Earth Day Blog Hop

Welcome to EcoScrapbook’s Earth Day Blog Hop! You should have arrived from Its Fun2Scrap. Be sure to check everyone’s posts out. I know Danielle (our lovely host at EcoScrapbook) has a giveaway and there might be another one along the way.

I wrote about ten ways to use found items a few months ago and thought that today I would show you how I might use a found item. I keep a basket of random found items to use on my layouts. Mostly, it includes pretty tissue paper, coffee cup sleeves, interesting tags off of clothing, and other random bits of packaging. (Yes, I am well aware of the cultural appropriation used in the found item I have selected for today. Read more about cultural appropriation here and here.)

I got this little booklet from Teavana and thought the weight and texture of the paper would be neat to use as the base of a mini-book.

Of course, since I am doing this project last minute, it is not finished. My daughter enjoys fishing at her Papa’s house. I have the photos from last summer printed and I already have a lot from this spring that need edited and printed. I decided to use some of these photos so that way she can easily look at photos of herself fishing anytime she wants. I will most likely finish the base and add 2-3 photos from last year, 2-3 from this year, and save a couple of pages for next year. Here’s what I have so far:

And in the spirit of being green, I have a canvas bag to giveway! Just tell me how you are green in your scrapbooking in the comments section for a chance to win! I will draw a winner on Tuesday, April 24, 2012 at midnight (central standard time).

Thanks for stopping by! Next stop on the hop is Almost Never Clever.

Participants:

Danielle: EcoScrapbook
Jules: Inspired Jules
Renee: Charms Buttons & Bows
Mariah: Its Fun2Scrap
Stephanie: Scrapworthy Lives
Natalie: Almost Never Clever
S: Snaps & Snippets
Zaira: Hacer Scrapbooks (in Spanish, translation tool available)
Lisa: Recklinghausen Musings
Jody: SpiegelMom Scraps!

Share
Posted in Blog Hops, EcoScrapbook, Green scrapbooking | Tagged , | 24 Comments

April’s Take Twelve

This entry is part 6 of 10 in the series Take Twelve

It is time for Take Twelve again. Each month in 2012, I’m joining Ella Publishing’s Take Twelve challenge. The goal of the 2012 Take Twelve Project is to take 12 photos on the 12th day of each month for a full 12 months—and scrapbook them! You can join in the fun any month of the year. 

This month I used The Take Twelve Guided Inspiration Kit to guide my picture taking. I used their special theme idea for April: technology.

I have no journaling yet. It is fitting that I opted to use the theme of technology and then I ran into technological difficulties getting my photos into my photo-editing software yesterday. I completed most of the layout last night, but am opting to get this post uploaded before I go to work so the journaling will have to wait.

My plan is to journal about one sentence for each photo.

I had issues this month. I was all set to take my photos on the twelfth. I forgot to take any photos until about 6 p.m. on the twelfth. Since my focus was on technology, I decided I would just take twelve photos the next day on the theme. I had trouble deciding what to photograph. I didn’t want my focus on technology to be all about “look at all the cool gadgets I own.” I wanted the focus to be a very broad-based interpretation of technology.

I have used Instagram for the first three months of this project. This time, I used Instagram for most photos, but also I just used the regular camera function on my camera, too. I probably could have run those photos through the Instagram filter before printing, but I honestly did not have time for any more tasks in order to get this online today.

A quick breakdown of my photos:

  1. A photo of my daughter on her bike, a bike as a piece of technology. I included a couple of photos that were taken a few weeks ago, too.
  2. Despite owning an iPhone, I still mainly listen to podcasts on my iPod Touch. I love podcasts. My favorites: The Paperclipping Roundtable, This American Life, The Moth, Office Hours (a sociology podcast), Stuff You Should Know, and Stuff Mom Never Told You.
  3. We set-up our old desktop for our daughter to use. The keyboard is wireless. One evening she brought the keyboard and a piece of paper onto the floor and set it up like a typewriter. I have no idea how she came up with this idea and she called it a typewriter. She will probably never use an actual typewriter. I’ve only used one a couple of times in my life.
  4. I use the Nike app to track my running. I love how technology makes it easier to track things like this.
  5. We live in the middle of nowhere. I do a lot of shopping online. I have begun venturing into the world of auto-shipping. I love how technology is making shopping for things we use a bit less frustrating.
  6. These are yummy items I get from Trader Joe’s. Thanks to our car, we can get to Trader Joe’s. Our nearest TJ’s is a good two hour drive away. We manage to get there about four times a year.
  7. My daughter playing with my iPad. Recently she has begun learning about the planets thanks to a couple of apps. Who needs an encyclopedia? (Though I secretly would love one of the last encyclopedia sets.)
  8. We hunt for morel mushrooms each spring. This year, me, my dad, and my husband hunted while my daughter stayed with my mom. I took this photo of a turtle and texted it to my mom to share with my daughter. How fun to show my daughter something cool from the middle of the woods without her being there!
  9. I do a lot of work online. This is a photo of one of the homepages for one place I do work for online.
  10. My washing machine. My washing and dryer were the first big purchases I made after getting my first real job after earning my Master’s degree. They aren’t flashy and do nothing special but they have lasted through several moves over about eight years.
  11. The last two photos were taken by my daughter. I think my favorite part of my iPhone may be how easy it is for my three-year-old to take photos. I end up with random photos of stuff in a store (I asked her to hold my phone while I was getting stuff out of the cart) and a random photo of me.
  12. I have a feeling that not only will my daughter belong to the most photographed-generation in human history, but I will belong to the most photographed-generation of moms in human history.
I hope you enjoyed my brief tour of some of the technology in my life. 

Check out my Previous Take Twelve Photos and Layouts:

And the Take Twelve Design Team:

Like the Car
Nihao, Cupcake!
Janette Carter-Kincaid
Scrap Inspired
Scrappy Wife, Happy Life
Day by Day
Right Here-Right Now
The Scrapbooking Haven Diva
Scrapworthy Lives
People of the Scrapbook
My Little Blessings
Life is Sweet
A Swoop and a Dart
Endless Possibilities
Yeah, Write

Want a free copy of The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Minimalist Scrapbooking? Sign up for the newsletter and it is yours!


Stephanie

Share
Posted in Take Twelve | Tagged | 6 Comments

Scrapbooking as Kin Work

Each Wednesday, I write a post from my dissertation.

Family relationships are maintained through scrapbooking in at least three ways:

  1. Scrapbooking can be a family activity
  2. Scrapbooks are offered as gifts (Downs 2006)
  3. Family history is chronicled within scrapbooks.

Moreover, photographs work to reinforce kinship relations, with photography regularly being a part of significant family rituals such as births and weddings (Musello 1979). Kin work (e.g., gift-giving, sending holiday cards, planning children’s birthday parties) falls primarily on women and is part of the unpaid, domestic work many women do (di Leonardo 1987). Even in same-sex couples, kin work tends to fall on the partner who does the majority of the domestic work (Carrington 1999). Respondents recognize that the scrapbook industry influences who does this form of kin work. One respondent, for instance, believes that because the industry (the magazines in particular) typically showcase white, middle class families and layouts produced by women, it let’s men off the hook in terms of scrapbooking and also in terms of being full members of the family.

The scrapbooker in the family often becomes the family historian (or is already the family historian and becomes the scrapbooker). This occurs regardless of the presence of children in the person’s life. For example, even though one respondent does not have children of her own and is single, she is still the primary kin worker in her family of origin, as a sister and a daughter. It is difficult to know whether or not this task falls on her because she is a scrapbooker, the oldest daughter, does not have her own children or a spouse and is thought to have more time to devote to her family of origin, or some combination of the three.

Kin work can most fully be accomplished with the support of the family. For example, one respondent takes photographs of all the family members at family reunions. I asked him if he struggled to get all family members to consent to being photographed. He says:

Yeah, there are always a few people that you have to twist their arm, but they know that I warned them, and they’re now used to having a flash bulb go off in their face because of me. It’s pretty easy now to get the pictures that I want.

In contrast to this family’s compliance, another respondent expects her daughter-in-law to provide photographs of her grandchildren for the scrapbook. She expresses frustration over the fact her daughter-in-law does not send photographs. She finally enlisted her son to send photographs instead. It is not that photographs are not being taken; the problem is they were not being sent to her. Despite the fact both her daughter-in-law and son work full-time, this respondent still feels her daughter-in-law should be sending the photographs. In this example, this respondent fully expects the kin work role to be performed by the women in the family even if they are employed full-time.

Kin work is passed on to future generations when scrapbooks are passed down to select family members (usually women), who then become the keeper of these records. Several respondents say that their daughters, not their sons, get the scrapbooks when they die. Mothers did not see sons as caring about the scrapbooks like their daughters did or would (most of these children are younger than five, too young to have really developed any kind of opinion towards scrapbooking at the time of their mother’s interviews). In other words, mothers rely on gender stereotypes. This could be due to the fact most scrapbookers are women, most of the support they get for their craft comes from other women (e.g., mothers, sisters, mother-in-laws, female friends), women are typically the kin workers both inside and outside of scrapbooking, or all of these reasons.

Respondents report that they scrapbook their husband and boyfriend’s photographs and memorabilia. They think their male family members are not going to do it because of the stigma attached to the hobby. In this way, scrapbookers are not only compiling their own memories or the family’s collective memory, but also are compiling the memories of family members from before they were part of his life.

Though respondents talk about scrapbooking as something that is fun, this does not negate the fact that work goes into the hobby. Moreover, just because some scrapbookers view scrapbooking as fun, does not mean some scrapbookers do not see it as work, similar to the work involved in other domestic tasks (e.g., the holiday work of meal preparation and gift giving) (Pleck 2004). The work that goes into the scrapbook is often not fully realized by others, as I discuss regarding gift scrapbooks. The work part is made further invisible when husbands do not even realize what their wives are already doing in the scrapbooks. For example, one respondent comments that her husband is supportive of the hobby but says things like, “we should really write down all the things that she [their daughter] says or does.” She replies, “I do that.” He has no idea that she is already doing that sort of thing. Though none of my respondents conceptualize scrapbooking only as work or as just another chore on par with childcare or feeding the family, scrapbooks as gifts is another story (and will be discussed next week).

Is scrapbooking a form of kin work for you? Join the conversation below or on facebook.

References:

Carrington, Christopher. 1999. No Place Like Home: Relationships and Family Life among Lesbians and Gay Men. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press.

di Leonardo, Micaela. 1987. “The Female World of Cards and Holidays: Women, Families, and the Work of Kinship.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 12(3):440-53.

Downs, Heather Ann. 2006. “Crafting Culture: Scrapbooking and the Lives of Women.” PhD dissertation, Department of Sociology, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL.

Musello, Christopher. 1979. “Family Photography.” Pp. 101-18 in Images of Information: Still Photography in the Social Sciences, edited by J. Wagner. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications.

Pleck, Elizabeth H. 2004. “Who are We and Where Do We Come From?: Ritual, Families and Identity.” in We are What We Celebrate: Understanding Holidays and Rituals, edited by A. Etzioni and J. Bloom. New York: New York University Press.

Did you know that you can subscribe by RSS?

Stephanie

Share
Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Scrapbooking as Kin Work

My February and March Scrapbooking Expenses

This entry is part 32 of 37 in the series Minimalist Scrapbooking

Every other Friday, I try to write a post about Minimalist Scrapbooking.

So much for $60 a month on scrapbook supplies. 2012 has not been good on the scrapbooking pocketbook. January was bad. Really bad. (And I placed an order of $57.14 at stopandscrap.com on January 31 after I published the January spending madness.) February was not much better:

  • $160.03 at Archiver’s (keep in mind I get to an Archiver’s about once a year)
  • $40.42 on another CHA-pre-order from stopandscrap.com
  • $3.18 on prints for Take Twelve Photo Challenge

February’s Total: $203.63

March was better:

March’s Total: $109.58

My monthly average since I started keeping track of this spending last April is up to $188.76. So it seems $60 a month is wishful thinking. Perhaps $100 a month is more realistic. What I do know is this: I must get back to minimalist scrapbooking for a bit. I need to get back to buying prints, adhesive, and tools as they need replaced and stop with the other stuff for the moment. 

Want a free copy of The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Minimalist Scrapbooking? Sign up for the newsletter and it is yours!

Stephanie

Related posts:
2012

2011

Share
Posted in Minimalist Scrapbooking | Tagged | 2 Comments

Take 12 Photos Tomorrow

This entry is part 5 of 10 in the series Take Twelve

It is time for Take Twelve again. Each month in 2012, I’m joining Ella Publishing’s Take Twelve challenge. The goal of the 2012 Take Twelve Project is to take 12 photos on the 12th day of each month for a full 12 months—and scrapbook them! You can join in the fun any month of the year.

This month I am using The Take Twelve Guided Inspiration Kit to guide my picture taking. I think I am going to use their special theme idea for April: technology. Are you planning on taking twelve photos tomorrow? Do you have a theme you plan to use tomorrow?

Check out my Take Twelve Photos and Layouts:

And the Take Twelve Design Team:

Like the Car
Nihao, Cupcake!
Janette Carter-Kincaid
Scrap Inspired
Scrappy Wife, Happy Life
Day by Day
Right Here-Right Now
The Scrapbooking Haven Diva
Scrapworthy Lives
People of the Scrapbook
My Little Blessings
Life is Sweet
A Swoop and a Dart
Endless Possibilities
Yeah, Write

Scrapworthy Lives is on Twitter. Are you? Follow scrapworthy on Twitter.

Stephanie

Share
Posted in Take Twelve | Tagged | 2 Comments

Does Your Family Support Your Scrapbooking?

This entry is part 42 of 86 in the series Scrapworthy Lives Results

Each Wednesday, I write a post from my dissertation.

Most respondents in my study report support for their hobby to varying degrees from their family. In fact, other family members are more supportive than non-family.

Husbands may roll their eyes or “think it is dumb” yet they still accommodate their wife’s hobby by taking care of children’s needs while their wife scrapbooks or providing financial resources to be put toward scrapbooking. It could be that scrapbookers who are supported in their leisure activity are more likely to consent to be interviewed in the first place. In other words, they feel confident that their hobby is something worth talking about with a researcher because their partners are supportive. Overall, there were no reports of the hobby harming family relationships, consistent with what previous scholars have found.

I did not specifically ask about how the hobby is negotiated in the household but did ask respondents how their family feels about their scrapbooking. Not one respondent talks about lying to other family members about how much they spend on their hobby or that they hide recent purchases[1] from family members as previous research suggests happens among other women crafters (including scrapbookers) (Downs 2006; Stalp 2006a; Stalp 2006b).

Family support extends beyond sharing space and economic resources with scrapbooking but also involves consenting to be photographed, taking pictures (of the scrapbooker), learning to take better photographs, going places for the scrapbook (e.g., scrapbook shopping and picture taking opportunities), and contributing their thoughts to the scrapbook. Family members have the right to refuse having their photograph taken, though most respondents did not mention this happening. Refusing to be photographed was the exception, not the rule. For example, one respondent comments how her family would not let her photograph them when they were seasick. Other than at that moment, they usually were good sports about it.

Not only do most scrapbookers want photographic images of family members for their scrapbooks, but they also want their words. Scrapbookers have various strategies for getting other family member’s words and thoughts in the scrapbook. Respondents use family member’s blog posts for journaling. Others email family members questionnaires to use in the scrapbook. Scrapbookers ask family to do things as simple as labeling photographs so that they knew what the caption for various photographs should read.

Extended family members also help scrapbookers scrapbook. The primary way extended family members help is by sending photographs to the scrapbooker who lives too far away to regularly see nieces, nephews, and grandchildren and take photographs themselves.

Overall, respondents feel like they are supported in their hobby by other family members. Scrapbookers feel the most support from family members who also scrapbook (or do other crafts), then from other female family members, and the least support from men family members. Husbands and boyfriends look at the scrapbooks but they do not really take an interest in the scrapbooks, like mothers of scrapbookers or other women do (i.e., asking about the scrapbooks or wanting to see the scrapbooks).

Scrapbookers seem to feel their hobby is most validated when another person becomes a scrapbooker, when they are asked to create scrapbooks for the family (e.g., heritage albums or an album for an elder family member’s 80th birthday), or they are asked to use their scrapbooking tools and supplies for other projects.

Does your family support your scrapbooking? How? Join the conversation below or on facebook.



[1] At City Scrapbooks (pseudonym), customers can write checks out to the acronym of the store, “CS,” so husbands are not be suspicious of checks written out to “City Scrapbooks.”

References:

Downs, Heather Ann. 2006. “Crafting Culture: Scrapbooking and the Lives of Women.”    PhD dissertation, Department of Sociology, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL.

Stalp, Marybeth C. 2006a. “Hiding the (Fabric) Stash: Collecing, Hoarding, and Hiding Strategies of Contemporary US Quilters.” Textile 4(1):104-25.

——. 2006b. “Negotiating Time and Space for Serious Leisure: Quilting in the Modern U.S. Home.” The Journal of Leisure Research 38(1):104-32.

Did you know that you can subscribe by RSS?

Stephanie

Share
Posted in Findings, Family, Dissertation | Tagged , | 8 Comments

Blogging as Scrapbooking

Today, Sara Grafton from 1200 Some Miles share some thoughts on why she blogs and how it is like scrapbooking. 

I started blogging in April 2007, but I was not sure that I would keep up with it for very long. I had been reading some scrapbooking blogs and thought that I could blog too. It seemed like a good way to keep up with my friends and family spread throughout the country. (I had not started using Facebook yet). I chose Blogger as a free platform and started posting.

Almost five years later, I am still blogging. At times, my posts were sporadic, but then they increased after my son was born. Countless stories and most of my favorite photos are there. I write about my scrapbooking and stamping, but it is mostly a blog about my little family. My blog is one of my scrapbooks. I have listened to the Paperclipping Roundtable podcast from the beginning, and I remember that on the first episode Stacy Julian said, “It all counts.” Scrapbookers are examining the connection between blogging and scrapbooking and the Paperclipping Roundtable extensively covered the topic in episode 104.

My blog is also a huge help when I find the time to sit down to make a traditional or digital layout. For example, when I made the Toddlerhood layout, I took the journaling directly from a blog post. This is a digital layout using My Digital Studio from Stampin’ Up! that I also printed for my son’s scrapbook. I do not mind that some stories are duplicated on my blog and in my scrapbooks.

Just like my traditional scrapbooks, I would be saddened to lose anything from my blog. My next step is to print my blog into photobooks. I noticed the ad and discount code (15OFFBLURB)on this site for Blurb, which gives me some motivation to get started. With over 650 blog posts, it will be a large task to print my posts into photobooks. I may not print every blog post and will be asking myself, “Is it scrapworthy?”

Do you blog? If so, how does blogging contribute to your scrapbooking process? If not, is there another medium that assists your process? Comment below.

You can find more of Sara at 1200 Some Miles and on Pinterest.

Share
Posted in Guest Posts, Blogging | Tagged , | 10 Comments

How Do You Budget for Scrapbooking?

This entry is part 31 of 37 in the series Minimalist Scrapbooking

This week I was a guest on The Paperclipping Roundtable. As usual, it was a lot of fun and I am happy to be invited to be a guest. I had a minor child-related emergency about 20 minutes prior to recording and though the emergency really was really minor, it totally threw me off and I was not able to get mentally ready for the podcast as I had planned before recording.

Our topic was on budgeting and scrapbooking. One thing they became clear in this discussion is that what works for some of us might not work for others. Take scrapbook kits for example. I do not belong to any kit clubs. Molly McCarthy belongs to one to save money. Me and Nancy Nally don’t belong to kit clubs to save money. Which perspective is “right”?

Both perspectives are right. Personally, I don’t belong to a kit club because it commits a certain amount of money each month. I don’t spend money on scrapbook supplies every month as it is, so I don’t want to tie up that money. The other thing it does is that it limits my other scrapbook spending. I was a direct seller for a short time and one reason I quit is because it tied up my scrapbook money with one company in order to meet my quota.

What really works for budgeting? Knowing what you need. Nancy talked about this quite a bit in the episode and I believe strongly in this as well. For me, I spent very little on scrapbooking stuff outside of tool replacement last summer when I adopted my minimalist scrapbooking approach one year ago. I worked on using items from my stash. By doing this I learned what supplies I regularly used and which I ignored. I also learned what was missing from my stash and bought accordingly. I’ve been on a bit of a scrapbook shopping binge but haven’t scrapbooked but one layout in the last month. (Don’t worry, I’ll pick it up again, I just have hardly been home over the last few weeks and have had other priorities when I have been home.) I think everyone should just stop buying for a period of time to learn what they use and need. What should that length of time be? It probably depends on how often you scrapbook. A week? A month? A summer? Alternatively, maybe just go by number of layouts. Create a dozen layouts and then shop again. Or just look over your last dozen or hundred layouts. Look at the supplies you used. Look at your supplies and see what you didn’t use. There are lots of ways to learn what you use or don’t use but everyone should figure it out if they are serious about budgeting for scrapbooking in any way.

I also mentioned that I unsubscribed from a number of blogs after CHA. This is true. I was overwhelmed. I was overwhelmed by the product but also by the sheer number of blogs I was following. Right now I subscribe to 131 blogs and several post daily or multiple times a day. I was subscribed to twice that many. I do this a couple of times a year. Some of the blogs I will resubscribe to in the future. For some, I still follow in facebook or twitter or get their email newsletter. I needed to cutback on this substantial flow of information in order to get done what I need to get done each day. Unsubscribing for me was not just about saving money, but also about saving time. And yes, I’m going to invite you to subscribe to this site, too. 🙂

The point is budgeting to scrapbooking is personal and there are a lot of ways to do it. If you want to read more about my adventures in scrapbook budgeting, you can sign up for my  newsletter and receive a free copy of The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Minimalist Scrapbooking. You can also read more on minimalist scrapbooking here.

How do you budget for scrapbooking? Comment below or join the conversation on facebook.

Stephanie

Share
Posted in Money Saving Tips, The Paperclipping Roundtable, Minimalist Scrapbooking | Tagged , , | Comments Off on How Do You Budget for Scrapbooking?

Child-Free Scrapbookers

This entry is part 40 of 86 in the series Scrapworthy Lives Results

Each Wednesday, I write a post from my dissertation.

Doing parenthood is something that child-free scrapbookers do, too. Child-free scrapbookers report that they include the personal context in their scrapbooks so that years from now when their children or grandchildren read the album they will learn more about their parents or grandparents. Here scrapbooks are created with the thoughts of future children and future grandchildren in mind. These scrapbookers anticipate parenthood and scrapbook with this in mind.

Not all child-free respondents in my research, however, intend on ever having children. These scrapbookers are more likely to deemphasize the role scrapbooks might play for future generations. They may also emphasize their role as caretaker of a pet more than a parent or a child-free scrapbooker who intends to be a parent one day might do in a scrapbook.

Child-free respondents say that the pervasiveness of the image of mothers creating scrapbooks pushes scrapbookers without children to the margins. One child-free respondent, who does not intend on ever having children, states:

For me, I am a person without children and a lot of people who scrapbook seem to think why in the world would someone without children scrapbook which lessens to me in my mind the value of my life and my experience. You’re saying that my life isn’t worth scrapbooking which is absurd. Because we have family and friends…if I’m gone somebody might actually want to remember me. If I’m here forever I might want to remember my nieces and my nephews, my grandparents whoever…so many people think that why would I scrapbook myself? I mean I can’t imagine thinking like that and thinking my mom and dad are not worth me scrapbooking.

Clearly, scrapbooking is about more than just doing motherhood or there would not be a place for child-free scrapbookers.

Moreover, most child-free scrapbookers still make scrapbooks about their family to varying degrees. Scrapbookers without children of their own (both men and women) make scrapbooks about nieces and nephews (scrapbookers who were mothers also make pages about their nieces and nephews). Several of these respondents make baby scrapbooks for their brother or sister’s child and the birth of the child was sometimes the trigger to becoming a scrapbooker.

The point is that child-free scrapbookers exist. Some scrapbook with the anticipation of eventual parenthood in mind while others have no intention of ever becoming a parent. The scrapbook industry promotes the image of mothers scrapbooking and this message is heard by child-free scrapbookers, who feel pushed to the margins of the hobby.

Are you child-free or did you start scrapbooking before becoming a parent? How does your parental status shape your scrapbooking? Comment below or join the conversation on facebook.

Did you know that you can subscribe by RSS?

Stephanie

Share
Posted in Family, Dissertation, Findings | Tagged , | 18 Comments

This Month on Scrapowrthy Lives: March 31, 2012 Edition

This entry is part 47 of 47 in the series This Week on Scrapworthy Lives

Each Saturday, I provide a compilation of links from the week’s posts. Because I’ve cut back on posting, this Saturday includes all of my posts from March.

This Month:

A Letter to My Readers

Why do Moms Scrapbook?

Why Scrapbook

Invisible Motherhood

March Take Twelve

Treat Your Scrapbook Supplies Like Your Wardrobe

If Moms Scrapbook, What do Dads Do?

One Year Ago:

Scrapbook for the Future (Purpose of Scrapbooking)

Scrap Happy: Scrapbooking Smart

Which Album? Organizing Layouts

Scrapbooking Brings People Together (Purpose of Scrapbooking)

B&B Review: Scrapbook Update

Scrap Happy: Lighten Up

Give Your Camera to Your Kids

Scrapbooks have Heart and Soul

B&B Review: Shutter Sisters

Acknowledge the Reality of Other People’s Feelings

Blogging for Scrapbookers

A Sense of Community

Books & Blogs: Color Me Happy

A House of Happy Memories

Learn to Use a DSLR

Do You Look at Your Scrapbooks?

Books & Blogs: Your Memory Connection

Five Ways to support Scrapworthy Lives:

  1. Get a free copy of The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Minimalist Scrapbooking and a sneak peak at The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Market Research by subscribing to the Scrapworthy Lives newsletter.
  2. Subscribe by RSS.
  3. Connect with Scrapworthy Lives on Google+.
  4. Become a fan of Scrapworthy Lives on Facebook.
  5. Follow scrapworthy on Twitter.
  6. Buy my e-book, The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Market Research.

Stephanie

Share
Posted in Family, Dissertation, B&B Review, Scrap Happy, Findings, Gender | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on This Month on Scrapowrthy Lives: March 31, 2012 Edition