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Posts Tagged ‘memorabilia’

Scrapbook Your Food Story: Your Food Execution

Monday, April 18th, 2011

Apr 2011 3549

This is the third day we’ve been talking about scrapbooking our food stories. Have I convinced you that you do have a compelling food story to tell?

So far we’ve answered these two questions:

Now it’s time for the third question…

What’s Your Planning, Shopping, and Cooking Method?

This story is already in progress. I have some memorabilia and I used it to determine the size and a mini-book (pictures of mini-in-progress below). Now I’m in the story + picture gathering stage.

Below are some questions to consider along with my own answers to the ones that apply, which will go in my mini-book.

  • How do you go about deciding your meals?
  • Do you plan a menu?
  • Do you see what is available at the farmer’s market or your CSA and cook from there?
  • Do you only shop at one standard grocery store or do you shop around with coupons for different store deals?
  • Do you rotate the same 7 meals every week and wing it when dinner time comes?
  • Do you prep food head of time or make it all at once?

For many years I chose about five new recipes a week, simultaneously listing the ingredients I needed. I had my menu and my grocery lists altogether on one piece of paper. I usually started a list as I realized I needed something from the store and over a week’s time it would accumulate items, the names and sources of new recipes to try (my menu), and lots and lots of doodles.

There are certain things I bought at the regular grocery store and other things I got at Sprouts, so I actually had two lists on one scrap of paper.

A Week In The Life  240

This year I’ve kept our regular menu very simple. We go to either the Farmer’s Market or Sprouts and see what’s in season and looks good, and we buy it. Then we make things up from there. I look forward to a time when I can do a bit more planning and try more recipes, but this is working for our lives right now.

Mesa Farmer's Market

May 11

May 15

May 21

The Mini-book:
Here’s what I have so far…

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Apr 2011 3552

Apr 2011 3551

Apr 2011 3557

Story-gathering Tip

Save a few grocery lists and menus! In the future you and others will find it fascinating. I have three lists from two years ago and I already love looking at them!

This is the end of a three-post series on telling the story about your food! I always have more to say on any given subject than normal people, so don’t feel bad if you think your story will only fill a single layout. That’s cool too!

Five Things That Could Be Missing From Your Scrapbooks

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

Memorabilia 924 - Version 2
Ever since I went through my old-school scrapbooks from high school and college a year or two ago, I’ve been on an escalating (though quiet) rampage regarding Life-Stuff — in other words, memorabilia and ephemera. I realized I enjoy my old scrapbooks — void of cute papers and embellishments, but packed full of stuff from my life — as much as my current ones, which were heavier on the “cute,” but lighter on the “life.”

Some memorabilia can tell the parts of the stories that our words and photos leave out.
Skeptical? You’ll see some examples below.

Life-Stuff Worth Keeping

In addition to the obvious ticket stubs, play bills, and post cards, there are other types of memorabilia/ephemera you might not have considered. Here are five qualities that compel me to save some memorabilia while tossing the others:

1) Tells something about your life.

While the left pocket in the memorabilia protector below holds the common concert memorabilia, the pocket on the right is holding ephemera from my favorite clothing store. Those items say a little something about me right now. Eventually these pieces will move onto a layout or mini-book.
Memorabilia 916

Some items tell a more subtle story about things that are going on in your life. At the end of the school year, Aiden’s teacher sent home a bunch of his first grade schoolwork. As I fished through the pieces, deciding what to toss and what to keep, I found the page below in a Valentines book where Aiden drew a picture of himself handing his great grandmother a heart.

At first I thought it was strange that he depicted Grandma Holt in bed, until I put the clues together and remembered that the month before he drew it, we had been visiting her in hospice. She died a couple weeks before Valentine’s Day. This drawing means that our visits, and Aiden’s relationship with Grandma, had enough of an impact on him to include it in his Valentine’s story two weeks later.
Memorabilia 903

2) Captures handwriting

The handwriting alone doesn’t do it for me, since we’re talking about collecting current ephemera, and there are a lot of possible pieces to save based on the handwriting criteria alone. But coupled with something else on the list, it’s very cool. Below is a story in Blake’s handwriting. He is a natural writer and I noticed that he used story-writing as a way to deal with a frustrating scenario involving a sibling.
Memorabilia 911
Actually, I’ve noticed he’s not the only one in my family to deal with situations this way. I may (or may not) want to combine these stories about various family members into one scrapbook story about family tendencies.
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3) Demonstrates learning and progress of a skill or natural talent

Aiden is also a writer — actually all five of us are — and after he wrote the “book” below, he pointed out to me that he included a problem and a solution in his plot-line, something he had recently learned.
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4) Demonstrates a person’s interests, natural tendencies, personality

Trinity draws almost every day, and most of what she draws has bright colors, hearts, and rainbows. I want to share her common art subject in a future scrapbook page, and I decided to save one that also included characters from her favorite movie, Hairspray.
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5) Shows a relationship

Below is something I saved that my Dad wrote to me, way back in 1980.
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When I was around fourteen, I decided to save this playful piece of paper my sister and I occupied our minds with during church. I could just journal something like, “My sister and I loved to play and tease, even during church,” but that doesn’t say it the way this does . . .
Memorabilia 922

And this is something I found in a paper pad. It’s the score sheet kept by one of my kids’ favorite babysitters from a game she played with Trinity. I love that Emily’s teasing personality will be forever implanted in our memories with this one piece of paper.
Memorabilia 913

Are you ready to start USING your memorabilia and need some inspiration? Below are some links to episodes with some layouts and mini-books. Paperclipping Members can watch the corresponding episodes in the Member’s Area, but if you’re not a member, you can see the projects in the blog post. If you want to see the tutorials as well, please click here to learn to learn about membership.

Everyday Items (for memorabilia specifically, look for the Starbucks mini-book)
Using Newspaper Articles on Layouts
Vacation Mini-book
Love Notes Mini-Book

A few more standard scrapbook pages:

Comfort Zone
Artsy Girl
Typical Friday

Weekly Roundup

Don’t Forget!

You Voted!

I’m happy to say that audience interest in tutorial topics were spread almost evenly among all four of the possibilities I shared last week. This means I’ll probably eventually do all four of them over the next six months (or sooner). I did count up the votes, though, and there was a clear winner. A majority of you voted on this episode topic:

Mini Scrap Clusters
Fill empty spaces with clusters of leftover scraps of papers, ribbons, etc.

Thank you for helping me choose our next Papercipping Video tutorial! We’re taping it today. Watch for its release soon!

Best Regards,

Noell
Host, Paperclipping

5 Step Mini-book Prep — Using Memorabilia

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

summer_outdoor_food
Hi, again!

I love really detailed three-dimensional mini-albums. I have a few that are long-term projects that I complete just one page at a time when I get the urge. I’ve also done a few very simple mini-books that I whipped through in one or two sit-downs.

I tend to feel less satisfaction with those faster ones, though. So mostly I make (or start!) a lot of mini-books that are somewhere in-between. In other words, I expect to complete them in a reasonable amount of time, but I also begin by loading them with lots of details. They end up taking me longer than I expect, and before I’m done I find another album or project I want to begin. Does this sound like you?

A Faster Approach

Well, I’ve come up with a new approach for these mini-books — the books for which I have high-expectations of stellar awesomeness, but that also need to get done within a reasonable amount of time. My new method has been great so far, for both a digi-heavy mini (sneak-peek above), and for my traditional tactile books (sneak-peek below). The method helps with mini-book completion in two ways:

  • It makes the process faster.
  • It allows you to simplify your final design — midway through the process — if your dreams of the “best mini ever” begin to feel overboard. But you’ll be able to switch gears without ending up with an intricate first half and a “clean and simple” second half.

The other cool thing is that this method came as a result of good design technique, so you won’t be compromising on design. In fact, it will help give you a great foundation in design for each mini-book page.

Interested? It’s the topic for the next Paperclipping Video Tutorial. I’ll show you how this method helped me with a digi-heavy book, as well as a purely paper one. You’ll need a membership to watch the episode and learn the method. So if this is an area you struggle with, but don’t have a membership yet, you can see how to get one by clicking here.

I had hoped to release this on Monday as the first of our August tutorials. It’s much heavier in content than usual, though, and it won’t be ready in time for Monday. We will release it as soon as we can. For now, I’ll share 5 steps for prepping a mini-book that uses multiple items of memorabilia…

5-Step Mini-Book Prep

organized_record_keeper

  1. Memorabilia – Fish through your memorabilia to find two or more pieces that are related. For example, in the book above, I found four different pieces that demonstrate how organized my daughter likes to be. Some other ideas: concert tickets, items from favorite places around town, school work, etc.
  2. Photos – Find two or more photos that will help tell the story of your memorabilia.
  3. Colors – Lay the photos and memorabilia on your table. Do they contain a hodge-podge of different colors? Congratulations! You now have your color palette! This is how I chose the color scheme for my paper album above: I had an orange piece of memorabilia, a pink piece, and two photos with green.
  4. Patterned Paper – Find patterned paper to go with the color palette of your photos and memorabilia.
  5. Book – Choose a mini-book size that will accommodate your memorabilia. Digi scrapbookers: When adding one piece of tactile memorabilia (un-scanned) to a small-sized digi-page, I have had the best visual results if the piece stretches from edge to edge, whether up-and-down or side-to-side.

If you start on these steps now, you’ll be ready to assemble your book when the new tutorial releases!

Weekly Roundup

Heads Up!

  • The Paperclipping Roundtable – We won’t be releasing this episode until Friday so that Nancy Nally can give us a full CHA trade show report!
  • Paperclipping Live! – This live scrapbooking show is every Tuesday at 6:30pm PST. Are you free?
  • The Paperclipping July Challenge – You have about two days to enter this! Come on, you know you want to…

That’s it for this week’s newsletter. I’m excited to share my two mini-books with you in the next week or so!

Best Regards,

Noell
Host, Paperclipping