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Archive for the ‘Scrapbook Layouts’ 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!

Six Tips for Telling the Story and Designing Intricate Scrapbook Pages at the Same Time

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

February Reservations

We often see either one or the other: a gorgeous and stunning page with little to no story. Or a simpler cleaner page with lots of story. Can the two live together? How do you strike that balance between making a page you love aesthetically, while also telling the story?

We had such a fascinating discussion about this topic on the Paperclipping Roundtable, and just in case you got caught up in the dynamics of the conversation and didn’t notice or remember all the specific ideas we shared, I thought I’d list the ones I remember, along with a few of my pages as examples.

1. Add journaling to a second smaller page.
This is especially good for those who really want to go at the decorating of a page without thinking about how to fit the journaling, whether it’s because you like to decorate with lots of embellishing, or because you like to use lots of photos.

Christmas for 2? - with journal insert

Sometimes I put it in the middle.

Christmas for 2? - with journal insert

Tap Dance for Money - right side

Sometimes I add it at the side.

Tap Dance for Money - both pages


2. Write your story first.

I always know what my story is before I start picking my papers and putting things on them. If it’s going to be more than a few sentences I write it out, too.

  • You’ll have an idea of how much space you’ll need on your page and you can work it into the design the same way you do with pictures.
  • A clear idea of your story can help you better choose patterns, embellishments, and colors because you’ll be able to focus more on visuals that will help tell your story.

Hyman Family

Click here to read the journaling on this page in the description below the layout. Once you read that I think you’ll understand why I choose a vibrant pink and orange color combination, along with my embellishments.


3. Add your story as text directly onto the photo.

If you add it directly onto your photo using software like Photoshop Elements, you’re also accomplishing tip #2. And now you have a page completely free for embellishing!

Anime Trin


4. Reduce the opacity of your journaling text.

If you do digital or hybrid journaling, reduce the opacity of the journaling so that it’s subtle and more like a patterned background. This means the visual weight of your journaling will be light, allowing you to focus more of the visual weight on the beautiful embellishments.

Journaling strips or fine-tipped pens in a color that doesn’t contrast is a non-digital option.

Mission(s) Accomplished: at 38

5. Write your journaling like you’re talking to friends or family.

Do you tell your friends stuff? Of course you do. There’s no need to word your journaling any differently. Just put yourself into the mindset of telling the story to a friend and you’re good to go!


6. Break the journaling up into smaller parts.

In small sections of just a sentence or two you can nestle it into embellishment gatherings, around titles, next to a photo. This is another way to be sure your journaling is light in visual weight so you can concentrate your weight on other things.

Did you pick up any other tips while listening to the Roundtable episode? Or do you have tips we think of? Leave a comment to share, either here or on the Roundtable post!

Want some help with these ideas?
I have video tutorials on many of these topics for the Paperclipping Members! Here are just a few:

  • #185 – The Off Center T Flexible Template
  • #179 – The Weight of Your Journaling
  • #173 – A Journaling Design Technique
  • #170 – Scrapbook Titles that Ramble
  • #105 – How to Have Endless Ideas
  • #103 – Visual Memoirs
  • #94 – Embellishment Crescendo

If this is a subject you need help with, consider this a class! Start by listening to the Roundtable episodes, view each of these video tutorials, trying each concept.

If you’re not a member, you can start your membership now and get access to all 186 tutorials, including the ones I listed above. 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! :)

Stretch Your Leftover Themed Products – Paperclipping 184

Thursday, December 29th, 2011

paperclipping 184

I don’t buy a lot of themed products except for the Christmas theme — in that case I do buy a lot, at least for me. And that means I have leftovers every year. I bet you do too.

Ever wonder how to make them fit together onto a page?

I’ve just released a video tutorial with lots of tips on stretching leftover themed products, such as Christmas ones, to fit together on your pages.

Here are some of the things I share:

  • A layout concept for when you have only one piece of patterned paper you want to use for a 2-page spread.
  • Principles of color to help you pull together papers with slightly different color families and make it balance across your entire spread.
  • Techniques for making non-themed products fit in with your chosen theme.

Sneak Peek

This episode is for the Paperclipping Members. Are you interested in a new year of scrapbooking with techniques and design concepts that will help you with every page you make? That’s what you’ll get immediately with today’s tutorial, plus more than 180 others!

Click here to learn about membership.

Sneak Peek

Sneak Peek

Get better use of your products and make pages you love! Start your membership today!

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!

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

Q&A: Do I Use Digital Templates?

Tuesday, July 12th, 2011

After seeing my mostly digital summer album last week, long time Paperclipping Member, Jana, wanted to know if I used a digital template.

Why I Don’t Use Digital Templates

I’m definitely not opposed to templates. I’m sure I’ll eventually use one some day — I’ve seen some by Cathy Zielske that appealed to me. But counter to popular opinion — as I often tend to be — it seems faster and easier to me to devise my own pages than to search for templates and then try to match the numbers and sizes of photos to it.

I have a simple method that has to do with…

  • identifying my individual stories within the larger story
  • knowing which photos I want with each story
  • knowing the basic design principle of dominance

It’s the simplest thing, especially with small page sizes. So here’s how I formed my pages for this 6×6 album just by looking at my photos (instead of using a template):

1) Decide which photos I want to use for each individual story.

  • Story = topic for each page.

The story is the photo(s) + what you have to say.

Some stories get one side and some get the whole two-page spread. For example, these pages are two different stories.

everyday_summer5

The story on the left: Tuesdays were show production days. At the time we recorded the Roundtable, the Digi Show, and Paperclipping Live! all in one crazy hectic day.

The story on the right: The funny homemade pop-up card that Aiden made for Izzy and me for our wedding anniversary.

Most of my stories have 1-3 photos, but there are a couple of exceptions, which I’ll share below.

Okay, let’s move on to how you can easily decide on your own how to format your pages (’cause I’m all about independent scrapbooking, yo).

2) For single photo stories: decide on square vs. rectangular photos.

If it’s rectangular, you can keep its 4×6 ratio and size. The rest of the page will be paper.

Each of the pages on this two-page spread has its own single-photo story:

everyday_summer10

If you want it square, crop the photo to 6×6 and it’ll be the entire page.

everyday_summer11

When it’s time to add journaling, decide whether there is a solid spot on the photo itself for journaling. If so, add it there. If not, add it to the paper part of the page or on a journal block that you’ll place on the facing side of the two-page spread.

everyday_summer13

See how easy it is? You’re just deciding on the needs of your photos.

  • Some photos crop well to squares. Others don’t.
  • Some have solid areas for journaling. Others don’t.

That’s how to determine your page design. It’s so much easier than trying to make your photos work with a template!

(IMHO — of course!)

3) For 2-photo stories: decide on an up-and-down format or side-by side.

Side-by-side can mean on one single page for vertical pics, or two separate pages for square or horizontal ones.

Is there a dominant photo? Make it slightly larger than the other one if you want them both on the same page.

everyday_summer8

Or make one photo square and keep the other rectangular if you want them on two separate pages.

everyday_summer2

4) For 3 or 4 photo stories: decide on photo dominance and hierarchy.

Is there a dominant photo that should be the focal point? You can keep its 4×6 ratio and size, and then re-size two supporting photos to 2×3 to place underneath.

Journaling can go on the opposite page.

everyday_summer12

If you have 4 photos, you’ll want a dominant photo, a secondary photo, and 2 supporting photos.

everyday_summer7

Place the secondary photo with its original 4×6 ratio on the opposite page. Journaling can fit in a solid area on a photo or in the remaining paper area on the page of the secondary photo.

For lots of photos: make a grid.

You can fit nine 2×2 pics into a 6×6 grid. Add any remaining photos in 2×2 size to the opposite side.

everyday_summer9

To keep the spread from being overwhelming, you’ll want contrast and a breathing space. So your opposite page should be mostly white space. If I’d had 2 remaining photos instead of 3, I probably would have designed it the same except with 2 photos in a row instead of 3.

If you do that, don’t stretch your journaling across the whole page. Make your journaling the same width of the two photos, or fit it into a third box where the picture would have been.

You could also keep the center square on the left empty and add an embellishment to that space.

Add Lines

Once you’ve gotten all of your photos onto their spreads, you can go back and add lines the way I showed you how to do in Paperclipping episode 164.

Add Embellishing

When it’s time for embellishing, add your elements…

  • alongside lines
  • on top of lines
  • in corners between lines and page edges
  • as frames around a picture
  • one-third the way in from an edge of the page

Look at my pages above for examples of each type of embellishment placement.

Tutorials on Concepts You Should Know for This Post

For help on all of the concepts and techniques in this post you can watch the following tutorials:

You must be a Paperclipping Member to watch these.

What?

You’re still not a member? Look at all those tutorials topics you’re missing — and those are just for one type of project! To get immediate access to 172 video tutorials, plus 2 more every month, join now!

Or just click here to learn more.

Like I said — I don’t see anything wrong with using templates. I just don’t think they’re easier than simply looking at your story needs and your photos. Give it a shot!

You have what it takes to tell the stories of your life. Hopefully with all the concepts we share at Paperclipping you’re finding yourself to be more and more self-reliant as a scrapbooker!

Unusual Photo Sizes: What and How I Typically Print

Monday, June 6th, 2011

After my post on printing in unusual sizes, someone asked me how you can print the smaller sizes at a place like Costco. If you invest in Photoshop Elements (I think it’s around $70), you can actually recoup your expenses in the long run if you print lots and lots of small pictures.

Why is that?

Because after you re-size your pictures, you can drag those smaller pictures onto one canvas and print them on a single 4×6.

For example, you can crop six photos into 2×2, create a 4×6 canvas, and drag the six photos onto the canvas. You’ll print all six photos as one 4×6 print. Six photos for the price of one 4×6 print!

Pretty awesome.

Printing Multiple Photos Onto a 4×6 Print

Sometimes I want a very unusual size, like I might digitally crop a photo to 3×6.5. When I do this I’m not looking for that specific size, necessarily. It’s just that when I’m working on the cropping, that’s the size that I happen to think looks cool for that photo.

Here’s a 4×6 print I developed most recently. The white gap in the middle is the extra space on the print. The photos on the left are 3×2. The photo on the right is 2×4.

unusual_sizes_print

The other two photos for the layout fit on one other 4×6 print. I cropped them into individual photos and put my layout together:

Lots of Drama

It’s most economical to print on 4×6′s, because they cost significantly less than the enlarged sizes.

But I’ve also found I use much less product when I have enlarged photos, since they take up so much space. So that extra cost for enlarging may end up a wash when when you factor savings in scrapbook supplies.

Here are some of the more typical sizes I tend to print in…

Unusual Sizes I typically Print

2×2

Self-Expression

You can fit six 2×2′s onto a 4×6 print using Photoshop or Photoshop Elements.

2×3

The-Best-Decision

You can fit four 2×3 photos onto a 4×6 print.

3×3 or 4×4

canyon_lake

Place two 3×3′s, or one 2×3 + one 3×3 on a 4×6 print.

6×6, 6×8, or 8×8

Remember

I place one picture of these sizes onto an 8×8 print.

tea_time

Or I like to do grid collages like the one above in the 8×8 size.

9×9 or 8×12

drum_drum_drum_drum

These sizes would both go on an 8×12 print. If I’m doing a 9×9 photo, that still leaves me room for quite a few 3×3 photos all around the edges of the print, so I often add photos of that size to the print, whether they’re for the same layout or a different one.

Wonderful_Beautiful_Amazing

I would not have been able to showcase the beauty of our desert to the same degree, nor the fun of being out there that morning with 4×6 photos. Both the focal point photo and the collage on the right are 8×12′s.

Costco prints in all of these sizes, plus larger ones. Non-local printers, such as Persnickety also prints and even more.

How to Drag Cropped Photos onto a 4×6 or Other Size Print

I have a tutorial that I made for Paperclipping Members a while back that shows how to drag photos onto one canvas as a collage, and then make the digital round-corner frame on top of it that you see in the Tea Time layout above.

Here’s another one:

Dad-On-Stroller

Member’s can find this tutorial in the Member’s Area or on iTunes. It’s Paperclipping 108.

Or, if you’re not a member, you can hop over here and sign up! What have you been waiting for?

Other related tutorials in the archives that Paperclipping Members can watch are:

You can learn about a Paperclipping Membership by visiting our Membership Information Page.

A Scrapbook Layout – Step By Step

Thursday, April 7th, 2011

The layout I shared on the Roundtable was one (of many!) that I put together with lots of doubt! It’s still not my favorite page, but it’ll do! I took pictures of each step as I went back-and-forth on a number of issues that were bugging me. I thought I’d add visuals of those steps for you to look at after hearing the Roundtable episode (or possible during, or even before!).

1) Photo placement –
I’m a big believer in deciding on the best placement for the photos before choosing the backgrounds, since patterns and colors are distracting. I’ve been doing it for years and later learned that most designers first design with a grey scale before they add the variables of colors and patterns to their design.

Mar 2011 3306

2) Journaling -
Unless I know my journaling will only be a sentence or two, I like to write it out ahead of time. The journaling equips me to make product choices that support my story.

This was my clan!

For the first four years of elementary school we walked, mostly with these same kids. It depended on the year because some were too young or too old in other years.

We had fun, and these guys were necessary allies against the school and neighborhood bullies!!

Eventually my school shut down and we got bused to a farther school after that.

3) Background paper -
Numbers seemed appropriate for a story about walking to school.

Mar 2011 3309

4) Lightening it up -
I didn’t like how dark and heavy the background — it wasn’t telling my story. So I decided to make it a side piece. I chose a patterned paper with a white background and added a yellow glimmer mist around the edges to make it work with the number paper.

Mar 2011 3310

5) Matte -
I decided to matte the photo with a color that emphasizes the important part of the story in the pictures. I wanted the focus to be more on us kids and less on the morning glow of the California sun, so I picked a blue piece of paper as a matte. Then I stamped numbers to the bottom of the blue matte in order to carry the number theme throughout the page, and also to cut away the excess. This cut away bottom allows the yellow and blue to interact and feel more like a cohesive team.

At this point I also felt that the slightly tilted photo positioning didn’t work with the new matte size. I changed them to a straight up-and-down overlap position.

Mar 2011 3312

6) Toning it down -
The ink I used for those numbers was too bright! I tried to make it blend by stamping again with yellow ink, which was a totally lame attempt at a comeback.

Mar 2011 3313

7) Toning it down again and making it blue instead of green! –
I tried one more time by adding a pale blue distress embossing powder.

Mar 2011 3315

Success!

Mar 2011 3316

8) Tacking embellishments up in possible positions -
I thought I would do three in a vertical row where the papers intersect so I tacked some options up there.

Mar 2011 3318

And this is the point at which I began to feel very unhappy with my layout. It’s so dark and heavy and more serious than the story calls for. WAY more serious. I considered starting over but forced myself to move things around for a while. I also scalloped a paper edge to lighten the tone and cause more interaction between the dark, dark brown and the yellow paper. This also gave me more room along the left side to add my journaling.

Mar 2011 3319

Closer.

Mar 2011 3320

Mar 2011 3322

Finally I moved over to the right and started a page with a white background, bright, happy colors, and a looser composition — something I was so craving!

My Scrap Table Right Now

That satisfied my need. So I went back and finished my page…

A Daily Walk

It’s not one-hundred percent what I would choose, but I think it’s alright. Or at least alright enough.

Sneak Peek: Scrapbook Layout for Next Week’s Episode!

Thursday, January 6th, 2011

Kindergarten Layout Sneak Peek
The first member’s video tutorial of the year will be available next week! I wanted to share a sneak peek of one of the layouts with you!

And here’s a little teaser — I’ll be fixing an issue I didn’t like about one of my recent pages to demonstrate a design concept!

Click here to look into getting your membership in time for the next round of new videos!

Next Paperclipping Live! Event!

I’ve missed everyone since we canceled our weekly Paperclipping Live! show. I promised you we would do them periodically and that the next one would be in January. Guess what? January’s here! Time to announce the next Live! event!

When: January 18th, Tuesday night

Time: 6:30 pm Pacific Standard Time
9:30 pm Eastern Standard Time

Where: http://www.paperclipping.com/live

These shows are usually an hour, but since it’s been a while, we might go over — just a little. ;)

Mark your calenders! If you’ve never attended one of these, you’re in for a fun time! I’ll be scrapbooking live on video and there is a live chat for the audience to get to know each other. It’s always been a great opportunity for friendships to form among the Paperclipping audience.

See you there!