Scrapbooking Related Blog and Book Reviews [or B&B Reviews]

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

Every Thursday, I will post a review of either a scrapbooking related blog or book. I have been following around 50 scrapbooking related blogs since the spring, but need suggestions, too. I am also going to review scrapbooking related books (and maybe even magazines). I rarely buy scrapbooking related books or any other books anymore. I have a few books on my shelf I may review, but they are several years old at this point. Please comment below with suggestions for blogs and books I should review. Remember, the bulk of the content on the blog or in the book should be related to scrapbooking. Or, the blog or book should be written by a scrapbooking “celebrity.” I have noticed that some of the “celebrities” are still blogging, but are not necessarily blogging about scrapbooking. Thanks for all of your suggestions!

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Why Scrapbooking

Why Scrapbooking?
Over the past 20 years, scrapbooking has grown from an obscure, kitschy craft stereotypically practiced by grandmothers and Mormons, to an economic powerhouse practiced by men and women of all walks of life. Though economically scrapbooking has leveled off, it is still an incredibly popular hobby. Scrapbooking involves arranging photographs, journaling a story, and placing embellishments (e.g., stickers), memorabilia (e.g., a ticket stub), or both on archival paper and then placing the page in a scrapbook album (i.e., an album specially designed to hold scrapbook pages) telling a story about a life or a subject in a way a conventional photo album does not.
Definitions
I realize that some of my readers are not scrapbookers, so I will try to define scrapbooking-related terminology the first time they are used. Posts with definitions will include the tag “definition” so that later, you can click on the tag “definition” and find the definition of the term when I use it and don’t define it at all. Now, a few terms used in the first paragraph:
Journaling: the words on the scrapbook page that tell the story of the photographs.
Embellishments: decorations such as a sticker, chipboard, or ribbon; embellishments are items included in the scrapbook that are not the paper background, photographs, or journaling.
Memorabilia: items collected from everyday life serving as souvenirs, such as ticket stubs or wedding invitations.
Archival paper: paper especially designed for use in scrapbooks that is acid-free and lignin-free. Acid and lignin are both naturally occurring in wood and will damage and degrade photographs over time.
What did I do?
For my dissertation, I interviewed 38 scrapbookers, 10 family and friends of scrapbookers, and 11 industry workers. I also reviewed a selection of scrapbook pages with the scrapbooker and his or her family or friend. In a future post, I will provide a more detailed breakdown of the demographics of my sample.

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The Purpose of Scrapworthy Lives

I recently completed my doctorate in sociology. I successfully defended my dissertation, “Scrapworthy Lives: A Cognitive Sociological Analysis of a Modern Narrative Form” on August 18, 2010. This blog is based on my dissertation. I have decided to publish my dissertation as a blog for a couple of reasons.
First, in the field of sociology there has been a push towards public sociology. Sociology as a field has not done a very good job at making its research accessible to non-sociologists. Public sociology is an attempt to make sociological research accessible to all. Traditional publication methods in sociology mean that research could take months and more often than not, years to be published in academic journals. These publications are full of jargon and cost more than most people (sociologists included) want to pay for information. A blog on the other hand, is immediate and free. The downside of this is that I do have to make a living and in order to give my words away for free, you will see advertising on this site. I also have some merchandise with my logo for sale at Skreened. A blog enables me to share my results with a wide audience and develop more content related to dissertation research that will also be relevant to my readers.
Second, there are a large number of blogs already out there about scrapbooking. I have been following roughly 50 of these blogs since this past spring. A couple of patterns have emerged. One, most of the authors of these blogs publish very irregularly. Very few publish daily or several days a week. I plan to publish content Monday through Friday. Two, giveaways are quite common. I can not fault other bloggers for publishing a large number of posts that are either soliciting entries for a giveaway or are the follow-up with the winner’s screen name being announced because they do have to make a living and I can not say that there will never be giveaways on this blog. I want to focus of Scrapworthy Lives, however, to be on the content, not the giveaways. Three, most scrapbooking bloggers publish layouts that they have created or from their readers. These pages include photographs of their children, other family members, friends, and so on. I am conflicted as to whether or not I will do something like this on Scrapworthy Lives. The focus of this blog is not on scrapbook layout ideas or techniques, though in the future some of these topics may be considered. Back to my original point, there are already a large number of scrapbooking blogs out there. Scrapworthy Lives is different in that my focus is on the sociology of scrapbooking (who, what, when, where, how, etc.). My goal is to bring my readers content about things they may not have considered before regarding scrapbooking in a format that is accessible to a wide audience (scrapbookers and nonscrapbookers).

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The Not So Scrapworthy

If something is not scrapworthy, then is it trashworthy? Maybe. I used to think that potentially scrapworthy things were not really trashworthy either. For example, consider excess photographs from the era of film cameras. I take many more photographs digitally than I ever did with film, but i am very selective as to what I print. Today, most of what I print ends up in a scrapbook. One thing that helps today is editing photographs prior to printing so that printed photographs won’t later be discarded for quality or size reasons…though of course then you then have digital clutter…

I had 2.5 Cropper Hopper Photo Cases full of photographs. These were not photographs waiting to be scrapbooked but were photographs that have been rejected from the scrapworthy. I’ve already thrown away poor quality photographs (e.g., blurry, horrible lighting, out of focus, etc.). But why was I keeping all of these not so scrapworthy photographs?

I decided to purge. I sorted the boxes. I selected some photographs to keep for my daughter to use in arts and crafts projects. I kept a selection of photographs of things like family members, animals, buildings, flowers, and boats. These will go in her arts and craft supply box.

Excess prints went in the trash. Then I moved onto the photographs that are available online. I used to send my film away to get it developed and the company I used stores your prints online. Someday I will get the rest of those photos downloaded so that I have a digital backup. Again, this was a easy; the rest went in the trash.

The most difficult to sort through are those photographs without digital back-ups. But if a photograph has not been scrapbooked or placed in a picture frame, why am I keeping it? I kept some of the older photographs just in case.

I also mailed photographs to several friends and family members. If they were in some of my photographs, I mailed those photographs to them to keep or trash. Everyone was surprised and happy to get the photographs. A few weeks after sorting through all my photographs, I moved to a new home. Moving without all these excess photographs was much easier.

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Scrapworthy: A Definition

Scrapworthy refers to anything that is worthy of inclusion in a scrapbook.

Scrapworthy things include mementos, memorabilia, embellishments, souvenirs, ephemera, and so on. People can be scrapworthy–your family and friends. Subjects can be scrapworthy (e.g., your dog, your house, a vacation spot).

Scrapworthy also encompasses how one’s life becomes structured by scrapbooking. For instances, my time becomes scrapworthy in that I spend some of my time scrapbooking. I’ve always kept my camera close by, but since I began scrapbooking, I rarely leave home without one in case a scrapworthy moment presents itself. Eventually, you begin taking photographs differently.

Lives become scrapworthy in terms of being a subject included in a scrapbook and structured by scrapbooking (such as carrying a camera everywhere.

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Under Construction

Thanks for stopping by. I hope to be up and running really soon!

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