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Archive for the ‘Scrapbook Designs’ Category

Scrapbooking Outside the Page Protector – Paperclipping 187

Tuesday, February 21st, 2012

paperclipping 187

Do you ever get bummed when your beautiful dimensional page flattens inside the page protector?

Do you ever wish your standard scrapbook pages could have the yummy interaction and 3-dimensionality of a minibook?

Ready to think outside of the box to get the best of both worlds?

Here’s a tip!

You don’t have to choose just one. Try this:

Protect your photos, ephemera, and standard pages behind page protectors, but add some fun goodies to the outside of the plastic!

For Your Entertainment (intro page)

I’ve been doing this for a few years now. It works, it’s beautiful, and it’s really fun!

Need some ideas?

I shared a bunch in the newest Paperclipping Video tutorial this week! You’ll see many very different ways to scrapbook outside the page protectors for both standard layouts and for Project Life, too!

Paperclipping Members can go watch right now in the Member’s Area or on iTunes.

If you’re not a member, click here to learn more!

The Off-Center T Flexible Template – Paperclipping 185

Friday, January 20th, 2012

paperclipping 185

We released a video this week that shares one of my Flexible Templates, which are starting point layout structures that get you going but are so flexible you can use them whether you’re using a single photo or lots of them.

Here’s a sneak peek at one of the layouts featured in this episode.

Walks to Basha's closeup

Altogether I shared eight very different pages using this Flexible Template.

You need to be a member to watch our video tutorials. To learn more about it when you click here.

Enjoy! :)

Three Part Triangle Flexible Template – Paperclipping 181

Friday, November 18th, 2011

Paperclipping 181

There is one design concept I use more than any other for setting up the structure of my design.

The Flexible Template I’m sharing in this week’s video tutorial is the most useful and the most flexible of all of them! Whether you’re doing single photo layouts from this past summer, or you’re already diving into multiple photo pages for the holidays, you’ll be able to use this template today as the jumping off point for your next scrapbook page.

This tutorial is for the Paperclipping Members. You can find it in the Member’s Area.

You’re not a member? Could your scrapbooking benefit from lots of Flexible Templates that will help you get started on solid ideas for your pages, without telling you exactly where to put things or how many photos you need?

What about design principles and concepts that will help you learn to make pages you’ll love in less time? If so, I think you’ll love a membership! You’ll get immediate access to the Paperclipping archives of 180 professional video tutorials, plus two episodes every month!

Click here for more information!

Sixty-Five Ideas for Scrapbooking Halloween

Saturday, November 5th, 2011

Are you ready to scrapbook your Halloween before we dive into Thanksgiving and Christmas? In case you need a few ideas I thought I’d share sixty-five of my own for you to choose from!

halloween_decorating-final (more…)

The Weight of Your Journaling – Paperclipping 179

Friday, October 14th, 2011

paperclipping179

I know you’ve experienced this…

You have a great page going. Then you add the journaling. And now you don’t like the page.

You probably assume your handwriting is the problem, right?

Sure, the handwriting may be part of it. But there is another cause that is just as common. In fact, if you fix this other problem, then your handwriting probably won’t affect your page, even if it is, ummm…

Okay, I’ll just say it…even if your handwriting is ugly.

Not everybody can make their handwriting gorgeous. But everybody can learn to fix that other most common problem that takes a page from fabulous to not-fabulous, and mask the handwriting, too.

I’ve just released a new video tutorial that explains the real problem with journaling. You’ll learn the different ways that you can make your journaling fit with your page, and even make the design better!

I hope you enjoy it!

The video is only for members. If you’re a member, you can go watch it now.

If you’re not a member yet, click here to learn about a membership.

The Advice that Probably Didn’t Help

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

I have some beef with something we keep saying on the Roundtable.

Have you heard us say on the show that your family doesn’t expect a Monet or a Picasso?

That your kids just want to see their pictures and read their stories?

That they’ll have no idea whether the paper is on trend this season or released in 2005, or that you didn’t make a visual triangle?

Is the advice true? Yes.

But did it help you feel better about pages you make but don’t like?

Probably not.

And why is that?

It’s because we’re not just sharing our pages with our children. We’re also online sharing our pages with other scrapbookers. So let’s be real — the pressure is still on.

And it’s also because a huge part of our motivation is the joy of making beautiful stuff.

Because we value aesthetics and skill.

When did it become wrong to want to gain or improve skills?

It didn’t.

So how do you gain and improve your scrapbook design skills?

You cycle through these steps over and over again:

  • Learn design principles.
  • Analyze the bad stuff.
  • Analyze the great stuff.
  • Practice.
  • Learn the principles.

And on and on…

Learn design principles from good explanations and lots of examples. That’s what I’m trying to give you with my videos.

And what about the analyzing? This means you look for the principles in action on great pages. Or you look for the missing principles that would have helped a page out.

Then you try it on a page.

And as you continue to learn more principles, you’ll get it more and more.

It’s a cycle.

You ready to roll?

Jump On!

You can jump onto that cycle of improvement today with a Paperclipping Membership.

Start with any of my video tutorials, get lots of explanations and examples from me, see how to analyze a page, and then continue the cycle with each episode.

Did you know there are almost 175 videos in the membership to learn from?

Click here to start your learning cycle!

Scrapbook Layout from a Paperclipping Member: The College Send-off

Wednesday, August 10th, 2011

cindy_layout

What will it be like when you send your oldest or youngest off to college away from home? What was it like, if you’ve already done it?

Cindy Wick had designed the left side of this page with all these wonderful pictures which give a comprehensive view of the sending off of her daughter. Notice the variety of visuals –from the Motel 6 to the sub sandwiches to the shopping cart full of stuff to the goodbye’s — that will trigger very specific memories for Cindy and her daughter forever.

Once Cindy got all the photos and the fun design on her page, she realized she had a big story to tell with lots of mom-feelings to share, but not enough space. The page sat on her table while she tried to figure out what to do, and then…

A super hero of the day flew in in the form of Paperclipping Episode 173 – A Journaling Design technique!

(I realize the above statement is as un-humble as it gets! I hope you don’t mind a little bit of boasting!).

I am really proud because I read Cindy’s journaling and it’s so moving. What a shame it would have been had she decided to condense it to make it fit, or remove some photos instead!

And of course, the icing on the cake was that by using the tutorial’s idea she was able to have fun and share her own feelings of pride and celebration for her daughter through the visual design and all the wonderful little details.

Turns out you really can have it all!

Doesn’t her design show celebration and growth all at once?

So I wanted to share it with you.

Get Solutions for Your Scrapbooking Dilemmas!

Cindy said some pretty great things about her Paperclipping Memberhsip, too, and I hope it’s okay for me to be a proud mama of my videos and quote some of what she said:

While I’m at it, I should say that I am a member of paperclipping and I really have gotten so much out of my membership. I consider myself a decent page designer, but I still learn new things from Noell all the time! She has a way of introducing things in a new and fresh way ~ it always gets me thinking creatively.

That’s probably because her way of teaching design is to get you to think of design principles as flexible, instead of using more concrete methods…Her videos are SO different, creative, and well thought out, I’ll probably be a fan for life.

(Thanks so much, Cindy!).

Okay, gushing moment over.

If you haven’t read Cindy’s journaling yet, please do! It’s an awesome example of how to share your own wonderful human emotional stories!

To see a larger version, click here to see her blog post, then click on the layout itself.

Want to see what all the hubbub around the Paperclipping videos is about?

(Did I just say hubbub?).

Click here to find out and maybe you’ll get the solutions you need to your scrapbooking dilemmas! >> http://www.paperclipping.com/membership

Design Basics from the Garden

Monday, August 8th, 2011

I want to get some succulents for inside and out the home and since my expertise with potted plants has always been to kill them, I thought I would try expanding my skills and see if I can learn to keep them alive!

So I was watching this video on YouTube and thought it was a fun little demonstration on the basics of design. I personally learned design by studying how it’s applied in many different fields, so I thought I’d share this with you for a different take!

Are you ready to dig much deeper into design than the mere basics? What if the in-depth training was specifically for scrapbokers?

Check out my design course – Design Your Story: From the Ground Up.

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!