one photo 5x7 page

One photo page

Download the PSE zipped one photo page: one photo 5×7 page.psd

two photo 5x7 page

Two photo page

Download the PSE zipped two photo page: two photo 5×7 page.psd

3photo 5x7 page

Three photo page

Download the PSE zipped three photo page: 3photo 5×7 page.psd

These are super simple pages. But that’s the cool thing about digital scrapbooking. It really lets you concentrate on the photos and story. That being said, I’m really excited to be using this kit from Traci Reed over at Sweet Shoppe Designs.

sweet  shoppe traci reed summer of fun

It has some super cool patterns and colors, and the embellishments will really complement the stories I hope to tell this year. The tone on tone papers will make great backgrounds for journaling blocks, and the brighter patterns will make the album soooo happy!

Quick note about using the templates. Make sure you have the guides turned on, so you can see what part of the page will be cut off when it is printed. If you have any questions, please add them below!

Out of the Closet and Onto a Page!

Out of the Closet and Onto a Page!

Now that you’ve gathered your old photos together, and taken a walk down memory lane with them, are you ready to create a page with them?

Did you take a few notes about stories you could talk about using the photos you put aside? Based on the photos I pulled out, I had notes for six stories. Six!

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Taking a second look at my photos, I decided which story would work best with the photos I had, and selected which ones to use. I’ll use the other photos, along with the notes I took, on one or more pages later.

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This captured a few stories actually, on one page. By tying together the ideas regarding my lack of practice, a broadening of my musical world, and a favorite teacher, I was able to turn it into story.

What stories did you think of when you pulled out your photos? Is there a common thread you can use to tie everything together? Make a page and share it with me! I’d love to see what you create!

If you are looking for a place to share the things you make, you could join my new Flickr group. You can find me here: No Excuse Scrapbooking. It’s so new, there’s only one photo in it!

Choosing Photos to Scrapbook: Back of the Closet Edition

Choosing Photos to Scrapbook: Back of the Closet Edition

Anyone here have old photos? As in photos taken with a film camera? As in most of the visual record up until the turn of the century?

Me too.

What should you do with all those old photos? (and negatives, let’s not forget the negatives!)

First, bring them all together. Get all your photos in one spot. Get them out from under the bed, and the back of the closet, the photo album you had planned to put them in but never got further than slipping the envelope of pictures behind the front cover.

If you have negatives, and they are still packed with the associated prints, make a quick note on the envelope that describes what the prints are about, pull out the prints, and start stacking the negatives, still in their envelopes, together. Don’t worry that the negatives are no longer associated with the prints. What you are accomplishing here is creating a quick archive that you are going to get out of your house. Take them to work, or have your spouse take them to work. If you have a safe deposit box, throw them in there. Leave them at a close relative’s home. They don’t need to be sorted or organized in any way, just put a label on the container so if anyone comes across them, they will know who the negatives belong to. Any old box will do to store them, although if you want to spend the money, something fire and water resistant would be a good investment. The goal is to create an archive so that if you ever have a fire or flood that ruins all your photos and scrapbooks, you’ll have some thing to start over with, if you are so inclined.

Now that you’ve got your negatives safely stored, let’s look at the pile of photos you have left. Look daunting? Insurmountable? I bet it does. That’s okay, we’re not going to sort it all today, or even most of it. Today, we’re going to take a trip down memory lane, and just look through some photos.

As you look through your pile, you’re going to find some pictures are horrible, and you’re wondering why you still have them. Other photos are going to make your heart go pitter pat, and help you recall a really wonderful moment. And then you’re going find some photos that are just “eh.” They don’t excite you, but they’re not completely dark and out of focus and full of people you don’t remember.

Those are the photos we’re going to work with today, because those are the pictures that will help you tell more story than you realize is possible.

So this is what you need to do: find five or so that are related that you don’t hate. Look at them closely. What kind of stories can they tell? Start taking notes.

These are the photos I found:

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None of these photos are very good. A couple could almost qualify as horrid, with the poor exposures and focus. But! (and this is a big but) I haven’t told any of the stories I could tell based on these photos. How much music affected my life. The trajectories of friendships. Even the fact that my high school band teacher dated my mom briefly after my dad died.

So, go gather up your photos. Archive your negatives, and find a few pictures that will help you tell a story or three. You can do this. Your story is important!

 

Found on Pinterest: Father’s Day Idea

Found on Pinterest: Father’s Day Idea

Fathers-Day-Pinterest-LogoHow many of you are on Pinterest? Do you love it, and pin with abandon? (I’m HeatherDubarry there if you want to follow me and see what catches my eye.)

Are you completely flummoxed by the idea of it? I love Pinterest. It’s a great way to organize and save and curate ideas you find in your web travels. (Think of it as a giant bulletin board!)

Do you ever make anything inspired by what you collect? I’ve made a few things based on ideas or projects I’ve found through pinterest. My friend Kristie Sloan at Artful Adventures put up a Father’s Day Pinterest challenge, where everyone can link to a project they make based on something found on Pinterest. Thru Pinterest I found a fun recycling project on Spoonful where you can turn a waxed half gallon carton into a wallet/change purse.

Materials are very simple, and the instructions are pretty clear. Helpful tools that I had on hand that not everyone would is my bone folder and the circle cutter set from Creative Memories. (I hate trying to cut a circle with scissors. It never comes out as smooth and even as I want.)

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Things that novice crafters might have trouble with: folding the accordion folds for each side. Getting those lines to meet up evenly is hard enough (try not to move the paper while tracing the folding lines onto your carton) but trying to create new folds over preexisting ones is very tricky. It can be done, but requires you to be patient, and to pay attention. It helps to try to create the fold by working from both the outside and inside edges of the score line towards the middle. Just remember, you want to fold each line in opposite directions relative to each other. (What origami calls valley (v) and mountain (^) folds.) If you start by folding the side flaps in, you’ll have the correct orientation to start your accordion.

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This was so fun and easy, except for folding over the spot where the carton originally was folded. I decided to see how easily this could be adapted to cardstock.

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Answer: Very easily! The score marks were easier to make and see, so the accordion fold was a bit easier to create. After debating with myself on how to create a closure for the cardstock version, I went with a couple small squares of magnet. Make sure they stick together and don’t repel each other before you adhere them! (Remember your high school physics and that magnets have positive and negative poles!)
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These are just the right size to use as change purses or gift card holders. I thought they might work as coupon holders as well, but they’re a little short. You could make a wider version by putting a bit of space between the two sides of the template, and I may do that. (My husband needs a place to keep his coupons!) Lots of options!

Have you made anything inspired by Pinterest? Do share!