A Happiness Blog Hop: Pay Attention

This entry is part 54 of 66 in the series My Scrap Happy Project

Welcome to A Happiness Blog Hop! This time around, our theme is Pay Attention. You should have arrived from Scraps & Sass.

Remember how I mentioned that I have a pair of fringe scissors, but never used them? Well I used them!
And now I have other ideas as to how to use them. I have probably owned these scissors for close to a year without using them. I think I need a new rule. If I buy a new tool, I have to use it within a month of purchase or it gets returned. Maybe that would motivate me to figure out how to use it sooner.

Do you have any tools you have never used? Perhaps, today is the day to go try it out!

Well, thanks for stopping by. Your next stop is Scrap Your Life.

Fun Mama
Kiss & Tell Scrapbooking
Melissa’s Blog
Nihao, Cupcake!
Nuggets
Our Life with Spiky Potatoes
Pie for Breakfast
Scraps & Sass
Scrapworthy Lives
Scrap Your Life
Slice of Life
Take a Picture and Remember This
This Kalil Life
1200 Some Miles
Scrapping Mojo
Your Memory Connection

Related Posts:

Join the conversation below by commenting!

Check out my Facebook page!
Stephanie

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Posted in Pay Attention, Scrap Happy, Blog Hops, A Happiness Blog Hop | Tagged , | 14 Comments

Keep a Contented Heart and Just Scrapbook

This entry is part 54 of 66 in the series My Scrap Happy Project

Each Monday, I discuss my Scrap Happy project based on The Happiness Project.

There are two Scrap Happy Project posts today because I have a lot to fit in November, and only three more Monday’s to do it! (Look for the blog hop post later today.)

November’s theme is Keep a Contented Heart. This seems really fitting now that we are in full holiday season mode.

The tasks for following this theme include:

  • Laugh out loud
  • Use good manners
  • Give positive reviews
  • Find an area of refuge

I have alot of ideas as to how I’m going to approach this month. What ideas do you have based on these topics? Join the conversation below by commenting!

Check out my Facebook page!
Stephanie

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This Week on Scrapworthy Lives: November 5, 2011

This entry is part 33 of 47 in the series This Week on Scrapworthy Lives

Each Saturday, I provide a compilation of links from the week’s posts.

This Week:

One Year Ago:

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. Become a fan of Scrapworthy Lives on Facebook.
  4. Follow scrapworthy on Twitter.
  5. Buy my new e-book, The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Market Research.

Stephanie

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My October Expenses

This entry is part 22 of 37 in the series Minimalist Scrapbooking

It’s time again for my monthly report of scrapbooking expenses.

  • I spent $26.06 at my local scrapbok store. I bought calendar pieces for a gift, glue (I was out), one sheet of alphas, and the rest was ribbon. I love ribbon. about half of my bill went to ribbon.
  • I bought book binding rings for $8.27 to finish an album. Unfortunately, they were smaller than described. I’m just going to keep them because I will eventually use them, but I still need one two-inch size book binding ring.
  • I upgraded to a pro-Flickr account for $24.95. I want to back-up all my digital photos to Flickr. I also have been using Flickr more to share projects I’ve been working on and had maxed out on the number of uploads I could view with the free account.
  • I paid $10 for my monthly membership to Get it Scrapped.
  • I bought Design Workshop from Ella Publishing $4.13 (there was a coupon).

I spent $73.44 in October. This brings my monthly average down to $83.36.

In November, I know I have to order some prints and I still need to find 2″ book binding rings. Other than that, I do not plan on making any other purchases. I do have my membership to Get it Scrapped. I will decide in a couple of weeks whether to keep it or not. It all depends on how much I use the membership in the next couple of weeks.

All in all, I’m not thrilled with how much I spent in October, especially my splurge at my local scrapbook store. I have ribbon and the ribbon I bought is beautiful and part of it has already been used, but I also didn’t need it.

Related posts:

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

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

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Posted in Minimalist Scrapbooking, Money Saving Tips | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Some Changes at Scrapworthy Lives

I have so much to share with the scrapbooking world. I started regularly posting on October 10, 2010 and have since published 328 posts. I post five to six times each week. I have big plans for this site, but need to cut back on the number of posts in order to accomplish more of my goals. So there will be a few changes. The biggest change is that some of the weekly series will now be every other week instead. I hope you understand and will continue to follow along.

On Mondays, you will continue to learn about My Scrap Happy Project. I have two months left of posts from The Happiness Project: Or, Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun.

On Wednesdays, I will eventually alternate between a post from my doctoral research and a scrapbooking industry post. Right now, my dissertation posts are on hiatus. I plan to resume these posts after the first of the year. In the meantime, I will be publishing posts about working in the scrapbook industry.

On Fridays, I will alternate between Books & Blogs Reviews and Minimalist Scrapbooking.

On Saturdays, you will continue to see This Week, a roundup of all posts from the week.

So you will now see 3-4 posts each week instead of 5-6 posts. I think in the long run this is best for the site, me personally, and my readers.
Stephanie

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Stumbling into the Scrapbook Industry: Is this a Hobby or a Business?

This entry is part 2 of 9 in the series The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Market Research

I subscribe to approximately 75 scrapbooking blogs. A couple times a year, I unsubscribe to blogs that just aren’t working for me. Sometimes I resubscribe to give them another chance or just to check in and see what’s new. I am always on the lookout for new blogs to follow.

Some of these blogs are part of a larger scrapbooking business. Some of these blogs are just blogs. Some of these blogs are mainly personal with just enough scrapbooking that they get filed as scrapbooking blogs. I’ve noticed that folks stumble into the scrapbook industry.

I know I stumbled into the scrapbook industry. I wasn’t even looking for a part-time job when I saw the posting at my local scrapbook store. I didn’t even realize that I was in a local scrapbook store. I just needed an album for this trip I took and signed up for their mailing list to get coupons. This was 2003.

Eventually, I decided to study scrapbookers for my doctoral research. My work in my local scrapbook store was greatly reduced due to other commitments of mine. I eventually became a direct seller–partly for the discount, partly because I was moving and my local scrapbook store was closing, and partly just to see what direct sellers do. I did that for about a year and a half. I quit direct selling because ultimately I decided if I was going to spend the time to make it really work, I would rather be promoting my own products.

In 2010, I was getting close to finishing my dissertation. I’ve known all along I want to write a book based on that research and that is still in progress. As I began doing research on book publishing, I found that the best advise seemed to be to start with a blog. So, I bought my domain and a few months later, Scrapworthy Lives went live.

I had every intent to just share my dissertation research here and post on a few other topics just to keep it interesting. As I learned more about blogging, I realized that it would be in my best interest to treat this whole project more like a business than a hobby. I want my blog to be self-sustaining. In order to do this, it needs to be treated like a business.

Enter, my first product, an e-book called The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Market Research. I have taken bits of my dissertation and added information about marketing research geared to the scrapbook industry.

If you are like me and have sort of stumbled into the scrapbook industry, it can be overwhelming to think about where to take your business. In my business, I could drop the business-to-business side of my business or drop my business-to-consumer side of my business. I’d like to continue reaching both audiences.

My reason for this is because so many of us stumble into the business side of the hobby. We submit a layout to a gallery, create a great tutorial on something we were doing anyway, and all of a sudden are guest posting or teaching classes or tapped to work for one company or another.

We stumble into the industry. We stumble along the way. I know my site has a lot of flaws. I know I do not do social media very well. I know my photography kind of sucks (they work well as prints, but I struggle with photographing layouts for the web). I suppose you could say, that I wrote The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Market Research for myself. I know where I need to improve and know what areas I need to consider growing, shrinking, or eliminating. I know I need a plan. Not only did I write the book, but now I am going to take the steps to implement everything I discuss in that e-book.

Now back to all those blogs I subscribe to. There are bloggers that treat their blog like a business (or one piece of their business. There are bloggers that are purely doing it as a hobby. Then there are the confused. Some days, it is a business and some days it is a hobby. Some are treating it as a hobby, but could be working it as a business with very little effort.

I don’t want readers to be confused as to whether Scrapworthy Lives is a hobby or a business. I want it to be crystal clear that this is a business. Scrapbooking may be a hobby, but Scrapworthy Lives is a business.

Is your blog a business or a hobby? Do you want to take your scrapbooking hobby and turn it into a business? Did you stumble into the scrapbooking industry?

Want a free copy of The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Minimalist Scrapbooking and a sneak peak at The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Market Research? Sign up for the newsletter and it is yours!
Stephanie

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Posted in Uncategorized, Direct Selling, The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Market Research | 6 Comments

My Life Before I Was Your Mother

Today, we have a guest post from Cheryl McCain at Scrap Your Life.

Have you ever thought how wonderful it would be to have an album with photos and stories of your Mother’s childhood and life before she became your Mother?

Why not join me in creating an album about yourself for your own children…..photos and stories of your life before you became their mother?

I am truly passionate about this project and I’ll tell you why. I purchased a blank journal for my Mother one year for Christmas and asked her to record memories and stories of her life, HER life, before she became my Mother.

It wasn’t to be. My Mother passed away on December 7th, 2007. Although I have memories of SOME stories she told, there was so much more to learn that is now untold forever.

It made me think that such stories, with or without photos, would be treasured by my own children (and future generations as well). After all, we live in a perfect time where our scrapbooking knowledge and technology, whether it’s paper or digital scrapping, is abundant, available, and most of all, FUN!

I would love to lead you on this journey with me each month by giving you prompts, tips, and example layouts so you can accomplish this project for yourself and your family, as well as sharing your layouts with the other participants and in doing so, we will give each other inspiration, encouragement, and support.

It matters not whether you paper scrap or digital scrap, you can accomplish your goal and the main thing to remember is that this project is YOURS, so there’s no right or wrong. I’m here to help you get those creative juices and ideas flowing to make what may be the most important album of YOUR and your children’s lives.

An example prompt from Lesson 1 (and there’s plenty more) would be photos, memorabilia, or both of your birth along with specifics such as your weight, length, etc.

Here’s a couple example layouts from my own album:





Included in this FREE class:

  • Downloadable PDFs of each lesson
  • FREE Quickpages and/or Page Kits for the digital scrappers
  • Links to helpful and/or inspirational information
  • The ability to share your layouts of each month’s lesson whether it be a link to your favorite gallery, your blog, or by using the linky widget right in each lesson post.

I sincerely hope you’ll consider joining me and I’ll look forward to seeing your progress. You can NEVER get behind, all the lessons will remain on-site and you can jump in whenever you wish.

Lesson 1 will be posted November 1, 2011 and can be found on my Scrap Your Life in the top menu heading under “My Scrap Albums”. You will see “My Life Before I Was Your Mother” there.

Cheryl McCain’s website is Scrap Your Life

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Posted in Guest Posts, Uncategorized, Online Scrapbook Education, Online Scrapbooking Courses | Tagged , | 3 Comments

What Does Keeping a Food Diary Have to Do with Scrapbooking?

This entry is part 52 of 66 in the series My Scrap Happy Project

Each Monday, I discuss my Scrap Happy project based on Gretchen Rubin’s The Happiness Project: Or, Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun.

Today’s task is keeping a food diary. I am a big fan of food diaries. I think they can be very effective to do things like tracking food reactions. I kept one several years ago and figured out that yellow #5 does not agree with me. Once I quit my daily Mountain Dew habit, I was also able to quit my daily zyrtec/claritan habit (the doctor changed it up at one point).

People scrapbook for a variety of reasons. A person could create a scrapbook based around a food diary. On Fed Up with Lunch, Mrs. Q, ate, photographed, and blogged every school cafeteria lunch she was served for a year. Among, self-identified scrapbookers, Cathy Zielske regularly blogs about Moving More, and Eating Well. There is even a site called ScrapFit for the scrapbooker looking for physical fitness inspiration. Yes, tracking physical fitness in a scrapbook is not the same as keeping a food diary, but the two often go together.

Other folks, might use scrapbooking to create a recipe book. This year, I opted to create a TasteBook. I included the recipes of the foods we actually cook. My goal was to store my most used recipes in one place rather than in a recipe box, file folder, and numerous cookbooks. I started last December and printed the book in August. Yes, it took awhile to enter 100 recipes, add some photos, and and some stories to go along with the recipes, but it was well worth it. A person could actually add photos of all the resulting meals from the recipes, but I opted to finish my book in less than a year instead. 🙂

What about you? Have you ever used a scrapbook as a food diary? What about as a fitness journal? Comment below or join the conversation on facebook or twitter.

Related posts:

If you want to read more about Scrap Happy project based on Gretchen Rubin’s The Happiness Project: Or, Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun or my Scrap Happy Project, check out the other posts in the Scrap Happy series.

Are you doing a happiness project? Are you doing a scrap happy project? What’s stopping you? Join me today!

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

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Posted in Scrap Happy, Pay Attention | Tagged | 2 Comments

This Week on Scrapworthy Lives: October 29, 2011

This entry is part 32 of 47 in the series This Week on Scrapworthy Lives

Each Saturday, I provide a compilation of links from the week’s posts.

This Week:

One Year Ago:

Eleven Ways to get more out of Scrapworthy Lives:

  1. Get a free copy of The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Minimalist Scrapbooking by subscribing to my newsletter. You will receive no more than two emails a week from this list. Subscribers will be the first to learn about any new products and promotions at Scrapworthy Lives.
  2. Subscribe by RSS. Click on the RSS button (in the upper right corner) and you can receive all of Scrapworthy Live’s posts in your RSS feeder.
  3. Comment. I would love to hear from you! Join the discussion by commenting.
  4. Become a fan of Scrapworthy Lives on Facebook.
  5. Follow scrapworthy on Twitter.
  6. Buy my new e-book, The Scrapworthy Lives Guide to Market Research.
  7. Subscribe to Scrapworthy Lives on your Kindle!
  8. Show your love for Scrapworthy Lives. Visit my store at Skreened.
  9. Email me your questions and suggestions. Email me at stephaniemedleyrath at gmail dot com and let me know what you’re thinking, what you’d like to see, and any questions you might have. I will personally respond to your emails and may use your questions in future articles.
  10. Share a great article you find with your friends. Tweet it, facebook it (is that a real expression?), email it, save it and so on. Just look at the link at the bottom of each article to share it in the way that suits you best. I appreciate it!
  11. I joined the crowd and am now on Pinterest. Follow me if you’d like. If you want an invite, email me at stephaniemedleyrath at gmail dot com and I’ll send you an invite.

Stephanie

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Posted in This Week | Tagged | 4 Comments

Books & Blogs: Snippets by Lain Ehmann

This entry is part 36 of 45 in the series Books & Blogs Review

Each Thursday I review a book or blog related to scrapbooking.


I bought Snippets about a year ago and finally got around to reading it. I bought it before I realized it is sort of out of print (I think!). See, Snippets was published by Simple Scrapbooks shortly before the magazine folded and it got a bit lost in the shuffle.

It’s a shame that it got lost in the shuffle because it is a cute and humorous book by Lain Ehmann.

The book is definitely not your typical scrapbooking book or even book for that matter. It is a 4×6 hardcover book complete with ribbon bookmark and elastic thing to keep the cover closed (I am sure there is a much more eloquent way of saying all that). In a nutshell, it would fit in a purse, or even your pocket. It is also short, at 115 pages. I read it over my lunch break–correction–I forced myself to do something other than my real job while eating my lunch.

In Snippets, Lain does a good job of making some spot on observations about scrapbookers (the desire for a larger and more permanent scrapbooking space), while at the same time relying on stereotypes about scrapbookers (we are all women with children hiding our addiction from our husbands).

Of course, I have a tendency to take things too seriously so it should come as no surprise that I also wasn’t thrilled with the reliance on self-deprecating humor (dieting, struggles exercising, and a purse so full it causes back pain). I was not a fan of all of the humor, but did find myself laughing out loud, too. Lain does a nice job gently poking fun at scrapbookers. It helps that she is such an awesome person to begin with.

Overall, Snippets would make a cute gift for the scrapbooker in your life.

Is there a scrapbooking-themed book or blog you would like to see reviewed here? Just send me an email at stephaniemedleyrath at gmail dot com and I’ll consider it!

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

Publishers and Authors
If you are a publisher or an author and would like me to review your scrapbooking-related book or blog, please email me at stephaniemedleyrath at gmail dot com.
Stephanie

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Posted in B&B Review | 4 Comments