When you get started in scrapbooking, it can start to seem very big. There are so many options to choose from for every decision involved in making a scrapbook. There are thousands of products, philosophies, and opinions. While all these options are what make your scrapbook so special and unique, they can also make getting started a daunting task. If you want to sort through all the mess and find your voice, you can find help from millions of people online who are just like you and who have been where you are right now.
You've looked over several magazines, websites and books about scrapbooking, and you feel like you're ready to go. However, in all these articles you've looked over, you realize there are a few words that you've heard your wedding photographer talk about…words that scare you a little bit…and cause you to doubt yourself with the thought, "I'm not a professional photographer…what have I gotten myself into?" These frightening words you will find aren't so frightening after all, and putting them into use will really spice up your scrapbook.
There's not much worse than looking through your completed scrapbook and finding that your book's layout is a mess. One page is crammed, the next is empty. Take the time to read the following ideas about scrapbook layouts to ensure that you are satisfied when you look through your finished product.
Every scrapbooker needs to know how to balance photos on scrapbook pages. When cropping photos, an easy way to achieve balance across a page layout is to crop two or more photos to the same size. A photo cropped to 3" x 4" will balance another cropped to 4" x 3".
There are some great ways to reuse your leftover scraps, but there may be only so much you can do with your own before all your books start to look alike. To spice up your scrapbooks and your friendships, have some fellow scrapbookers over to share and trade leftover scraps.
Scrap swapping with your friends is also a great way to keep yourself from overbuying supplies. Maybe you need a touch of pink in a layout but don't want to buy an entire package of cardstock or ribbon. Trading with your friends is an easy way to get that small touch you're looking for without a big pricetag.
We've all looked through scrapbooks before and find us reading aloud to ourselves the captions and short journal entries that accompany the photos. Scrapbooking wouldn't be as meaningful and as captivating without those short, but sweet written memoirs. Here are a few ideas to help enhance your next scrapbook with journaling.
One of the hardest parts of journaling is finding something creative to write. Next time you are having trouble, give one of your friends the photo and have them create three to five questions about the picture that they want to know about. Tell them to be creative and avoid the who, what, and where questions. If your friends are having the same problems exchange pictures and help them out.
Who said that scrapbooking can only be made the traditional way, that is, the employment of the maker's hands crafting the materials? Who told you that you can only create your scrapbook by burning the midnight oil just so you will be able to come up with it? Nah, forget about these things! There is a lot better way of creating your scrapbooks if you want to enjoy doing it less the stress to suffer from.
Holidays are a time when traditions are held closely, and sentiment is dear. When composing a family scrapbook, you will find that much of the content is made up of holiday content. Christmas time is most likely the season in which you will base much of your winter holiday themes around. But what about Thanksgiving? Thanksgiving is a wonderful opportunity to really chronicle family's thoughts and time together as a family. A great addition to the information you collect would be Thanksgiving poems. Lighthearted and fun, these poem selections give you the chance to choose sentiment as it is reflected in words. Sound cheesy? Thanksgiving poems offer a reflection in words that one will appreciate especially after the passage of time. Words have the uncanny ability to bring one back to a thought sequence or state of mind that they were in when originally those words were first spoken or read.