pretty paper. true stories. {and scrapbooking classes with cupcakes.}

lovely to meet you Twitter Facebook Pinterest YouTube

Take a Scrapbooking Class

online scrapbooking classes

Shop Shimelle Products

scrapbook.com simon says stamp shimelle scrapbooking products @ amazon.com shimelle scrapbooking products @ amazon.co.uk

Reading Material

travel

i will scrapbook this Category

Travel Notes from Bangkok Grand Palace

Notes from Bangkok Grand Palace
Grand Palace Bangkok Thailand
From the older ruins of Ayutthaya, we headed to something much more sparkly and new: the Grand Palace in Bangkok. Its construction started in 1782 and new additions have continued to be built. Indeed, we saw a few towers of scaffolding while we were here.

Grand Palace Bangkok Thailand
This is an expansive place, yet the tiny details are what I found most amazing. Tiny reflective tiles hand-cut and placed in mosaic patterns to make up a rich picture, at times in the way that individual brush strokes can be beautiful both in close scrutiny and upon stepping back to see everything as one full picture.

Grand Palace Bangkok Thailand
Grand Palace Bangkok Thailand
While our last stop showed styles that were consistently Thai, at this palace there were bits here and there that reminded me of other cultures. The bonsai trees and a few of the guard statues reminded me of what we saw at the palaces in Kyoto, Japan. Whether there is a real connection there, I’m not yet sure – I’m making this note here so I can look up the influences and political connections of the time and find out! (We arrived a bit late in the day to meet up with a tour guide, who probably would have known, so I’ll ask the powers of the internet when we have a better connection than today.)

Grand Palace Bangkok Thailand
The palace has a smart dress code – our first time to test what we chose to pack in our small bags. The Boy had no problem, but I was stopped at the door for something that surprised me entirely! I was wearing a knee-length dress with short sleeves (but not sleeveless) and three-quarter length leggings. I would always think that was more modest than the same dress without leggings, right? But no – I was asked to either remove the leggings and wear the same dress with bare legs or to wear a full-length sarong, which anyone who doesn’t meet the dress code can borrow while they walk around the grounds. So no problem at all and I happily borrowed a pretty blue sarong, but it left me perplexed that bare legs would be preferred to covered! One of the ladies explained it was because anything tight would be disrespectful. Learn something new every day!

Grand Palace Bangkok Thailand
When we walked around other areas of Bangkok, there was an interesting mix of old and new, where modernisations have been added right on top of the existing culture, so you get interesting scenarios like elderly shopkeepers selling the latest in modern technology and very old buildings with signs for Western fastfood restaurants – that sort of thing. But at the palace that was notably absent. I think if you took photos here thirty years ago and compared them to today, they would look remarkably similar.

Probably something else I should try to find out, I’m sure!

xlovesx

Notes from Ayutthaya Thailand

Notes from the road :: Ayutthaya
Ayutthaya, Thailand
After a long flight, we made it to Bangkok, Thailand, where we are staying with a friend I haven’t seen since college. She has been an absolutely amazing host and helped us see so much in our time here. Our first stop was the ancient city of Ayutthaya. I am somewhat obsessed with seeing UNESCO World Heritage Sites (and I live just a short walk away from one!) so starting here made me giddy to check another site off the list.

Ayutthaya, Thailand
Ayutthaya dates back to 1351, which means the buildings we saw were actually younger than places like the Tower of London, but earthquakes and a Burmese takeover that burned the town to the ground really didn’t help preserve things. As a result, there are many headless buddha figures found here – hundreds, if not more.

Ayutthaya, Thailand
The different sites here are spread all over the town, so after walking through a few that are right across the street from each other, we bought some postcards of things that looked interesting so we could communicate to the driver where we wanted to go. It worked a charm, and we were able to see different areas of the city, from old and unrestored to shiny and new.

Ayutthaya, Thailand
One of my favourite aspects of going to places like temples and shrines is looking at the objects that are part of the rituals. Candles, flowers, offerings – there is a personality to what is left at each monument. Here it was basic and often worn, but beautiful in its balance.

Ayutthaya, Thailand
Rubbing gold leaf on a buddha helps build good karma, as you’re helping to keep the monument at its best, as we were told. I love that making things glittery is seen as a way to do good!

Ayutthaya, Thailand
One thing I never imagined I would see: monks with mobile phones. And they posed for pictures with each other, as these monks were visiting from another area of the country. They had an amazing way of being happy and something I would describe as excited but in this completely calm way.

Ayutthaya, Thailand
Heck, I was jumping up and down and clapping my hands just to have such a pretty blue sky as a backdrop to the pictures. Calm excitement? Clearly not in my nature.

xlovesx

The Mad Hatter's Tea Party

the mad hatter's tea party
the mad hatter + alice
This weekend was truly magical – a trip down the rabbit hole to a tea party in Wonderland, hosted by the lovely birthday girl, SJ.

red queen + knave of hearts
Because after all, if the Red Queen summons you to tea, it’s best to attend if you value your head!

cheshire cat
While there, we saw the Cheshire Cat, from time to time…

white rabbit
and the White Rabbit reminded us of the time.

jen + michael
The White Queen was radiant and her knave was ready for battle.

kevin, maxwell and leanne
This pack of playing cards painted the roses,

laura + will
and we all gathered for tea and cocktails and a barbecue on a beautiful summer’s day!

tea party
We sat round a beautiful table of tea cups and flowers.

rainbow layer cake
And ate magical rainbow layer cake.

mad hatter
Then took a little walk.

new shoes
And wandered along the beach.

all the girls
Something tells me you might see a few scrapbook pages about this, given all these ladies were in attendance! (That’s Rachel, SJ, Jen, Laura and Leanne as well!)

In other news, the past week has been a bit of a whirlwind, but I have so much lined up for you now! On Monday, get your first chance to sign up for the new class, and more every day this week. Good stuff to share!

alice and the mad hatter

…and for now, I shall dream of magical days with a boy who is just a little bit mad indeed.

xlovesx

Time to head home and scrapbook

snapshots from Dublin

Assuming the ash cloud behaves (which of course is quite a big assumption) we shall be heading home from our minitrip to Dublin in just a few hours. Thanks so much for the fab advice — it has served us well and we’ve been to Trinity College, Avoca, Temple Bar, Cafe du Seine, Queen of Tarts, Phoenix Park and even the Guinness Storehouse, though I am about as much a fan of Guinness as I am of Marmite, which is to say… not at all.

ETA The ash cloud has not behaved, so we’ll be on the overnight ferry… and I love sailing nearly as much as I love Guinness. But everything is an adventure, right?

Alice in Wonderland... with Guinness
This was my favourite find of the Guinness tour: a retelling of Alice’s adventures in a Wonderland filled with pints?! (Sadly no reproductions available in the gift shop — they are clearly missing a trick!)

handknit flower corsage
And a little crafty inspiration for you this Sunday! The lovely Rachel has been knitting adorable things for a while now and has opened a Folksy shop, The Funky Beau. I love this flower for spring-ing up things that are a bit wintry. I’m still too cold to go without a scarf but I am tired of feeling dressed for winter! She has it in teal too and she might even take special requests for colours to match your favourites too. You know, if you ask with lots of pretty-pleases and cherries on top.

Care to share a link to something that is inspiring you today? Let’s have a little windstorm of pretty things!

xlovesx

PS: If you haven’t already, I would love your answer to the camera poll here. Thanks!

Too cute not to share

baby duckies
baby duckies

Adorable, yes? I especially love that one duckling is yellow while all the others are brown.

Happy Bank Holiday Monday to those of you in this part of the world! We’re enjoying a pretty but very cold day here. And I’m working through the emails to request all the pages for volume three of the Scrapbook Inspirations Ideas Book. Exciting!

xlovesx

Evolution of a group shot

scrapbooking retreat scrapbooking retreat scrapbooking retreat scrapbooking retreat scrapbooking retreat scrapbooking retreat

I was really just checking the settings on my camera so I could pass it to someone to take a picture, but I really love this little series. Funny and sweet.

I had the most amazing stop between trains and took some pictures there too. This is seriously just outside a train station. And to think, all that’s opposite our local train station is a fish and chip shop.

Or if you fancy something scrappy, I scrapbooked the first photos from our stop at the Eden Project.

Back to work I go!

xlovesx

PS: There is just one opening for the album workshop I am teaching this Saturday at Eclectic Keepsakes in Colchester. Grab it while you can and treat yourself to a lovely day of scrapbooking!

A journal for travels ahead

travel journal

So very excited to share this project with you.

Excited because it’s this week’s Tuesday Tutorial on Ali’s blog.

Excited because we are going back to Iceland very soon.

Excited because it’s the first project I made with my new digital products.

That makes for a very exciting day, I do believe!

The full tutorial is here and I hope you like it! I’ll be featuring the ‘after’ of this project at the end of September, once we have completed the journey.

If you’re visiting here from Ali’s blog, welcome! Make yourself at home. I hope you’ll take a look around and maybe
subscribe so we can become fast friends. Thanks so much for stopping by!

xlovesx

What if The Boy scrapbooked?

mystery boy.  not a scrapbooker.

The Boy is somewhat clouded in mystery. Sometimes so much so that newcomers tend to think I am talking about my son, which I am clearly not, as I do not have anything that falls into the offspring category, either gender. Several others wondered if he would be upgraded to The Man or The Husband after the wedding, but I am not big on such name changes. The Boy is so-called because he is three-and-a-half years younger than I am. Thankfully he did not return the favour by launching a blog and publically referring to me as The Old Woman. That was kind of him.

He is also referred to by such a moniker because this is the internet and although I choose to tell you things, I thought he was entitled to his privacy. Remember, I once spent my days teaching teenagers whom we would inevitably run into at the shopping centre and the train station. All teachers know it comes with the territory that one idle Thursday evening, you can be deciding which bag of frozen peas looks best when out of nowhere, exceedingly high pitched screams of ‘Miss Laaaaaaaaaaaiiiiiiiiiinnnnnnnnnnnnnnnneeeeeeeeeee!’ will pierce the silence and the calm of the frozen vegetable aisle forevermore. I guess I signed up for that, but I figured he did not, and so I never used his actual name at school or online and it seemed to do the trick. If someone who had listened closely saw us both in the frozen vegetable aisle, they wouldn’t actually scream and would perhaps politely ask ‘Is this The Boy, Miss?’ which was far more tolerable.


I swear I don’t pose these shots on purpose. He walks faster than I do. Faster than anyone I know. So I take pictures like this. What can you do?

But scrapbookers are polite people anyway and don’t generally shout amongst the frozen goods. Some do ask about The Boy and a few have even giggled to ask ‘Does The Boy scrapbook?’ and this makes me laugh. No, The Boy does not scrapbook. On a good day, he appreciates my scrapbooking. On a bad day, he tolerates it. He has made one layout in his entire life, which was part of a challenge over at UKScrappers and was entirely my fault. It is one of the three moments I have ever seen The Boy get stressed out that did not involve my inability to navigate from a map nor my inability to get somewhere at a set time. Three. So ever since he has kept a safe distance from the scrapbooking supplies, and this is fine.

There are, however, moments when our easily amused brains entertain the idea of what life would be like if it were The Boy who were the scrapbooker in our household. Admittedly, there are male scrapbookers who make it work for them – be they few and far between! The Boy quite clearly could not be one of them. So we compiled a list of ways in which life as we know it would change. May it entertain you.

If The Boy scrapbooked and you asked him to name his favourite scrapbooking supply, he would reply “glue”. If you followed up with “But what about Thickers?”, he would only glare. The next day your friends might find you had been turned to stone.

If The Boy scrapbooked and you asked him to name his favourite scrapbooking technique, he would reply “making a grid of photos. with glue.” You would quite rightly think that he is in quite good company for loving grids, what with the likes of Ali and Cathy proclaiming their love for just the same thing. But after the first incident, you will have learned to keep such comments to yourself.

scrapbook page?
A scrapbook page by The Boy or a mosaic from Big Huge Labs? Who can tell?

If for a moment you supposed we were both scrapbookers and you asked The Boy to name his favourite scrapbooker, he would dutifully reply “Well, obviously Shimelle. Except her layouts are far too busy. They need more grids. And glue.” {Yes, I asked. That’s a direct quote.}

If The Boy scrapbooked, there would be no talk of crops or retreats or CHA. There would instead be the occasional construction meeting in a secret location. Later, employees of the local pub would be found to be scraping glue off their tables and shaking their heads.

the boy's scrapbooking tote - on the left.

If The Boy scrapbooked, there would be no need to shop for a scrapping tote. Any scrapbook supplies would need to be transportable by backpack. There would be no stressing out while traveling about the chance that paper could be crumpled. I don’t fully understand how this is possible, actually.

If The Boy scrapbooked and you looked at his album, you would see an abundance of white pages and grey text that would suddenly make you think you were perhaps not looking at a scrapbook at all, but some new arm of advertising from Apple. He assures me this would be wholly intentional. I tried to talk him into adding a swirl stamp to the look, but I only missed being turned to stone because I knew to jump quickly.

If The Boy scrapbooked, regular blogging would be replaced by months of silence broken by a single philosophical statement about the hobby. Apparently The Boy is not such a fan of the chit chat.

If The Boy scrapbooked, he would scrap photos of me without photoshopping out my frizzy hair, blotchy skin or slouchy posture.
I don’t think the world is ready for this. I know I am not.

If The Boy scrapbooked, there would be no requests for photos of our feet whenever we a) had new shoes or b) traveled somewhere where the paving looked slightly different than home.

If The Boy scrapbooked, he assures me he would proclaim a new title that has much more implicit honour than The Boy. As of yet, he is still unsure of his new name. Suggestions are welcomed.

If The Boy scrapbooked, he would replace my sewing machine with an industrial laser cutter. Every time he used the device, he would impersonate Dr. Evil. Every. Time.

If The Boy scrapbooked, he would take up lots of sketch challenges but every resulting layout would look the same: nine 4×4 photos in a grid, glued to a 12×12 page. No matter what the sketch.

If The Boy scrapbooked, he would sell my ribbon collection to the highest bidder and use the proceeds to install stereo surround sound in his scrapping space. Then he would sell all the stamps and use the proceeds to buy some large invention involving a flat screen. Then one day I would come home to find all the paper had disappeared, the Expedit had been replaced by an overstuffed recliner, and a large assortment of additional gadgets with remote controls. When I ask what’s happened to all the scrapbooks, he tells me it was more beneficial to scan all the photos into digital files, back those files up on web servers in different locations all over the world and then free our home of all paper products and embellishments. As a result, he explains, we can now plug in lots of extra gadgets without fear of an electrical fire destroying our heirloom albums.

And then he would promptly stop scrapbooking and become some sort of world authority on mindless action films, the complete works of Top Gear or a video game with a parental advisory sticker.

So really, I think it’s best we just stick with me being the scrapbooker if it’s okay with you?

Feel free to ask the nearest male what would happen if he scrapbooked instead of you. Just be sure to dodge the glare of stone, okay? We want you to live so you can report back!

xlovesx

PS: Are you ready to party? A few things coming your way tonight, then mad-cap mania alllll weekend long! Bring it!