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Archive for December, 2010

PDS028 – Dirty Dishes in the Sink

Thursday, December 16th, 2010

Hey Digital Scrapbookers! Let’s hear a couple digital scrapbookers who don’t have children talk about what they scrapbook and why! Come listen!

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The Panel

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Picks of the Week

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How to subscribe…

We’re in the iTunes directory so you can just click on this link to go there and subscribe,… or if you want to do it the hard way, you can subscribe to the show’s RSS feed.

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PRT049 – All Twelve Months

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

Before you do anything else…

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Please call that number and leave us a voicemail we can play on the show next week! Thanks! :)

Okay, back to our regularly scheduled program…

Come listen to this week’s Paperclipping Roundtable. Enjoy!

You can use this audio player to listen to the show:

If you want, you can also right click this link to save the show to your computer manually.

The Panel

Sponsors

Any Class from GetItScrapped.com: Click here for the course information, and make sure you use coupon code take10wprt at checkout.

Big Picture Classes: Click here for the promo code to save 10% on any class at BPC!

Picks of the Week

(Affiliate links wherever possible.)

How to subscribe…

Did you know that when you subscribe in iTunes (which is free), you’re helping support Paperclipping Roundtable? It’s true. iTunes measures every subscription, so it’s like casting a “vote” for the show. It helps us move up the ranks and helps us grow the audience.

iTunes is free. Subscribing is free, so why not use it to download the show? Subscribe in iTunes (iTunes link) right now so your computer will automatically download each new episode as they become available.

Scrapbooking Ideas for Your Own Holiday Story – First Gift

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

decdaily_4_1-copy
What is the story behind the first gift under your tree this year?

Last week I shared a story as a prompt for you. It was a story about my parents’ gift-giving ways and how I adopted and then adapted them. Today’s stories are about my children.

But you don’t have to have kids to use this as a regular yearly story prompt. It just happens that my kids’ actions last year and this year propelled these stories. And now that I’ve done two in row, the “First Gift” prompt might become a tradition for me to note and document — even though the story behind the first gift won’t always be as stellar.

These are my stories about the first gifts under the tree . . .

First Gift – 2009

first_gift_2009_
Journaling reads: The first gift under the tree was from Blake to Mom. We were at Starbucks and when I went into the restroom Blake quickly bought a mug that I’d been eyeing. He had been saving money for stuff he wants for himself, so it made me feel good that he was so excited to buy a present for his mama.

First Gift – 2010

25_merry_days_2010
Journaling written mainly to Aiden:
First gift under the three this year. There’s a story behind this gift. Aiden — you had gotten your hands on a box we were going to recycle. (Somehow you instantly get ideas of things to build when you find clean trash).

You also saw on the floor the chipboard dividers I use to separate layers of ornaments. Had I realized what they were when I was helping you tape them into place, I would have stopped you. I didn’t realize until later, though.

You had asked me to get the boxing tape out. Then you proceeded to cut my chipboard pieces into the shapes and sizes you needed to make wings and a propeller to put on your box, turning the whole thing into a plane.

But this wasn’t an ordinary plane. This was a plane that could be folded shut to look like a regular box when gift-wrapped. I saw you making adjustments to make sure your wings would be able to shut as flaps, but I didn’t know why until you asked me if you could go wrap your plane.

A good while later, you emerged from my bedroom where I keep the gift-wrapping. You had a big box-shaped present that you could not wait to put under the tree!

“It’s for all of us! Even me!” you announced. Then you found a sharpie and wrote our names on the box and set your perfectly imperfectly-wrapped gift under our Christmas tree.

* * *

What’s your First Gift story this year?

Coming Up At Paperclipping

There will be a video tutorial for our members, as well as a Roundtable and Digi Show episode the month of Christmas (next week)! Both audio shows will be taking the week off after Christmas. Don’t forget to listen to this week’s shows!

If you think you might like to have your membership in time for the next video tutorial, please click here to find out how it works!

I hope to start posting more of my December Daily 2010 pages with you very soon!

Happy Holidays,
Noell

Three Holiday Tags

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

I plan to attach these to brown paper wine gift bags.
Holiday Wine Bottle Gift Tags

They’re three of the four tags I’ve finished so far from Tim Holtz’s 12 Tags Of Christmas challenge. I have one more nearly finished and there are a few more I still want to try.

Bird on Tag
One of the things I’m most proud of is my little birdie nest. I thought I would use one of the rosettes off of Tim’s ribbons for a nest. I pulled the tape off the ribbon of my brand new package and was at first sad to see the tape shred about four of my rosettes. But then I realized the shredded rosettes make even better nests!

Scrapbooking Ideas for Your Own Holiday Story

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

Stories Are Gifts - Share
Years ago I scrapbooked every Christmas because that’s just what you do as a scrapbooker, right? Well, not necessarily. Later, I only scrapbooked what I really felt like scrapbooking.

It turns out that I always want to scrapbook about Christmas whenever holiday season comes around! But even my holiday scrapbooking inspiration has been evolving. Lately, it’s been more about capturing certain stories — deep rooted stories, funny stories, important stories, revealing stories. I find myself wanting to scrapbook more than just one Christmas layout per year because I’m digging deeper now than I used to.

Do you feel you scrapbook the same thing over and over again every year for the holidays? Or do you avoid scrapbooking Christmas for that very reason? What if there are rich stories revolving around your winter holidays that you haven’t even noticed?

Guess what? There are!

Our winter holidays are all about family traditions. Think about the way our personalities cause us as adults to either embrace some of our parents’ ways of doing things, or to toss them away, or to allow them to evolve to accommodate the needs of our own children. Much of what we do we don’t even realize is a “tradition” because it’s all we know. It’s all we’ve seen. There are lots of rich stories to reveal from this time of year. If you don’t think you have them, you just haven’t identified them yet.

For the rest of the December newsletter articles, I will share some of my own stories, mostly as I’ve recently been discovering them while poring over my parents’ photo albums from 1967 to 1975. I had no idea that by looking through these old photos I would learn things about myself — why I do much of what I do during the holidays. Here’s the first story. I hope it makes you think of something from your own life . . .

christmas_for_two

I searched the picture on the left quite a while for a clue as to who all these presents could be for. My parents’ first child was still months away.

“Mom!”

I had to ask her.

“Were these presents from you and Dad to each other?”

She looked at the picture, laughed, and said, “Yeah, I think so. Dad and I have always gone overboard for Christmas.”

I still couldn’t believe it, but then I took a good look at the other pictures.

buckland_christmas_c1967

  • Dad trying on a bullet belt, holding a polaroid camera box in his left hand and a suitcase under his arm. He looks like he’s wading in a shin-high river of tissue, packaging, and wrapping paper.
  • In another photo Mom is holding a dress (or robe?) to herself. At her feet, empty boxes are scattered around the floor, along with what looks like a rolled up sleeping bag. On the sofa the suitcase in the first photo has a mate. Above the pair is some clothing, and on a chair in the foreground is another stack of opened gifts — probably a set of stemware and more clothes. There are yet more items in the other pictures

The undeniable proof, though, is in the final picture of this set which you see in the top right photo. Mom relaxes on a chair, overlooking the aftermath of Christmas morning, eating an apple in the same relaxed and pensive way I’ve seen her eat apples my whole life.

The trash is all over the floor. There is nowhere to walk. It looks like they tore into their gifts without the slightest thought for cleanup. It’s a disaster.

This was how Christmases were for us when I was a kid but I never would have thought the mayhem to have also happened when it was only the two of them.

Even when we had a low income, my parents threw us huge Christmases! The stacks of wrapped gifts under the tree were tall and beautiful, though most gifts were not expensive and some of them were just practical — the stuff they would have bought us over the next few months out of necessity.

My parents wanted the promising beauty of a tree with mounds of presents. They wanted to draw out the main event of the holiday — exchanging and unwrapping gifts.

How do I know this? I didn’t actually ask my mom. I know because she passed this desire on to me. I remember my first Christmas with Israel. We didn’t get ourselves quite as many presents as my parents did, but we weren’t quite as practical with our gifts either. I remember how happy I was to have so many gifts under our tree. I also remember the wide eyes and comments from other couples — friends of ours — who were only exchanging one or two modest gifts with each other.

I remember being embarrassed about it, too.

Over the years Israel and I have shrunk Christmas down to a modest amount of gift exchanging that is more in line with our deeper values. Despite those values — the value of a certain level of simplicity and minimalism — these pictures of my mom and dad’s extravagant pre-children Christmas make me smile. Because I relate. And I remember.

What’s Your Story?

Thanks for letting me share my story with you! Did you relate? Or was it the very opposite from your own Christmases? Did my dad’s bullet belt remind you of your dad? Or did that blue fridge take you back to an earlier time (if you clicked on my photo and took a good look at it!)?

If you thought of one single thing from your own life while reading my story, then you have one of your own to share. In my kids’ school they call that seed writing. I tell you a story which, without fail, will always trigger a memory of some kind in your own mind. If you tell me you didn’t think of one I won’t believe you! So what’s your story? Write it down, quick. It may seem too small, but if you start writing it, you’ll begin remembering more. There’s always more to a story than you initially think.

Photos From the Paperclipping Members’ Holiday Photography Tips Course

For the holidays I’m giving our members a course in photography. I wanted to share a few that really caught my attention . . .

Shannon Van Sluytman
DSC_0019

Melissa Stinson (scrappyjedi)
_DSC8589.jpg

Weekly Roundup

Happy Holidays!
Noell

PDS027 – Extracting a Banana

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

Hey Digital Scrapbookers! Are you ready to hear our hosts share their best tips about extracting elements in their images? Come listen!

You can use this audio player to listen to the show:


You can right click to save the file.

The Panel

Sponsor

Learn Photoshop with Digital Templates from GetItScrapped.com – Click Here to learn more about the course, and don’t forget to use the coupon code take5offdigt4pds at checkout to get your discount.

Picks of the Week

(Affiliate links wherever possible.)

How to subscribe…

We’re in the iTunes directory so you can just click on this link to go there and subscribe,… or if you want to do it the hard way, you can subscribe to the show’s RSS feed.

Your thoughts?

What did you think of the show? What questions or feedback do you have? Please let us know in the comments!

PRT048 – If My Husband’s Listening…

Wednesday, December 8th, 2010

What ideas do you have for the holidays? What kinds of things can you make, and what are you hoping to receive as gifts?

Come listen to how the ladies answer these questions in this week’s Paperclipping Roundtable. Enjoy!

You can use this audio player to listen to the show:

If you want, you can also right click this link to save the show to your computer manually.

The Panel

Sponsors

Building Pages from GetItScrapped.com: Click here for the course information, and make sure you use coupon code 15offBP4prt at checkout.

Big Picture Classes: Click here for the promo code to save 10% on any class at BPC!

Picks of the Week

(Affiliate links wherever possible.)

How to subscribe…

Did you know that when you subscribe in iTunes (which is free), you’re helping support Paperclipping Roundtable? It’s true. iTunes measures every subscription, so it’s like casting a “vote” for the show. It helps us move up the ranks and helps us grow the audience.

iTunes is free. Subscribing is free, so why not use it to download the show? Subscribe in iTunes (iTunes link) right now so your computer will automatically download each new episode as they become available.

Train Station Flexible Template – Paperclipping 159

Monday, December 6th, 2010

I’m excited to share another Flexible Template in this episode — these are some of the audience favorites! Not only will you get a flexible scrapbooking idea that you can use for different amounts of photos, but I also share some design principles so you can choose how to vary your design according to what you want to communicate.

Also, this template works great whether you want to do a single page or a double page layout, which you will see in the three layout examples below — two doubles and one single.

You need the free Flash Player to view this video.

You can also right-click to save the video.

If you are not a Paperclipping Member, you can watch the trailer or download it to your computer. For this and other scrapbooking ideas, please click here to find out more.

Christmas ’06

2-page 12×12 layout
Christmas '06
Journaling reads: Your gifts from Santa – the big items on your wish lists this year (plus umbrellas — my wish).

A Shared Community – An Instant Friendship

2-page 12×12 layout
A-Shared-Community---An-Instant-Friendship
Journaling reads:
Who else but a bunch of scrapbookers could meeting person for the first time after communicating only briefly through email and click so immediately?

Dedra and I met Lain Ehmann after she taught classes at a CK Convention. We had dinner on Main Street in downtown Mesa. And of course, we all had our cameras. So we reverted to a junior high age-mentality and shot a bunch of photos of oursevles around the city sculptures.

So much fun!

Supplies for this page: I did a fun technique on this black Bazzill glazed cardstock to lighten the negative space around the images and give it some glimmer. Members can watch this technique by locating Paperclipping 146 in the Members Area. You’ll need Banana Pudding Chalkboard Glimmer Mist.

i can’t find any avaialble floral gaffer tape by 7 Gypsies, but the great blingy items at the end of the tape are Prima flower centers from the Sultan collection.

Note: All linked items are a part of my affiliate store. I purchase all of my scrapbooking supplies myself at retail price (nothing is given to me), just like you! If you make a purchase through my links, I will receive a small commission. Thank you!

We Have Fun, Always

12×12 layout
we_have_fun
Journaling reads: We tease. We play. We dance. We joke. We love.

Note – I realize I forget to mention where we were and why on this page! I’ll be adding it to the top left in the empty space!

Supplies for this page: The only supplies on this page that are still available are the metal ones — but they’re some of my favorites! The Muse Tokens have great depth and texture that doesn’t show up in the images online. And then there are the Spinners, which I altered Paperclipping 152. Members can watch the tutorial in the Members Area.

* * *

I hope you like today’s episode! It’s always nice to get a little design help for multiple photo layouts, which tend to be the hardest to pull off.

To learn about a Paperclipping Membership so you can have access to our archive of scrapbooking ideas (almost 160 tutorials!), plus receive two more episodes a month, please click here!

Learn From Others Using Scrapbook Supplies You Already Own

Thursday, December 2nd, 2010

There are so many fun challenges, group projects, and exciting classes happening around the internet right now! I feel like a kid at Christmas time again! Do you find yourself getting inspired, wanting to participate, but without all the supplies you see in the demo’s?

I’m raising my own hand here. I’m following along with Tim Holtz’s 12 Tags of Christmas project and I’m still fairly new to most of his supplies and techniques (though not to his metal pieces!). Clearly, we cannot go shopping every single day to purchase the supplies he uses on each of his daily tags. So what do you do?
12 Tags of Christmas
Here is the tag I made from the inspiration I got from Tim’s first tag. My tag is not taking my breath away. I made the mistake of gluing a transparency (the snowflakes and green flourish) over a tag before I was satisfied with the background I gave it. That left me with only the upper corner to try and adjust. And I ended up adjusting it multiples times turning one mess into a different mess into a different mess.

But never mind my (lack of) inking technique here. There are some things that I think are pretty good about the tag. I happen to like my reindeer and his Christmas wreath. Here’s how you can learn from others’ techniques using supplies you already have . . .

Specify what you like.

When I saw Tim’s tag I was drawn to the colors. I really wanted to make a tag with layers of blues tones in the background and the bold red and green as accents, like he did.

What I was missing: A die cut machine, or a house of any kind for that matter * a wreath * a snow flake stamp (I know, how lame is that?) * those great inkable ribbons * blue distress inks (I have one light blue distress ink pad and that’s it).

Identify what supplies you have with similar characteristics.

  • I had multiple tones of blue Glimmer Mist, one blue Distress Ink, and one blue Stampin’ Up ink pad.
  • I had two tones of green wire.
  • I had red rhinestones.
  • I found some sparkly snowflakes that I could cut away from a photo transparency.
  • I had cream-colored organdy ribbon, which I thought might possibly take some ink — and it did!

Identify any problems caused by your lack of supplies

I started by coloring my tag blue and white in ways I don’t care for and will no longer discuss. I also had a way to make my own wreath, but there was a problem. You can’t just hang a wreath from the winter blue sky — a wreath hanging in the sky would cause a good amount of cognitive dissonance to the viewer!

Identify replacements based on supplies you do have.

I looked through my stamps and found a reindeer head with lovely antlers. I had grungeboard, gold embossing powder, and some Walnut Distress Ink to stain the edges of said reindeer head.

Notice the common characteristics between what I had (a reindeer) and what Tim had (a house):

  • Both are made with grungeboard, allowing me to have the three-dimensionality and the weight of a focal point item
  • Both are in the brown tones, allowing me to continue with the overall color scheme

But here’s the important part . . .

  • Both are great for hanging Christmas wreaths!

Reindeer Tag

When You Have Almost Nothing

How about a few more case studies?

Case Study #1: IZZY
Izzy's Tags
Izzy decided to make tags along with me last night! He has even less experience than I do, and what’s worse, he doesn’t know what supplies are even available to him, since they’re mine. He decided to just use the fact that he felt inspired by Tim’s tags, and he practiced the techniques he was already a little familiar with. Aren’t the tags awesome?

Case Study #2: TERESA ROBSON
DOF2
We are on Day 3 of my Holiday Photography Course for Paperclipping Members. The first challenge was to photograph either ornaments, decorations, or the Christmas tree. Not everybody has their Christmas stuff out yet, or even plan to put any out. That didn’t stop Teresa! She took her camera shopping and got these neat shots.
DOF5
Who cares that they’re not her own ornaments? She got some photography practice and she captured what we all experience of this season while we’re out shopping, whether we even celebrate Christmas or not!

Holiday Photography Course — You Still Have Time!

So far, 336 of our members have signed up for the course, and 47 of those decided to join the group gallery and forums.. This is a free course for Paperclipping Members. If you get a membership now, you can still join us! You’ll just be a couple days behind, and that’s okay. Email me if you are a current Paperclipping Member and I will send you a link to the sign-up page!

Members will also get their two video episodes this month, of course! One will be a brand new Flexible Template. The other will be on design for titles! New members will also love getting access to the 158 tutorials we already have in the archives! You can find out more here!

This Week @ Paperclipping

In case you missed it . . .

Happy Holidays!

PDS026 – The Mail is the Topic

Wednesday, December 1st, 2010

In this new episode, we’re answering your questions! Come listen to see if we read your mail!

You can use this audio player to listen to the show:


You can right click to save the file.

The Panel

Sponsor

The Digi Chick has new collections from Basic Grey!Click Here to see the collections!

Mad Digital Skillz Bundle from GetItScrapped.com – Click Here to learn more about the course, and don’t forget to use the coupon code 20offmdsb4pds at checkout to get your discount.

Picks of the Week

(Affiliate links wherever possible.)

How to subscribe…

We’re in the iTunes directory so you can just click on this link to go there and subscribe,… or if you want to do it the hard way, you can subscribe to the show’s RSS feed.

Your thoughts?

What did you think of the show? What questions or feedback do you have? Please let us know in the comments!