Paperclipping: The Video Podcast | Design Your Story

Login | Join

Paperclipping Home

Archive for January, 2007

Salvaged from ripped jeans

Sunday, January 14th, 2007



Salvaged from ripped jeans

Originally uploaded by Noell.

Remember that box of stuff I dug out of my closet and passed on to Goodwill? I salvaged a few pieces from some ripped clothing (which did not go to Goodwill).

Even with all the delicious products the scrapbooking companies design, it’s still fun to use unusual pieces I’m not going to find in other people’s layouts in magazines and online. Just once in a while…

I already have something in mind for that tag from my jeans that says “refuge.” I automatically associate that word with scrapbooking. And the powers that be at 2 Peas In A Bucket just launched a contest that will give me the perfect opportunity to create something about my favorite refuge.

They are calling all scrapbookers to enter their “Why We Scrapbook” contest. The amazing Life Artist, Ali Edwards, is judging. And I will confess that I’ve been trying to get her attention, so if there is an opportunity to put my stuff in front of her, I’m taking it!

Anyone else joining me?

Imagination and a Deck Of Cards

Saturday, January 13th, 2007



Peeking Through His House Of Cards

Originally uploaded by Noell.

What will scrapbookers think of next? After clicking on Nathalie Kalbach’s blog this morning and seeing what she created, I am confident that I know what the next new scrapbooking rage is: A Deck of You. Nathalie joined a challenge by Emily Falconbridge, who created the Deck Of You concept.

There’s always a new distraction to pull my attention away from my actual scrapbook pages! This looks super fun! I’ve got to do better at keeping up with what I am currently working on before I jump on this new challenge. But I’m really tempted. I think I’ll start on it late, maybe after I finish and submit my HOF entry in February.

What about you? What do you think?

Photography Challenge: Aiden’s First Chicken Feeding

Friday, January 12th, 2007



Aiden’s First Chicken Feeding

Originally uploaded by Noell.

Yesterday was all about farms. Aiden and I met a highschool friend at a cafe on a farm for lunch. After that we picked the other kids up from school and went to Trinity’s friends house. This family has a small animal farm. They have horses, chickens a turkey, and are about to get a pig and a cow! We had the best time feeding the animals. As you can see in the photo, it was Aiden’s first time.

Note to fellow photographers: “Hard-hat” criticism wanted on this photo, please! I find it very hard to get all the elements of a good photo just right when I am taking candid shots of my children. I would love your suggestions!

ISO: I think I set it at 800 or 1600 because we were in the shade.
F-Stop: 5.6
Shutter Speed: So sorry! I forgot!
Editing: I increased the exposure because of the shade, increased the saturation and the contrast just a touch to help with the blandness of coloring.

Increase Your Scrapbooking Speed, As Well As Your Skill

Wednesday, January 10th, 2007

…and your satisfaction.

Would you like to? There was a time when I was very slow (it took me one or two weeks to complete a two-page layout). I would have liked to become faster, but I thought I would have to sacrifice quality to do so. I also suspected it would mean giving up the joy of the process. In fact, I’ve read these same types of comments on the message boards at 2 Peas.

At one point I began making some changes in the way I scrapbooked. The changes were unrelated and happened over a period of about six months, but each one contributed to a surprising increase in all three: speed, skill, and satisfaction. I’ve since become a woman obsessed, actually.

So let me ask you again. If you could increase your satisfaction, your skill, and your speed at scrapbooking, would you like to know how?

I’ll post a list of changes I made, recommendations to you, today. And over the next few weeks, I’ll spend an entry discussing each recommendation.

1. Give yourself a scrapbook area. Even if all you have room for is a little table just big enough to hold a layout, claim it as your own creating space. Whatever project or layout you are working on or intend to work on soon, have it out on that table all the time. Even if you don’t know when you’ll have time to sit down with it.

2. Spend at least ten to twenty minutes at your table every day. If that means reorganizing, then do it. If it means choosing the next set of pictures so you can think about what you’ll be doing next, do it. If it means pulling out papers that could potentially go with your next layout, do it. If ten minutes is all you have most days, that daily ten minutes will make a world of difference. I’ll explain why in the post dedicated to this recommendation. (Note: This is the reason why having a permanent table is so important).

3. Give yourself permission to take risks, make mistakes, create a really bad layout, and otherwise get messy. This means you can go ahead and cut that paper up, even if you’re still not sure it’ll work.

4. Participate in online challenges. Have a blog or gallery where you can post your layouts publicly. This will be the motivation for creating the layout by the challenge deadline. My experience with these is that you have between 3 and 7 days from the time the challenge posts, to the deadline. Seven days may be a lot, but remember that you have to photograph the layout and that usually needs to happen in the morning hours to get good lighting. Then there is the time it takes to edit it, upload it, and post it to the blog/gallery. That cuts out at least one day of scrapbooking time. If you are trying for multiple challenges at a time, or if want you to be among the first to post so that people actually see your work, your time is even shorter.
It forces you to work at a faster speed.

5. Give yourself permission to scrapbook out of order. I used to be a slave to the timeline. I still keep my books mainly chronological, but ever since I allowed myself to go with my “creative flow,” or the momentum of whatever I am feeling motivated to do at a given moment, I work faster and I love all of my pages.

There they are. My five recommendations. Changes I made that had enormous impact. I can’t wait to discuss each of these in more detail in future posts.

Flow

Sunday, January 7th, 2007



Flow

Originally uploaded by Noell.

Remember the challenge I mentioned in the previous post? My one-word-theme for the year 2007 is FLOW.

I… (Flow)
My creative…
Go with the…
My own natural…
Embracing my…

FLOW

(In the box journaling):

For ten years I worked hard to STIFLE my own natural flow; my tendency to bounce from one idea/project/thought to the next. I studied and observed people who were naturally organized. I learned how their thought process differs from my own. I learned to do one thing at a time, in the proper order, and to clean up between each step.

(Out of the box journaling):

Recently I learned there are benefits and advantages for people like me: people who flow from one thing to the next, or back and forth; who get bored and MOVE ON. So I’ve been letting myself go with it…I’ve been FLOWING.

I love how this has changed my art, incresed my creative inspiration and joy. And I get more done now! So this year, 2007, I am all about GOING WITH THE FLOW.




Flow

Originally uploaded by Noell.

If you enlarge this close-up of the butterfly you should be able to see the tulle I layered over it, underneath it, and even behind the entire page.

Products:
Coldpress watercolor notebook
Grumbacher Acrylics: cadmium yellow, titanium white, mars black hue, cadmium red light, grumbacher red
Winsor & Newton Acrylic paint: cadmium lemon
Lavender tulle
Alpha’s: Stampin’ Up
Pen: Creative Memories




Flow

Originally uploaded by Noell.


Playing Around Today

Sunday, January 7th, 2007

The Ali Edwards newsletter challenge for this week was:

Can you identify a single word that sums up what you want for yourself in 2007? This week your challenge is to create something, anything, that celebrates your chosen word for 2007. Maybe a layout. Maybe a blog posting or a journal entry or a simple post-it note that you put somewhere you can see it each day. Make sure to journal about why you chose your word and what it
means for you – the more you let yourself explore the more benefit you will receive in the end.

So I’m playing with my paints today. I’ll post the finished product, along with my word for 2007, as soon as It’s done (as long as I have good lighting to photograph it, that is!).

Note to my photography challenge friends (and anyone else interested): I would definitely like some friendly but constructive feedback on the composition, the color, the lighting, etc of my photo. I made some small adjustments on my computer. Does your screen show this photo dark like the last one?

Settings: I forgot to write them down before I pulled them off the computer, but I think they may be:

ISO: 400
Shutter Speed: 350 (does this mean 1/350?)
F-Stop: 5.6

Insights Into The Mind Of A Three-Year-Old

Friday, January 5th, 2007

This is the play-conversation I am hearing from Aiden while he takes his bath and I do my hair:

Shower Head (in a really obnxious voice): But I don’t want to be nice!!!!
Bathroom Scrub Brush: You have to because you’re mean!
Shower Head: I am not!
Bathroom Scrub Brush: Yes, you are!

And then a minute later:

Shower Head: That’s my mommy!
Bathroom Scrub Brush: No, it’s not! It’s my mommy.

And on and on…

Photography Challenge: Gerber Daisy

Friday, January 5th, 2007



Gerber Daisy

Originally uploaded by Noell.

Flowers for my daughter’s seventh birthday party tomorrow. I bought these at the nursery yesterday (if you’ve never been to one, it’s a total experience! Taking your three-year-old makes it even better!) Each of the girls will get their own pot and we’ll be transplanting he gerbers into their new terracotta homes. They will be the party favors for the girls. Much better than bags of candy and plastic trinkets, no?

Photo Details:
ISO: 1600 Since it is dark, cloudy, and rainy this morning, I had to set the ISO to the highest setting in order to keep the F-Stop at 5.6.

F-Stop: 5.6 This is the perfect setting for getting depth of field. (Note to newbies: depth of field gives the effect of having the subject in focus and the background blurry. The farther back an object is, the more blurry it shows in the photo.

Shutter Speed: 80 Eighty is very slow. Normally you should put it on a tripod at this speed to keep the camera steady enough, but it seems to work out for me when I am taking a photo of something that isn’t moving, like a flower.

Composition: I wanted the pink flower to be off to the side rather than in the middle. It faces the the extra space. in other words, since the flower is facing left and slightly up, I positioned it in the lower right corner.

This photo is for the Photography 2007 Blog challenge from an ongoing thread on the 2 Peas In A Bucket Website. I also did this for the Color Challenge thread in the photography forum at the same site.

Have a happy day!

Scrapbook Layout: (not)-Normal

Thursday, January 4th, 2007



(not)-Normal

Originally uploaded by Noell.

I decided to do another sketch challenge from Pencil Lines. It’s a great way to pull out a really fast layout in-between my more time-consuming ones!

I used my blog entry on the 6 Weird Things About Me for the journing.

Products:
Cardstock: Bazzill
Patterned Paper: Fancy Pants
Pen: Creative Memories

Scrapbook Layout: Easter 2006

Wednesday, January 3rd, 2007



Easter2006

Originally uploaded by Noell.

Here is that layout from Episode 3 regarding photo placement and sizes. I’ll come back later with an update on the products and journaling. Right now I’m off to finish laundrey and make dinner!