Books & Blogs: 20 Simple Secrets of Happy Scrapbookers

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

I bought 20 Simple Secrets of Happy Scrapbookers“>20 Simple Secrets of Happy Scrapbookers a few months ago, but just now took the time to read it. 20 Simple Secrets of Happy Scrapbookers“>20 Simple Secrets of Happy Scrapbookers is a great little book that essentially gives you scrapbooking prompts based on research known about happiness. Each tip is paired with a related quote a comment about the tip from Lain Ehmann or Stacy Julian (the authors), a discussion about how the tip relates to scrapbooking or how to scrapbook the tip, and a layout that Stacy or Lain created based on the tip.

Overall, I like this e-book. Of course, I’m a bit biased as I am working on my own Scrap Happy Project.

Scrapbookers are happy people and happy people scrapbook.

Why do you think that scrapbookers are happy people?

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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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Handwritten or Typed Stories

This entry is part 7 of 86 in the series Scrapworthy Lives Results

Last week, I told you about the importance of writing your story. Your story can be written in your own handwriting or typed up and printed out from a computer. If you are a digital scrapbooker, you can even have your handwriting turned into a font so that you can get your own handwriting on your layout. Heck, you could even do what Gretchen Rubin did when she created photobooks, which was write her captions directly on her printed pages.

What’s the difference between handwriting and typed writing if the story is the same? Using one’s own handwriting provides a personal touch (Kelley and Brown 2005). Others suggest that being able to see another family member’s handwriting is meaningful to them. Continue reading

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Posted in Storytelling, Scrapbooking Norms, Journaling, Dissertation, Findings | Tagged , , , | 7 Comments

Use Poetry on Your Layouts

I realize it is now May and National Poetry Month has ended, but I have one more post on poetry and scrapbooking.
Obviously, we tell stories in scrapbooks, but does anyone ever write their stories in poetry form?

I challenge you to write your journaling in the form of poetry on your next layout.

Here’s my example:
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My poem reads:

Sweet potato
Sweet potato
Sweet potato pie
Please be careful that you
Don’t get any in your eye


Yes, a silly song for my daughter when she was first starting solid foods.

Do you ever include poetry on your layouts? Join the conversation on Twitter or Facebook.

Stephanie

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Posted in Poetry | Tagged | 2 Comments

Scrapbookers are Collectors

Scrapbookers are collectors. We often talk about how we have too much stuff or we buy supplies without having a use for it. People sometimes become collectors of scrapbook supplies instead of scrapbookers. Sometimes people who are scrapbookers experience this problem, too. I don’t want to analyze this particular issue in this post today, but I bring this up to get us thinking about how scrapbookers are collectors.

Scrapbookers are collectors of memories and stories. Scrapbooks are collections of memories and stories.

Perhaps this is why scrapbookers seem to be happy people. In The Happiness Project, Gretchen Rubin decides to start a collection to increase her happiness and finds that it does increase her happen.

Of course, a collection could become burdensome, hence the interest in things like Unclutterer, Real Simple, and minimalist living.

I think the lesson though is that collections can make people happy but there is a line that can be crossed where a collection can make a person unhappy. If you are unhappy about scrapbooking, it is important to figure out what is the source of unhappiness. Is it too much stuff? Is it not the right kinds of supplies? Is it disorganization? Is it something else?

What kind of scrapbooker are you? Are you a collector of scrapbook supplies or are you a collector of memories and stories? Perhaps, you are a little of both. Let me know in the comments below.
If you want to read more about The Happiness Project 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!

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Stephanie

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Posted in Scrap Happy, Be Seriuos About Play | Tagged | 6 Comments

This Week on Scrapworthy Lives: April 30, 2011

This entry is part 7 of 47 in the series This Week on Scrapworthy Lives

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

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Stephanie

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My Scrapbook on the Road: The Skeleton

Last week, I wrote about my adventures taking Ali Edward’s Scrapbook On the Road self-paced course. Well, now I have the photos of the skeleton of my album to share with you. I purchased some more book binding rings, so the album pages actually turn properly. Anyhoo, here are a couple of photos of my project:

The Cover

The Cover. Remember those twist ties that were sold as scrapbook supplies several years ago?


Transparencies and Envelopes, Oh My!


I uploaded the rest of the photos to the Flickr. Let me know what you think!

Did you know Scrapworthy Lives is on facebook? Become a fan of Scrapworthy Lives on Facebook.


Stephanie

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Books & Blogs: Tammy Tutterow

This entry is part 23 of 45 in the series Books & Blogs Review

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

The Review

I reviewed Tammy Tutterow’s blog from March 21 to April 22, 2011.

Tammy Tutterow’s blog highlights her crafty projects. She does feature scrapbook layouts based on Sketch Support sketches, but the bulk of her posts were various other types of projects. She uses conventional scrapbook supplies in these projects, but they are not just layouts. She showcases art journals, altered canvas, cards, and so on.

I liked that she also keeps a personal blog that is accessible from the main blog. Some people combine the two, but I think sometimes it is nice when they are separate. I think it just depends on what your purposes are with your blog posts.

Tammy also shared a layout of her daughter’s on the site. It is always refreshing to see children scrapbooking and how they scrapbook.

Overall, Tammy Tuttorow’s blog provides great ideas for using your supplies in non-scrapbooking ways. Though many scrapbookers already do this, we all don’t for whatever reason. I don’t really use my scrapbooking supplies outside of scrapbooking so I do enjoy seeing how other people do this. Maybe one day I will, but probably not anytime soon.

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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All Style, No Substance

This entry is part 5 of 86 in the series Scrapworthy Lives Results

Each Wednesday, I write a post from my dissertation.

We live in a culture that focuses on the pretty. Fashion magazines are devoted to teaching us how to decorate our outside selves. Home improvement and decorating shows are devoted to teaching us how to beautify our homes.

And what about scrapbook magazines, idea books, and blogs? They focus more on substance, right? No, most are designed to showcase product. In other words, they are also devoted to teaching us how to make our scrapbook pages pretty. Yes, there are examples of industry workers working to encourage scrapbookers to focus on the story, but never forget that advertisers promoting product are not far behind.

Why does this matter? Well, as I have written before, the story (or journaling or the words) provides the context to the photographs.

What I found in my study is that many (often beginning) scrapbookers do not include much journaling at all on their layouts because they get so enamored with all the stickers, papers, and other embellishments the industry sells, that they do not yet see any or not much value in writing their story. Others do not know what to say in their journaling or are convinced that the photographs alone are all they need to include in order to record the memory. Other scholars find that scrapbookers report that without journaling, the scrapbooker finds their scrapbooks less meaningful (Goodsell and Seiter 2010; Kelley and Brown 2005). In Goodsell and Seiter’s (2010) study, they report that the woman at the center of their study increased the amount of journaling her scrapbooks contain as the years went by. I find a similar pattern, that the longer a person scrapbooks the more they journal and the greater importance they place on journaling. Regardless, even scrapbookers who see the value in journaling do not always provide much if any journaling on every scrapbook page. Scrapbookers often leave space to do journaling later, but they may not ever come back and fill in the space.

Why does this matter?

Well, few scrapbookers suggest that a photograph could stand on its own and tell a complete story without any words, despite the common saying that “a picture is worth a thousand words.” The addition of journaling communicates which of those thousand words are relevant. Signorile (1987) argues that what happens is that not only is a picture worth a thousand words, but that a word, then, is worth a thousand pictures. Moreover, “[w]hat cannot be put into words will ultimately prove to be meaningless” (Signorile 1987:287). In other words, without the words, the pictures become meaningless and without the pictures, the words become meaningless. This line of thinking, then argues that memories require both words and images.

Journaling is important because without the words or the context, your photographs are going to end up in a yard sale, according to one industry worker. She has old family photographs that are not labeled and says they are completely meaningless to her because she does not even know who the people are in the photographs.

Do you want your scrapbooks to have substance? Well, then they have to contain words. You have to include the story. Without the story, the scrapbook is just style. I know it’s not easy. I struggle with journaling, too. Do you have any strategies to increase your journaling? Does the idea of writing your story make you not want to scrapbook? Comment below and join the conversation on facebook.

References:

Goodsell, Todd L. and Liann Seiter. 2010. “Scrapbooking: Family Capital and the Construction of Family Discourse.” Bringham Young University.

Kelley, Ryan E. and Charles M. Brown. 2005. “Cutting Up with the Girls: A Sociological Study of a Women’s Scrapbooking Club.” in The Eastern Sociological Society. Washington, D.C.

Signorile, Vito. 1987. “Capitulating to Captions: The Verbal Transformation of Visual Images.” Human Studies 10(3-4):281-310.


Stephanie

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Scrapbooking Cuts Across Social Class

Margaret Austin Smith writes “Poetry is an art form that cuts across material inequalities and enables, encourages the very human and humanizing act of sharing knowledge” in response to a commentary about a Beautiful and Pointless.

Replace the word poetry with scrapbooking. Scrapbooking “is an art from that cuts across material inequalities and enables, encourages the very human and humanizing act of sharing knowledge.”
Does it hold up? I think so.

Let’s face it, most Americans have access to a camera on their mobile phones. You can start a blog for free. You can even use opensource software or free programs online to create digital scrapbook pages if you want more than what a free blog service can provide. You can post status updates and your favorite things along with photos to facebook, just like an old-fashioned scrapbook. If you get down to its basics, you can use actual scraps to make a scrapbook. It is easy to spend a great deal of money on scrapbooking. The reality is that scrapbooking can be incredibly affordable and bordering on free. Scrapbooking is often accused of being an expensive hobby. I think people without hobbies and scrapbookers that feel the need to buy everything labeled “scrapbooking” or “acid-free” say this. What do you think? Is scrapbooking expensive or is it a hobby that is accessible to people regardless of social class? Comment below.

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Posted in Inequality, Poetry | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Scrapbooking off the Path

This entry is part 23 of 66 in the series My Scrap Happy Project

“I started carrying a camera everywhere, to sharpen my eye.” That’s what Gretchen Rubin did to “go off the path” as part of her happiness project.

For scrapbookers, this probably seems pretty obvious. Moreover, most people today do carry a camera everywhere because they have one on their mobile phone. The trick of course, is to actually use the camera.

How else might a scrapbooker “go off the path?” Going off the path might mean not taking your camera everywhere. I don’t think I could do that. You could still scrapbook your memories from whatever it is you are doing. You just would most likely not have any photos to go along with it. What do you think? Do you do this?

Perhaps participating in scrapbooking challenges? Just google “scrapbook challenges” and you can find all kinds of sources of inspiration for scrapbook challenges. During my search I came upon the Counterfeit Kit Challenge (http://counterfeitkitchallenge.blogspot.com/). I had seen various bloggers posting their Counterfeit Kit Challenge, but I didn’t pay much attention to them. Now I realize that they are not really a kit, but instead are scrapbookers using their stash to create a “counterfeit” kit based on a currently released kit. Love the challenge but also love that it is somewhat minimalist. I say somewhat because they do make a point to showcase a currently available kit so you can buy the kit in addition to attempting to replicate it with your own stash.

What are some ways you think that scrapbookers could “go off the path?”

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

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Stephanie

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