B&B Review: Stacy Julian’s Blog

This entry is part 3 of 45 in the series Books & Blogs Review

Each Thursday I review a book or blog about scrapbooking.

This week I am reviewing Stacy Julian’s blog. She is the author of a handful of scrapbooking books, was an editor for a scrapbooking magazine, and co-founded Big Picture Classes. I really love her approach to scrapbooking and scrapbook organization. In a nutshell: keep it simple.

I reviewed her blog posts from October 11, 2010 to November 10, 2010. There were 16 posts.

Only one post was really about scrapbooking and it was by a guest blogger. The rest of the posts were varied: a post from a cruise she is on (where she is teaching scrapbooking classes), a post from her assistant, a post about a local craft fair, a post about the things she did that day, a post about a website created by a friend, a post about a trip to Disneyworld, a post about what her kids dressed up as for Halloween…I think you get the idea.

Stacy Julian’s blog is clearly written for both her family and her fans. She includes posts about the goings on in her family (and she writes that her “blog is one way she scrapbooks”). She also promotes her work in the industry at Big Picture Classes. If you are looking for her blog to teach you about scrapbooking, you are going to find very little of that here; you are going to need to go to Big Picture Classes. The randomness of her posts leads me to believe that her blog is also for her fans–it’s a way for them to get to know her a little better as a person instead of just as an industry expert (which she very much is). I would like to see more posts of pages she has made or projects she has in progress. I think readers would enjoy that and still sign up for classes at Big Picture Classes.

Overall, I would encourage you to visit her blog and really explore the whole website. The blog is just one piece of it–the only part I reviewed.

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The Sample: Family and Friends of Scrapbookers

Each Wednesday I will write a post about my dissertation. Last week, the post discussed my sample of scrapbookers. This week I am going to tell you about my sample of family and friends of scrapbookers.

For my dissertation, I also interviewed a family member or a friend of 10 of the scrapbookers in my sample. I interviewed this group to understand if the message scrapbookers intend is being communicated in their scrapbook pages. I’ll talk about that in another post. Today, I’ll tell you about this part of the sample.

Six of the 10 family or friends that I interviewed were either married or partnered to the scrapbooker. One was a friend, one was the scrapbooker’s son, one was the scrapbooker’s mother, and one was the scrapbooker’s mother-in-law. Two respondents in this set of interviews were gay or lesbian. There was one black pair of respondents in this group, wihle the rest were white. All respondents except the college students had household incomes of at least $40,000. They ranged in age from 10 to 65 with a mean age of 36.6. All had at least some college except for the child.

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I’m Signed Up. Are you?

I promise that tomorrow’s post will be better. We are recovering from the flu at my house. I slept most of yesterday and then did not sleep at all last night.

Anyway, I signed up for a free class from Jessica Sprague. Let me know if you take it, too. We can peer pressure each other into completing it. I have not taken any online scrapbooking classes before, so this should be interesting.

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Scrapworthy Clutter

As scrapbookers, we tend towards the sentimental. A few months ago, Unclutterer posted about sentimental clutter.

How do you decide which sentimental items are scrapworthy and which are trashworthy? Some of the items mentioned in the Unclutterer post (e.g., friendship bracelet, napkin) would have been saved and placed in my scrapbook. Some of this stuff, though, should probably be trashed. My daughter recently started attending daycare and she brings home artwork several times a week. Part of me wants to keep all of it. Instead, I hand it on the fridge. Once the fridge is full, then most of it gets trashed. I bought an artwork frame to keep one displayed nicely (and is easy to change out).

I used to be big on saving all the “stuff” from vacations, etc. I still do save that stuff, but most of it ends up in the trash. I scrapbook very little of it. And for me, if it does not end up in the scrapbook it ends up in the trash.

What do you do with sentimental items? Are they scrapworthy? Are they trashworthy?

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Scrapweb November 5, 2010 Edition

I am not a faithbooker, but I find the practice fascinating. Read more from Jenni Hufford on Scrapbooking your Faith.

Little Yellow Bicycle has some of their older collections deeply discounted.

And this is why I must always have my camera with me. Despite my phone having a 2 megapixel camera on it, I rarely use it. On my drive home from work there was a bit of sun shining down between two very dark and stormy chunks of sky. I wished I’d had a better camera with me. I will tomorrow.

I reviewed Sir Scrapalot yesterday on here. This post in particular is interesting because it is about purging digital scrapbook supplies.

Lastly, here is a post on scraplifting from Your Memory Connection.

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B&B Review: Sir Scrapalot Designs

I only recently began following Sir Scrapalot Designs. I can’t remember how I learned about him, but I decided to review his blog because 1) he’s a he, 2) I only recently began reading his blog, and 3) he is not a full-time industry worker.

Sir Scrapalot is Aaron Morris, who is a full-time seventh grade math teacher. He also sells his own digital scrapbooking kits at his blog.

I reviewed Sir Scrapalot Designs from October 3 to November 3, 2010. Overall, there were 17 posts. The posts were surprisingly varied.

Two posts were specifically about time management, which could be applicable outside of scrapbooking. About a third of the posts were self-promotion type posts (a giveaway, a new blinkie, now a contributor at Simple Scrapper [insert link]). Self-promotion is necessary in the blogosphere. I bring it up so that you know what you get if choose to subscribe to a blog’s feed.

Sir Scrapalot offer a lot of practical advice on his blog related to scrapbooking. In one post, he discussed mental roadblocks to scrapping and making time for scrapping. Another post was raising awareness for Scrappers Give Thanks. (Anyone participating?)

Sir Scrapalot is also interactive. Morris is designing a new digital kit and is requesting input from his blog readers.

Overall, Sir Scrapalot offers a fresh perspective on scrapbooking. His focus may be digital, but his discussions are applicable to conventional or traditional scrapbookers, too. I suggest checking out Sir Scrapalot Designs sometime.

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The Sample: Scrapbookers

Each Wednesday I will write a post about my dissertation. Last week, the post discussed my sample of industry workers. This week I am going to tell you about my sample of scrapbookers.

Age, Gender, Sexual Identity, and Race
I interviewed 38 scrapbookers, ranging in age from 21 to 67. From my experience as an industry worker, I know that scrapbookers are a diverse group. I strived to obtain a diverse sample. I was semi-successful. Six of my scrapbookers were men and the rest were women. Twenty-nine of the scrapbookers were heterosexual, five were lesbian, three were gay men, and one was bisexual. Most of the scrapbookers were White. One was Middle Eastern, one identified as other, and four were Black.

Marriage and Parenthood
People become scrapbookers for a variety of reasons. One reason is marriage. Of my sample, 13 were currently single (five were divorced), 25 were married or partnered, and one was in a polyamorous marriage. Another reason people begin scrapbooking is parenthood. Nineteen scrapbookers were parents–18 mothers and on father and 19 of the scrapbookers were not parents.

Religion
I recruited Mormons for inclusion in this study because Latter-day Saint’s (LDS) beliefs are credited with helping to increase the popularity of scrapbooking. Genealogy work is religious duty for members of the LDS church. Mormons research their family histories in order to obtain the names of their ancestors so that they can be baptized and receive salvation in the spirit world [insert link]. Moreover, LDS members (at least women) are encouraged to keep family histories in photo albums, scrapbooks, and books of remembrance and personal journals [insert link]. My sample was surprisingly religiously diverse. Of my 38 scrapbookers, eight were LDS, two were Agnostic, four were Catholic, two were Interfaith, four were Jewish, one was Pagan, 13 were Protestant, and four did not answer.

Social Class
The scrapbookers were overwhelmingly middle class and upper-middle class. Every respondent had at least some college education and the majority had completed a college degree. Eighteen respondents had a Bachelor’s degree, one had an Associates degree, 11 respondents had a graduate or professional degree, and eight had some college but no degree (three were currently students).

Of my 10 respondents reporting a household income of less than $39,999, five were currently students. Eleven respondents had household incomes of between $40,000 and $79,999. Eight respondents had incomes of between $80,000 and $119,999. Five respondents had incomes of between $120,000 and $159,999. Two respondents had incomes higher than $160,000. Two respondents did not disclose their income.

Twenty-seven respondents were employed (19 worked full-time and 8 worked part-time). Eleven were not employed or seeking employment.

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Hatecation Anyone?

Hatecation might just be the complete opposite of scrapworthy. What do you think? Clearly, it’s not completely trashworthy either. What do you with bad vacation photos? What do you do with bad photos in general? Comment below.

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Ethical Photography Part I: Your Own Children

I have been thinking quite a bit about the ethics of photography. What is ethical? What is unethical? Where is the line?
Is it okay to take photographs of your child’s every waking moment? I always kid around that for a child of a scrapbooker to rebel, all she or he would need to do is refuse to be photographed, refuse to where clothing that coordinates with the rest of the family, or refuse to make an acceptable face.

What about publishing photographs of your children? There are many blogs written by parents that use photographs of their children. I used to keep a blog like this to update the family, who lived across the country. I quickly realized that they weren’t even reading that blog, so I gave it up. What about social networking sites? My profile photograph is of my daughter. I changed my photo once to a nature scene and my sister posted on my wall within minutes. She lives across the country and couldn’t stand not seeing a photograph of her niece.

Scrapbooking revolves around photographs. Most scrapbook pages contain photographs. Most published scrapbook pages (in idea books, blogs, and magazines) contain photographs of the scrapbooker’s family (I have no evidence to back this up, but it seems to be fairly accurate). Scrapbook pages of cute kids sell. I can’t help but wonder where the line is though between clean fun and exploitation. If I earn a living as a scrapbooker, who publishes pages of my children (and the children makes no money from this), is it exploitation? At what point would the scrapbooker be no different than Jon and Kate? I’m still on the fence. I really do not no where the line is here. I also do not see anyone talking about this issue. Perhaps this is one of those questions that shouldn’t be asked because we don’t want to know the answer. Is it ethical to publish any photographs of your children to the internet? Under what conditions?

You will notice that on this blog, I have published only a couple of photographs. I plan to include more photographs because I think it makes the blog more aesthetically pleasing. I still haven’t decided, however, what role photographs of my child should play on this blog. She is far too young to consent. Thoughts?

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Scrapweb October 29, 2010 Edition

Eco Scrapping with Aly Dosdall In this post Aly Dosdall shares with readers how to reuse the packaging scrapbook supplies come in as scrapbooking embellishments. This post is very timely. We are seeing more vintage and vintage-inspired scrapbooking products, this is ecologically sound (aka good for the environment), and is economical. It also puts the “scrap” back into scrapbooking. The only disadvantage would be if you are concerned about how archival the materials might be. Each scrapbooker has to make her or his own decision on that practice.

The Daily Practice from Shutter Sisters is an excellent post about how practice makes perfect. Not to get too school-geek on you but one of the first articles I read as a graduate student was “The Mundanity of Excellence” by Daniel F. Chambliss. This article highlights how Olympic swimmers achieve greatness through making sure every aspect of their practice is excellent. Karen Grunberg writes about her experience taking photographs everyday on Shutter Sisters and how this practice is helping improve her photography. It is the classic case of practice makes perfect.

Another freebie from Ali Edwards. This time the freebie is Halloween themed.

Each Friday, Simple Scrapper compiles a list of scrapbooking-related freebies from around the web.

When I travel I tend to save everything: ticket stubs, maps, restaurant menus, and so on. Get it Scrapped has a post talking about not only collecting this memorabilia, but also using it on your pages. I use some of my memorabilia, but end up tossing most of it.

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