This Week on Scrapworthy Lives: October 15, 2011

This entry is part 30 of 47 in the series This Week on Scrapworthy Lives

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

And now that I’ve reached my one year anniversary, here are the posts from one year ago:

Ten 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. Subscribe to Scrapworthy Lives on your Kindle!
  7. Show your love for Scrapworthy Lives. Visit my store at Skreened.
  8. 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.
  9. 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!
  10. 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

Share
Posted in This Week | Tagged | 2 Comments

Books & Blogs: Scrapbooks etc Page Planner for the iPad

This entry is part 35 of 45 in the series Books & Blogs Review

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

I was super-excited to see that Scrapbooks etc. Page Planner magazine was adapted for the iPad. No, I never did buy the printed copy of the magazine. I don’t really use sketches or page planning as it is. What motivated me to buy it was that I could read it on my iPad. I love the idea of storing all my scrapbooking ideas, inspiration, tutorials, and so on in one place, electronically and incredibly portable on my iPad.

The book begins with an anatomy of a sketch and some tips on how to use the book. I found this useful and good way to kick things off.

I disliked the size of the layouts on the page. It was difficult to see the actual layout without zooming in, which is not something I want to do on every page. The sketches were also too small. If you wanted to know what size to cut your items, you again, had to zoom in to read the measurements.

I liked that each sketch was used in multiple ways. The sketches were rotated, shrunk to a smaller size, and interpreted by different designers. This gives you plenty of ideas to work with.This magazine was really not adapted for the iPad. I read the pages vertically, but then flipped my iPad to horizontally to see the corresponding sketches.

I also disliked that the layouts were not organized by number of photos, layout size, one or two page layouts, or in some other way based on how people actually scrapbook and use sketches. With that being said, there are better books out there for sketches, like Scrapbook Page Maps and Scrapbook Page Maps 2. If you are looking for materials that are easy to store on your iPad, then I would opt for a publication from Ella Publishing Co..

I was also frustrated by the advertising in this magazine. The magazine cost $9.99, which to me says it is a high enough price that advertising should be much more limited or nonexistent.

The absolute worst part? The part where you find out you get to download the page planner sketches. I thought that is what I already bought? I finally got around to checking that part out (I read the book initially without an internet connection). I followed the link and ended up googling the link on my laptop to access the sketches. You get to download each sketch individually. What a pain! I attempted to download the first sketch, but Scrapbooks etc. wanted more information from me in order to do so. Hello, I already paid for these sketches. I do not need to give you anymore information to gain access to materials I have already purchased. So, I did not download any of the sketches.

I would save your money on this book. There are better options out there that are more user friendly and less expensive.

What do you think? Have you read this particular book? 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!

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

Share
Posted in B&B Review | Comments Off on Books & Blogs: Scrapbooks etc Page Planner for the iPad

Concluding Thoughts about Gender and Scrapbooking

This entry is part 29 of 86 in the series Scrapworthy Lives Results

Each Wednesday, I write a post from my dissertation.
My respondents made scrapbooking fit in their lives. For the most part, they did not scrapbook because they felt obligated to scrapbook as mothers, wives, or as female members of their family. Respondents scrapbook because they want to scrapbook. They scrapbook for themselves and most consider the albums their own rather than their family’s albums. Perhaps it is because my sample had higher income and educational attainment than average that their experience as scrapbookers appears to be more empowering than oppressive. Female respondents with children may have had to go to a scrapbook store or have a husband commit to childcare duties so that they could scrapbook, but they were able to get their husbands to do these things without argument. These women demonstrate how leisure can be something that women are entitled to and scrapbooking just happens to be their leisure activity of choice.

Though men typically are not compiling a scrapbook that does not mean, however, that they do not contribute to the scrapbooks their partners compile. In cases where husbands control the economic resources, he influences the quality and quantity of supplies his wife can purchase. Importantly, none of my respondents say they did without because of lack of resources even when they depend on their husbands providing their scrapbooking budget.

Many respondents explain how they request input from their husbands in their scrapbooks. They request journaling from male partners, have them take photographs for them or collect memorabilia. The respondent who most successfully, obtains her husband’s input on the journaling did so because they keep a family blog. He is much more likely to post on the family blog than sit down and type up journaling expressly for the scrapbook. This respondent regularly includes these blog posts in her scrapbooks; therefore, her husband does contribute to the family scrapbook.

Scrapbooking is an interesting hobby to study in order to explore gender roles. It is easy to assume that it sets women back decades in terms of gender equality, but the reality is much different. Though, it can certainly be oppressive to some, for most it seems, scrapbooking is a source of empowerment.

Related Posts
The Family Album is Like a Resume for a Man
Scrapbooking Gender
Men and Women Scrapbooking
The Scrapbook Industry Depends on Women Doing Gender
Can I be a Scrapbooker and a Feminist?

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

Share
Posted in Gender, Uncategorized, Dissertation, Findings | Tagged | Comments Off on Concluding Thoughts about Gender and Scrapbooking

My One Year Blogoversary: 10 Favorite Posts


On the 10th of each month I am participating in Shimelle Laine’s 10 Things.


Today is my blog’s one year anniversary. I thought I would share 10 of my favorite posts from the last year. (They are numbered but are in no particular order.)

One
42 Posts from the Dissertation On August 17, I had published 42 posts from my dissertation. I still can’t believe that I have written this many and then some posts from my project. I probably have at least another year’s worth of weekly posts from the project.

Two
Lain Ehmann Talks about Guilt-Free Scrapbooking Lain was my first guest poster. I was nervous about asking her, but I felt like she had a similar outlook on scrapbooking as me and would be a good fit.

Three
10 Behind the Scenes Details about my Study on Scrapbooking I had a lot of fun writing this post. I got to share the details that you usually don’t talk about and no one ever asks about.

Four
My Scrapbook on the Road is Finished! This was a project spanning several weeks. It was a lot of work chronicling the project while trying to complete it. Ali Edwards was kind enough to donate a “seat” in her class to one of my readers.

Five
Minimalist Scrapbooking In this post, I kicked off my minimalist scrapbooking project. My favorite posts in this series are my monthly reports on how much I spend on scrapbooking each month. I don’t budget for scrapbooking, but having this series has definitely made me more cognizant of how much I spend on the hobby and it has really forced me to use supplies I would have just ignored.

Six
Books & Blogs: Scrapbook Workshop This has got to be my favorite Books & Blog post. I’ve had mixed feelings about this series. I know why I do it, but have been disappointed in a few purchases to the point that I had to take a two month break from the series. This book, however, was awesome and really renewed my faith that there can be really top-notch scrapbook idea books published.

Seven
In Case You Haven’t Heard…My Appearance on Paperclipping Roundtable This post is rather boring, but I still can’t believe I was invited to be on the Paperclipping Roundtable.

Eight
Alphanumeric Blog Hop This was the first time I participated in a blog hop. It was a lot of fun to join in a blog hop. I think every blogger should join a blog hop at least once.

Nine
A Happiness Blog Hop I decided to host my own blog hop about my Scrap Happy Project series. It has since become a monthly feature. I am so happy to have found some great regular participants of this hop.

Ten
A Project to Recap Your Summer This is my first guest post on another site. Jennifer is one of the first scrappy bloggers I’ve connected with online and only scrappy blogger I’ve connected with in-person. Come to find out we only live about 45 minutes from each other. When I saw she was looking for guest bloggers to write during her maternity leave, I jumped at the chance.

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 Blog Hops, 10 Things | Tagged | 12 Comments

Pay Attention

This entry is part 51 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.

October’s theme is pay attention. Rubin identifies four means of paying attention and I am going to focus on three of those ways:

  1. Examine true rules: What are the rules of scrapbooking? What are my scrapbooking rules?
  2. Stimulate the mind in new ways: How might the mind be stimulated in other ways to support my scrapbooking?
  3. Keep a food diary: What does keeping a food diary have to do with scrapbooking?

Each Monday in October, I’ll tackle one of these items. I hope you come back to read more!

I think most scrapbookers already think about how scrapbooking forces them to pay closer attention to the details of their lives, so I it will be interesting to think about how these tasks apply to scrapbooking itself. Do you think you pay more attention to the details of your life since you started scrapbooking? Comment below or join the conversation on facebook or twitter.

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

Share
Posted in Scrap Happy, Pay Attention | Tagged | Comments Off on Pay Attention

This Week on Scrapworthy Lives: October 8, 2011

On Wednesday, my site was not working properly. I apologize if you received an unfinished post via RSS or came to blog and couldn’t find anything. The is fixed and should be working properly now. Thank you for your patients.
Each Saturday, I provide a compilation of links from the week’s posts.

Ten 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. Subscribe to Scrapworthy Lives on your Kindle!
  7. Show your love for Scrapworthy Lives. Visit my store at Skreened.
  8. 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.
  9. 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!
  10. 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

Share
Posted in This Week | Tagged | Comments Off on This Week on Scrapworthy Lives: October 8, 2011

My September Scrapbooking Expenses

This entry is part 20 of 37 in the series Minimalist Scrapbooking

Time for another installment of my monthly scrapbooking expenses as part of my minimalist scrapbooking project.

I only spent $26.07 on scrapbooking in September! Here is what I bought:

  • I spent $13.01 on prints from Snapfish.
  • I spent $3.06 on prints from ScrapbookPictures.com.
  • I joined Masterful Scrapbook Design for $10 a month.

This month’s purchases come with a great big caveat. I did spend probably close to $300 on memorial scrapbooks for my mother-in-law. I am excluding these from my expense tally because it was for the memorial and not for my personal scrapbooking. Do you think I should include this expense in my scrapbooking budget?

Without that expense, my monthly average is down to $85.02 a month. If I include that expense it totally busts my success reducing my spending on scrapbooking. What do you think?

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

Share
Posted in Minimalist Scrapbooking | Tagged | 4 Comments

Books & Blogs: Scrapbooking the Everyday

This entry is part 1 of 45 in the series Books & Blogs Review

Each Thursday I review a book or blog related to scrapbooking.
Scrapbooking the Everyday: 34 fresh new ways to celebrate your daily life

Today, I am reviewing Scrapbooking the Everyday by Elizabeth Dillow and Tina Cockburn from Ella Publishing Co..

Scrapbooking the Everyday contains 12 challenges to inspire you to scrapbook the everyday.

Though the challenges are to inspire you to scrapbook the everyday instead of the extraordinary (e.g., holidays, celebrations, travel), these challenges could definitely be used for extraordinary topics, too.

Not surprisingly, the title is somewhat misleading. The subtitle says “34 fresh new ways to celebrate your daily life.” I’m not sure where the 34 comes from. There are 12 challenges and each author provides their take on the challenge. That equals 24. There are also bonus tips for each layout. Maybe that adds up to 34. Perhaps this is me being super-picky, but I want the title to accurately reflect the content of the book because this is an e-book. I can’t flip through it before purchasing to see if I am getting what is promised.

Regardless, I did like this e-book. I think that this was $5.99 well spent. If you are wanting to test the waters of scrapbooking the everyday or you already are an everyday scrapbooker but need some inspiration, be sure to check out Scrapbooking the Everyday from Ella Publishing Co..

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 B&B Review | Tagged | 4 Comments

A Happiness Blog Hop: Links to Yesterday’s Participating Posts

This entry is part 49 of 66 in the series My Scrap Happy Project

Yesterday, I hosted another round of the Happiness Blog Hop. It is a lot of fun and we have some great participants! If you would like to join the fun, just send me an email (stephaniemedleyrath at gmail dot com). Here is a complete list of yesterday’s participants in case you missed it.

A Happiness Blog Hop List of Participants:
My Creative Days in Beijing
Kiss & Tell Scrapbooking
Your Memory Connection
Slice of Life
Take a Picture and Remember This
Scraps & Sass
Pie for Breakfast
Scrapworthy Lives

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 Scrap Happy, Blog Hops, A Happiness Blog Hop, Pursue a Passion | Tagged , | Comments Off on A Happiness Blog Hop: Links to Yesterday’s Participating Posts

A Happiness Blog Hop: Pursue a Passion

This entry is part 48 of 66 in the series My Scrap Happy Project

Welcome to the October Happiness Blog Hop! You should have arrived from My Creative Days in Beijing. This month’s theme is Pursue a Passion 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.

The passion I have been unsuccessfully pursuing is using manual mode on my camera. Last week, I took a few photos in manual mode. Here they are on a layout:



What scrapbook-passions are you pursuing? Comment below or join the conversation on facebook or twitter.

Related posts:

A Happiness Blog Hop List of Participants:
My Creative Days in Beijing
Kiss & Tell Scrapbooking
Your Memory Connection
Slice of Life
Take a Picture and Remember This
Scraps & Sass
Pie for Breakfast
Scrapworthy Lives

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 Scrap Happy, Blog Hops, A Happiness Blog Hop, Pursue a Passion | Tagged , | 4 Comments