Paperclipping: The Video Podcast | Design Your Story

Login | Manage Account | Join

Paperclipping Home

Archive for July, 2011

Documenting Teenage Growth and Change

Friday, July 29th, 2011

Am I there Yet?
Every few days this entire school year Blake has walked up to me, compared his height to mine, and then said, “Dang it!”

On Feb. 22 I said this about it on the Roundtable:

“For some reason he thinks that one of these days he’s going to walk up to me and he’s either going to be as tall as me or taller.”

Guess what?

He was right.

He DID walk up to me outta-absolutely-nowhere and bang — he was totally taller.

July 2011 4723

How did that happen so fast?

Document Teen’s Crazy Growth and Change

Here’s another way to document it:

June 2011 4586

Teen-to-Mom foot comparison

June 2011 4588

Teen-to-Dad foot comparison.

Having a teen is like having a toddler again. Keep yours eyes open, Moms and Dads! You, too, Grandma’s!

Do You Have a Teen?

What are you noticing? How are you documenting it?

Easier Intricate Mini-Books – Paperclipping 174

Thursday, July 28th, 2011

Dancer angled

My favorite mini-books are the most intricate interactive three-dimensional ones! The ones that really wow you!

But I have a few different tricks up my sleeve that allow me to finish these in just a handful of hours or two to three sittings!

Do I dare share them?

Well, maybe just with the Paperclipping Members. ;)

We’ve just released the newest episode of Paperclipping on mini-books that are intricate and stunning, or at least that create the illusion that they are intricate — though the “stunning” part is no illusion!

Kiss 10

YouMeMiniBook

YouMe_HangerClock

If you’re not a member, maybe it’s time you join us!

Before you scream “YES!” and jump on board, keep in mind that the Paperclipping Video Tutorials are very rarely step-by-step hand-holding tutorials. They’re full of concepts that work over and over again for all types of layouts and projects.

To benefit, you have to be able to apply principles, as opposed to exact instructions of what goes where.

So if you think you’re up to the task and are ready to have the concepts for why things work and how to make them work for you — if you’re willing to be an independent self-reliant scrapbooker with your own stories to tell– it might just be your time!

Click here >> Membership Information Page.

2nd_office_1

mini-book snea peek

A note for those Members who have already watched the tutorial (it’s in the Member’s Area and your membership iTunes feed), these pages go in the dancer album and I used the same tactic for them that I did for the bird mini-book pages. Basically it’s that third “trick” I talked about, plus my task-batching method from Paperclipping 150.

Dancer

The supplies for this book are top-notch. I’ll share as much as I can…

Cover

Pages

So what do you think? Are you ready for your Paperclipping Membership? Click here to learn more!

New Keyword to Tag and Categorize Photos: Clothes

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

June 2011 4595

I added a new keyword to my tags and categories for photos.

Clothes.

You know what inspired it?

This…

June 2011 4597

Trinity put on her outfit, then told me she wanted us to be twins for the day and asked me to wear something similar.

I already had a layout idea of her 1st grade dresses that became my tops.

Exhibit A: Red + Black Plaid Dress –> Top

Family Picture 2007 4748

March  4065 (1)

Exhibit B: Hello Kitty Dress –> Top

trin_hello_kitty_shirt 4749

Taking Grandma to Starbucks

We’ve already traded a lot of clothes that fit the other better, and I have this picture of her looking through my closet for potential inheritances.

Trin Looking through My Clothes

Seeing her looking through my clothes, shoes, and jewelry makes me nostalgic because I remember how much I loved scavenging my own mom’s beautiful things when I was little.

Lately I’ve gotten more and more excited about the time I hope to come when we’re close to the same size and we can trade like sisters.

So with all this going on, I realized the subject warrants its own keyword so I can easily find these photos when I’m ready to scrapbook them.

What are the newer patterns emerging in your life that might warrant a keyword in your photo tagging and categorizing system?

PRT078 – So Proud to Be a Part of It

Tuesday, July 26th, 2011

CHA is over and we have a lot to talk about. Come listen!

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

This text will be replaced

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

The Panel

Sponsors

Masterful Scrapbooking Design Bundle: Click Here to check out the bundle.

Big Picture Classes: Click here to see special offers from Big Picture Classes!

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.

Or you can always manually subscribe to the Paperclipping Roundtable RSS Feed.

Mixing Styles: Romantic + Funky Casual

Tuesday, July 26th, 2011

July 2011 4719
I love mixing styles. One style often doesn’t tell the whole story.

Take me, for instance.

I have a little bit of a romantic side, sure. But I’m really not nearly as girlie as most ladies I know, and the more feminine romantic styles just don’t feel like me.

So I ME-ified this romantic white blouse by funking it up with a casual striped halter top and some shorts.

July 2011 4718

I love the stripes peeking out of the blouse at the bottom and how my halter straps jut at a sharp angle against the soft lacy off-shoulder sleeves.

July 2011 4717

Together these two styles tell my story.

Mix Styles to Tell Your Story When Scrapboking

You can use style to tell your stories through scrapbooking. I’m working on a dance mini-book for my daughter and since she dances all standard styles from ballet to hip hop, it gave me a fun opportunity to mix funky with romantic in one little book.

Here’s a sneak peek:

mini-book snea peek

If you’re a Paperclipping Member you’ll see me assemble the cover — partly visible in the lower left-hand corner — in the upcoming tutorial! Click here if you want to have your membership in time for this episode’s release!

How do you pull it off?

It takes two things.

  • Own it.
  • You need to do it on purpose. You need to do it with confidence. You need to let it show.

  • Balance it.
  • The styles should be balanced through the page or the book.

    Or on the body–

    Top to bottom:

    1. funky casual hair
    2. soft necklace
    3. funky straps
    4. soft blouse
    5. funky stripes on shirt and shorts
    6. soft but casual sandals (a nice mix of both).

    July 2011 4716

    I have an episode on this topic in the Paperclipping Membership Archives. It’s called How to Mix Styles – Paperclipping 144. If you’re not a member yet, this episode is one of 173 current reasons why you should join!

    The other 172 reasons are the other episodes you get instantly when you sign up.

    Click here if you’re thinking about it.

    Your Photos Tell You Where They Want to Be

    Friday, July 22nd, 2011

    So there was a little controversy and a bunch of misunderstanding regarding my point in last week’s article about templates. There was discussion in the comments, on Facebook, and on Twitter about it.

    In the article I questioned whether it really is easier to use a template, and stated that I find it easier to just look at my photos to know how to crop them and where to put them.

    Jennifer Wilson from The Simple Scrapper engaged me in a discussion about this on Twitter and she said my principles on how to decide on cropping and placement is the same thing as a template. She said it all comes down to semantics.

    I love Jennifer. She rocks.

    But I totally disagree.

    The difference between templates/sketches and concepts/principles is enough that it’s worth it to me to write a response. Because that difference demonstrates the chasm between two types of minds.

    • Some minds thrive in having a template, sketch, or sample layout to refer to while they’re scrapbooking.
    • Some minds are stifled by it.

    Going Nuts

    I thrive with conceptual ideas and principles that I can pull from my mind and apply to any photo or project. I don’t like to refer to something visual.

    So, as someone who is stifled by step-by-steps, by templates, by sketches it’s beyond semantics. It’s an important distinction that could make the difference in keeping someone engaged in a hobby.

    I figure there are some of you that are more like me, and that’s why you hang around Paperclipping in the first place — because we think alike and my unusual ways of doing and explaining scrapbooking clicks with you.

    (Many thanks to those of you who think differently from me but still like to hang around anyway!).

    There are few who teach scrapbooking in the ways that work for my mind and the minds of others like me. We’re a neglected crowd.

    That’s why this is important enough for me to clarify with another post.

    That’s why I don’t want my different method to be reduced to an explanation of semantics. There really is a difference.

    What I Wasn’t Saying

    So to clear up the misconceptions –

    1. I wasn’t saying it’s “bad” or “worse” to use someone else’s template instead of your own.
      –though there are benefits to not “needing” to do so, and you can better adapt sketches and templates to your needs if you have design know-how.
    2. I wasn’t saying to make your own templates.
      –Using your own templates is the same process as using someone else’s and it’s that process of using a template that I find harder than people say it is.
    3. I wasn’t saying to do things the harder way.
      –My point was that there are principles that make it simpler.
    4. And it’s not that I’m not used to Photoshop and templates, as one person assumed (lovely, though I’m sure that person is!).
      –I feel the same way about sketches for traditional scrapbooking as I do about templates for digital.

    Jennifer said a template is like a pattern for sewing clothes. She doesn’t realize I hated trying to work with clothing patterns and gave up trying to sew because of them.

    I’m sure I’m not the only one, right?

    I’m saying, your photos tell you what shape they want to be. They tell you where they want to be placed. Your story can tell you that, too, but that’s for another article.

    Let Your Photos Tell You Where They Want to Go

    This is the big key that makes it so simple. Here’s what your photos can tell you:

    • Whether they want to be square or rectangular.
    • Whether they want to the right or the left on the page, or centered.
    • Whether they should be higher or lower on the page.
    • Whether they want a matte or not.
    • Whether they want to be cropped bigger or smaller.

    You can refer back to my original article on this subject for some examples how to “read” your photos’ desires as I listed above. There are points in my article about choosing non-traditional photo sizes that will help, too.

    I’ll come back soon with specific examples. Maybe next week, but no promises.

    What About My Flexible Templates?

    Aren’t they templates and sketches?

    Nope.

    If you’ve been looking at my Flexible Templates the way you look at sketches, and don’t see the difference, then I haven’t explained them well and you haven’t yet seen their openness and potential for flexibility.

    If that’s you, you should click here to get the scoop.

    With Flexible Templates you should have a concept in your head, not a template or sketch that you’re referring to. That’s the difference that may seem small but is really huge.

    What’s My Point Already?

    My point is that for many of us, there is a way that can often be easier than sketches and templates. For some of us, it will be easier more often than not.

    If you ever feel less adequate because when you use a sketch or template it takes longer than it’s “supposed” to, it might be worth it to learn the concepts of “reading” the photos.

    These concepts may seem harder to grasp initially because they are not concrete like sketches and templates. But once you get them, photo placement and cropping and page design becomes a cinch!

    June Challenge Highlight: Ginny H. and Jana Olivera

    Thursday, July 21st, 2011

    Congrats to both Ginny and Jana!

    Okay — I know, I know — we highlighted two people last month. I won’t keep doing that. But this month I wanted to show how two dramatically different styles and stories can have strong foundations in design!

    Ginny: Chalenge 1 – Die Cut Paper Base

    june_highlight_one
    What Ginny said:

    The design of this page was inspired by a Lisa Day sketch. With the base of die cut paper and a dark brown cardstock background, I built the page from there. I added the teal paper strip behind the die cut paper to begin a vertical line that would later intersect the horizontal line where my title would rest. I cut the clouds from a piece of Bella Blvd. patterned paper.

    I made my title in aqua and brown to draw color from the background. Then, I used some border stickers to build to the horizontal line on the page and to bring in some more color. Lastly, I added some final details-the button, punched glitter heart, and a quick handcut photo corner.

    Designing the Story:
    Ginny’s story is about the long-term stability of her relationship and how laughter is an important element of that relationship. Her design communicates fun and stability. A vertical line that intersects with a horizontal one communicates stability. The scalloped circle and clouds, the vibrant contrasting colors, and the items to she used to make the lines near her title add energy, playfulness, and movement!

    Even though Ginny based her page on a sketch, she shows that she has a good feel for design with her choices. One of my favorite parts of this page is the way she balanced the heavy weight in the upper-left corner with the three little brads at the bottom right.

    How do three tiny brads balance all that weight at the upper left? Paperclipping Members should know! You can learn about it in the Paperclipping Video Tutorial 167 – How to Use Embellishments to Balance a Layout.

    Click here and join us to get that episode and 172 more right now!

    Jana: Challenge 4 – Scrapbook About Yourself

    june_highlight_two
    What Jana said:

    This is another submission this time about me, always when is about me the layout takes a whole different approach, messy no rules artsy approach . I don’t know why this is the way alway I feel more confortable talking about myself. I tried to use a lot of embellies that I had for ages.

    The use of design principles in this page is not so obvious, but it’s definitely there and I can prove it! :)

    If you know your story or what you’re trying to communicate, and if you know design as well, the use of design principles come intuitively and I would guess that’s how Jana may have worked with this page.

    So here’s how design comes into play for this story and page:

    • The layers of frames around the focal point photo suggests a sense of movement and shifting, which is awesome for her story of emotional progress and change.
    • Triangular balance or weight from the upper right corner frame to the focal point to the bottom right dense corner.
    • There is balance in color b/c of how she spread it evenly around the page.
    • She grounded all that wildness and color with the use of black, which is also balanced around the page. Even her black stitching is in a visual triangle.
    • She leads the eye around the page — the photo pops out from the white and leads you through her line of sight across to the journal strips. Your eye then wants to float up to the white frame with the butterfly, which points you back to the focal point photo, and then back down to the journaling and that right corner full of stuff.
    • The black stitches act like barriers, keeping your eye from floating off the page.
    • So what do you think? Does this stuff fascinate you as much as it fascinates me?

      This is why I love combining the art of visual storytelling through design with scrapbooking!

      Learn to Tell Your Stories Through Design

      One of my favorite things about last month’s challenge submissions is how I could see so much progression in design understanding with the entries. It wasn’t just these two, but you could see it in the other entries and many of their descriptions as well. Congrats to all who entered!

      That is the point of my new course on design. We dig deep with seven lessons on building a foundation for your pages and stories.

      Check it out here: Design Your Story: From the Ground Up.

      Find Ginny and Jana

      You can find Ginny’s page at the Paperclipping community, The Crop Circle.

      You can also find Jana’s page there, and on her own blog, as well.

      Join Us for the July Challenge!

      Suz has four possible challenge topics for you to choose from. They are all based on things techniques and concepts I’ve shared here on Paperclipping over the recent weeks. You’ll love Suz’s examples, too!

      Click here and join in: July Challenge.

      Many thanks to our Challenge Coordinators and Judges: Lesley, Suz, and Kristyn!

    PRT077 – Masters of the Long Arm Extension

    Wednesday, July 20th, 2011

    What are some great ideas for scrapping about your spouse or significant other? That’s what we’re talking about this week!

    Come listen!

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

    This text will be replaced

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

    The Panel

    Sponsors

    Masterful Scrapbooking Design Bundle: Click Here to check out the bundle.

    Big Picture Classes: Click here to see special offers from Big Picture Classes!

    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.

    Or you can always manually subscribe to the Paperclipping Roundtable RSS Feed.

    Ten Ideas for Scrapbooking Your Relationship with Your Spouse or Significant Other

    Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

    The Endearing Things They Say and Do for You

    Note it. Appreciate it. Write it down.

    For You
    Kiss Texture Closeup

    The things I hear you say to the kids on my behalf…

    “Guys, get away from Mom’s door. I don’t want her to feel rushed.”

    …while I was finishing a scrapbook project before leaving with the family.

    To You
    Kiss 2

    Me: Do you need me?
    You: I always need you. You’re a need and a want.

    Kiss 3

    Me: Sorry to bother you again.
    You: Oh, don’t worry about bothering me. It just means I get to see you again.

    The Funny Stuff

    Inside Jokes
    smile


    Funny Stories and Incidents

    he-makes-me-laugh

    Date Nights and The Places You Go Out Together

    I’m still working on the actual scrapbooking of this part, but I’ve been dong a lot of the photo-capturing and journaling!

    A Favorite Venue
    Noell & Izzy at D'Vine

    D'Vine Bar and Bistro
    We come here about every other week. I have lots of pictures here!

    A Favorite Activity
    June 2010 169
    We love live music and going to concerts. Here we are outside Dodge Theater waiting to see Slightly Stoopid play.

    The Difficulties

    You don’t have to share the particulars. I didn’t…

    amazed

    Somehow we’ll make it cause that’s what we do. –Red Hot Chili Peppers

    The Childless Vacations

    Your Personalities
    two_of_us 4747

    I think vacation scrapbook stories are even more interesting and meaningful if you focus more on how your personalities come into play in the vacation.

    Or how the vacation might affect the relationship.

    New Starts and Joint Discoveries
    H (Tuscon) - 3
    This trip inspired the idea of mountain-biking through the desert trails. We’ve been biking most every Friday since this trip except during the most extreme points of winter and summer.

    H (Tuscon) - 5

    We ate at our first vegan restaurant — Loving Spoonfuls! We loved it!

    This trip was the start of a whole series of firsts and a fun new exciting time in our life together.

    The Major Life Changes

    Forever-In-Blue-Jeans
    Money talks. But it don’t sing and dance and it don’t walk. Long as I can have you here with me I’d much rather be forever in blue jeans. (Neil Diamond).

    In October you walked away from The Man. The suit and the tie disappeared and the jeans came out. We depend now on our creativity and drive. We gave up a lot of monetary luxuries. And we are happier. Life is more fun than ever before. The past three months have been a honeymoon for us. Life is so very, very good. Love you.

    Q&A What Kind of Paint Should I Use?

    Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

    I thought I’d answer this question in a blog post, since maybe there are others out there who are wondering the same thing about what paint and ink to get.

    Hi Noel,

    Regards from Venezuela. Happy 4th of July!

    I’m experimenting with painting in my layouts, I wonder what kind of paint or ink do you use in your designs? Any brand that you recommend?

    Best Regards
    Elena

    For a long time I was using one from a brand called Grumbacher. They sell them at Michael’s. I like that brand for scrapbooking because it’s not the cheapest acrylic paint, but it’s not the most expensive either.

    Tubes Of Paint

    It’s artist’s acrylic paint in tubes with a nice thick body that I’ve enjoyed for scrapbooking. I haven’t loved it so much for painting, though, and have switched to Golden brand. Golden is much more expensive and great for painting. But probably nicer than necessary for scrapbooking! :)

    Really, if you’re just trying to get color down onto scrapbook paper without any detail, any kind of acrylic paint should do.

    As far as ink goes, my favorite is Tim Holtz distress ink. There is so much you can do with it! But it really depends on what you want to do with the ink.

    Hmmm, I think we better leave that for another post or tutorial, since there are so many types and purposes of ink!

    Paperclipping Tutorials with Paint:

    For anyone interested in expanding their use of paint, I have these tutorials in the archives for Members:

    Layer and Texture with Color – Paperclipping 163

    Kiss Paint Cloeup

    Mix Your Own Paint Colors – Paperclipping 106

    YouAndMe_Section3

    Using Masks and Paint
    – Paperclipping 27

    January Layouts  616

    If you’re a Paperclipping Member, you can find those tutorials in the Member’s Area or in iTunes.

    Otherwise, click here to learn more: What Do Paperclipping Members Get?