Paperclipping: The Video Podcast | Design Your Story

Login | Join

Paperclipping Home

Beyond the “First Day Of School” Layout Duldrums

New to Paperclipping? A few things you should know: This is a great place to learn all scrapbooking techniques (I've posted more than 100 video tutorials). Several are free downloads, and I consistently release new tutorials every month. Others are members-only, available when you become a member. Finally, I recommend you subscribe to my RSS feed, or the newsletter (the form is in the sidebar) to make sure you get new videos as they're released. Thanks for visiting!

Are You happy with your Back-To-School Layouts?

Do your first day of school layouts look basically the same, but with updated products? Or perhaps, you’re still using the bounty of school-related stuff you bought three years ago? Are you tired of attaching the same title, “First Day,” every time?

Do your layouts reflect the pride you felt at your kids’ good looks in their brand new outfits? Or your dismay at how big they’ve grown? Or the chaos of trying to take their first-day photos and get them to school on time? Do you relive feelings again when you look at your back-to-school layouts?

Daddy Documents

The journaling reads: This year’s first day of school felt extra-special. Not only did all three of you start at the same school for the first time ever, but Daddy got to join us–again, for the first time ever…which led to the very best first day of school photos ever. And, he brought his great video camera to conduct first-day interviews with each of you. We loved sharing the excitement-including the music and balloons and energy.

Identifying The Stories

I knew I had accomplished my goal when Israel looked over this page for the new school year and said, “Oh my gosh, this totally makes me remember being there and what it felt like.” He got to see the kids off with me for the very first time. This year we have lots of good pictures and lots of good stories.

I took note of the different stories I wanted to tell, and then I looked through my photo manager to view and choose photos. Rather than trying to fit all of the good pictures on one back-to-school page, or choose just my favorite one or two, I identified which photos best told which stories, and allowed the number of stories I held in my heart to dictate the number of layouts I would make, and the number of photos on each one.

Last week you saw one of those layouts–the story of my oldest child, Blake, growing into a young man. This week you will see the rest of the stories, as well as one from last year. Today I’m sharing the one that celebrates Izzy’s being able to join us, and the overall excitement we enjoyed as we all entered the school grounds together.

Choosing The Photos

Notice how the photos in my layout each show a part of the story in the journaling: the three children posing for Dad; the kids entering the school, balloons in the background, Aiden receiving a high-five from a teacher; Izzy interviewing the kids; and of course, the focal-point photo and the focus of the story: Izzy with his camera.

The Products

I didn’t have a good experience the last time I purchased school-themed products. They didn’t reflect my actual stories and I couldn’t work them into my layouts. I decided this year and last year to only get things that I could easily use for other topics as well. So you won’t see many school-specific items on Paperclipping this week. What you will see are elements that reflect my own view of my stories:

1) Energy: Energetic red.
2) Time: The face of an old vintage watch alongside other time-related symbols.
3) Elementary School: The “D is for” prefix to my title, evoking an elementary alphabet lesson.
4) Feelings of Stability With Dad’s Presence: Strong, clean lines between the reds and cream plus strong shapes around the photos.

Note: I did not consciously think, “Dad brings feelings of stability, therefore I will use strong lines and shapes for this layout.” If you will get in touch with the emotional and personal aspects of your story, and focus on trying to reflect them visually, you will often choose design elements that reflect those ideas in a sub-conscious way.

Self-Reflection

Ask yourself, what is different about this year’s first day of school? What stories, incidents, feelings, or reflections dominated the day?

Journaling
How can you translate that into words? Be specific. Talk directly to your kids, or the subject of your layout, in your journaling. If you have more to say than one or two simple sentences, write it out ahead of time so you can make adjustments before you commit pen to paper.

Photos
Which photos best tell your story visually?

Products and Design
How can you translate the ideas on which you reflected into your design? What colors, papers, and embellishments will help support that story and those feelings? Don’t be bound to your school-themed products. If they support your story, use them. If they don’t, then leave them off.

Creating A Visual Memoir

Relax and tell your stories. That’s all this is. Someday you’ll have a collection of back-to-school stories that, as a whole, are a colorful memoir of a parent who watched her kids grow from year to year–of her children as they experience the excitement of walking into the unknown and entering a new phase of relationship, challenges, joys, and learning.

Find this useful?

Help me spread the word. Share or bookmark this post:

  • Facebook
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • FriendFeed
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Pat N
    I'm on the last of my back to school layouts. I will have four when I'm completed. I love how you talk about the stories and how the elements and the pictures support the story. When I went back and looked at the pages I completed, I noticed how I (unconsciously) picked embellishments to enhance the story. I also like the fact that you don't tie your layouts to themed products. Love your work and especially sharing it on Paperclipping.
  • Awesome. Finally found one of my labels of my personal scrap style: subconscious! ;) LOL! I am always creating what feels right to me and my memories... The inspiration has to come from an experience, something I am passionate about documenting, photos, colors, etc. Digging deeper is what helps me form what I want to convey. I love your posts... they always make me think about my own process and to give up what doesn't work for me.
  • Yeah--the subconscious! I do so much explaining about how my design supports my story, but it usually gets there subconsciously and then I become aware of how it all worked out afterward! It's such a satisfying way to scrap, isn't it? It's a very internal, introspective thing. And I'm also continuing to learn what processes are not best for me.

    For example, it seems like everybody in the industry keeps some kind of idea binder or idea cork board. I've tried that. But I found that it's best for me to not go looking for outside sources very often while I'm actually creating. I work best internally. So I enjoy outside ideas and inspiration from others when I find them, but I don't actually keep and collect them. That was something about myself that I learned was okay.
  • EXACTLY what happens here. No wonder I love your work and postings... I can identify with so much. I have tried to use other tools, like sketches, scraplifting, and my mind just doesn't work that way. I am sure they are great resources, but I can't use them. Coming up with ideas is my favorite part of my creative process! See you tonight! :)
  • Amy
    Love the three colors together on this layout. That red/orange paper the cream and the black in the accents is so complimentary together! ps can I just tell you how much I love that you don't do the "cheesy" and expected "themey" thing in layouts like these. I don't want to offend anybody because how you design is your own personal thing and I am just happy of the fact that a person has documented their history but, what you do is like the next level and leaves a piece of you with your layout! I am so happy to have found a person and a site that "gets it" and appreciates the extent you can take your story by making every aspect of it so you! and that includes the details and design. see ya tomorrow Amy
  • Amy, did you notice the light blue? =) Putting my layouts online always seems to desaturate certain colors, and that blue, which was a very important, yet small part of the layout, hardly shows up. Just had to point it out to ya, lol!

    Thank you so much for what you said to me. I appreciate it so much. I agree that everyone's designs, and way of designing, is their own and I don't look down on it. But I definitely have my own way and I love that I get to share it on Paperclipping. I especially love that there are people who feel the same and appreciate my take on it. I also love it when you guys expand on my topics and share your own perspectives.
  • Amy
    I can see the blue now Noell It doesn't show well on my monitor (sigh) very nice touch though......THat is the only frustration I have with scrapping and computers sometimes those subtleties get lost and those details can really make a layout! One day I hope someone gets that whole color thing and the computer all worked out ya know? I saw something recently about calibrating your monitor and your printer to get more accurate print colors but, it was way over my head would love to find out more on that subject as well though!
  • Color calibrating is extremely technical, even for techies and experts! I made a lot of adjustements and have finally figured out how (for the most part) to get it where my prints will look pretty much how I expect them to. But somehow those same colors get lost when I put them online. It makes me wonder what the editors see when I submit layouts to magazines.

    Maybe someday that will be perfected--it effects a lot of other industries in addition to scrapbooking, lol!
  • Thanks for walking us through this, Noell. I love gleaning from your thought processes.
    And I see the subtle visual triangle as well. Very nice.
    Blessings,
    ~Toni~
  • You see the triangle! =)

    Thanks, Toni. Are you doing back-to-school layouts?
  • Well...sort of. We homeschool and I did take pictures of the table and supplies for our first day. I also took some fun photos, like 6yo ds doing his Spanish letter on the computer while 1yo watched with curiosity.

    I have to put on a show on the first day to get them in the "switch gears" mode after having their house and mom back for the summer without school overtones. I do silly things like take roll call, point out who "ended up in the same class with whom", etc. They giggle and think their mom is silly, but that's the point. And now I'm thinking I have my story for journaling. ;D
    Blessings,
    ~Toni~
  • Oops, lesson. I meant Spanish lesson, not letter.
blog comments powered by Disqus