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Scrapbooking Giveaway Day

scrapbooking giveaway day
plundered pages prize pack
This weekend, one commenter will win something pretty amazingly awesome…. a bespoke pack of Plundered Pages hand gathered by Julie Kirk of Notes on paper.

Plundered Pages kits is a range of original vintage and retro paper packs for use in papercrafts, scrapbooking, collage, art journaling and more. The prize this week is for you to have your own bespoke unique collection created to suit you and your life. There will never be another kit like it, because Julie will work her magic collecting perfect items just for you from her huge collection of:

  • old novels, text books, instructional books;
  • illustrated children’s books;
  • children’s dictionaries + annuals;
  • factual books;
  • vintage magazines and advertisements
  • collectors’ cards;
  • postage stamps;

You can see all of the plundered page kits currently for sale in Julie’s Etsy store and you can also read her inspirational blog to see what else she gets up to. Including making pretty things like this.
juliek1
and this….
Juliek2

To enter, just leave a comment on this post describing what your dream plundered page kit would include.

Entries close at midnight Thursday UK time and the winner will be posted Friday evening, so be sure to check back to see if it’s your lucky day!

Good luck!

10 Things I Have Learned from Scrapbooking

10 things I have learned from scrapbooking
scrapbook from a coffee cup
Every month on the tenth, we share 10 things – a list of absolutely anything, as long as it’s ten. For months people have asked asked why I hadn’t done a specifically scrapbooking-themed 10 Things. The answer was I’ve been saving it for September, the month with such a learning focus for me. Thus I give you: Ten Things I Have Learned from Scrapbooking.

The writing is the most important thing for me.
For some, it’s the photos. For some it’s the pretty paper. For some, it’s about keeping a somewhat up-to-date family record. I love all the pictures and the paper and the whole thing as it all comes together, but it’s the writing that drives me. Yet I enjoy this far more than just writing on its own. I think there is something about the other creative elements that just makes me a bit more comfortable with the pen than the big blank page.

My favourite technique is cut this paper and glue it to that other paper.
Some crafters live for techniques. I love design, but my techniques are pretty simple. More than anything else, I cut paper into different (yet basic) shapes and sizes and glue it to other paper. I’m okay with that. It never gets old for me.

Life live. And pay attention.
I firmly believe you have to live first and scrapbook second. (Okay, you can eat and sleep and maintain personal hygiene second. It’s just way catchier to say second rather than seventh or twelfth or wherever it would actually fit in the scheme of staying alive.) The biggest adventures of life are amazingly fun and rewarding to record on scrapbook pages. And the everyday bits and pieces are too – but all that stuff has to have time to actually happen, and sometimes that means getting away from behind the camera or saying no to some time surrounded by craft supplies. Oh, the balance.


There are endless ways to describe this craft.
Most people in the UK have never heard the word ‘scrapbooking’ so I’ve had endless opportunities to define it. It can be ‘fancy photo albums’ or ‘paper crafts with lots of pictures’ or ‘like making cards, but we make books’. Or to be more philosophical, scrapbooking is writing your own illustrated life story.


The more I love the photo, the more inspired I am to create.
Sometimes that comes from a photo being technically great – sharp focus, good colour, pleasing composition. Other times it comes from just the content of the picture and it doesn’t matter in the slightest how the photo looks as it’s the memory that makes it truly fabulous. But it’s always more fun to get creating with a photo that makes me happy in one way or another!


There are many perks to friends who are also scrapbookers.
Not everyone understands this scrapbooking thing. So it’s nice to have scrapbooking friends who totally understand why you would have a scrapbooking space instead of a guest room. Who don’t think you’re weird at all for passing them your camera and asking them to take a picture of you. Who understand the need for group photos at all events, and even collect ideas for your next group shot. Who will share supplies, trust you to photograph their weddings and newborns, and just generally share some of your philosophy on life. Good friends indeed.


Use more than I buy. And donate too.
It’s ridiculously easy to get carried away with the scrapbook shopping. In fact, yesterday I was reading an article in the New Scientist about addiction and they mentioned someone who was clinically addicted to shopping for scrapbooking supplies. I do love to pick and choose and shop, but I love to make stuff more, and I don’t love all my supplies piling up and feeling overwhelming. So I run a regular rule of buying more than I use each month – because I have a base collection of things I love that still need to be used, so this keeps it going down ever so slightly rather than piling up. And I clear out anything I don’t absolutely love regularly – I always have two boxes on the go, one for selling or gifting and another for donating. I love it when I can breathe and happily get to everything in my stash!

Give it time for others to understand.
I’ve been scrapbooking for a long time now. Since 1998. It took many years for quite a few people to understand. And honestly, there are still people quite close to me who don’t understand the full extent of how scrapbooking isn’t just fun – it’s good for me. It takes a long time for many people to see anything other than stickers and pretty paper. But eventually, it did start to click with people. Give it time. Don’t be ashamed of it, which is silly and yet completely prevalent. Stick up for it and explain just now and then that scrapbooking reduces the drama, helps you remember the best things, puts things into perspective, helps you make better decisions, keeps you creative, improves your memory. It can do all those things and more. It just takes a while to realise.


Scrapbooking can make some things a little simpler.
It’s so easy in life to get caught up on the little annoyances and problems. For whatever reason, when I scrapbook I put things into a better perspective that lets me get over those little things and focus on all the good. It makes me a more pleasant person and happier in my own skin. Simple as that.

It can be anything you fancy.
You can love pretty paper. You can make books of big photos. You can keep a blog. You can create with thousands of digital scrapbooking kits. You can keep a journal. You can save tickets in a jar. You can do pretty much anything you want to keep memories and make a scrapbook. And pretty much every time I see a new interpretation of the idea, I gasp in delight.



The Paperclipping Roundtable discusses scrapbooking older photos

paperclipping roundtable
scrapbook page with old photo
I have to admit I love the process of preparing for the Paperclipping Roundtable almost as much as the show itself. We get the theme a day or so in advance and I love being able to just think it all through! We recorded a new episode today and it is already online! Angie Lucas, Jessica Sprague and I join the regular team of Noell and Izzy for episode 128: Mushrooms and Daisies.

scrapbook page
In this episode, we’re discussing some questions brought up by listeners over the past several months in regard to scrapbooking older photos. This page was one that came to mind in our discussion of subtle patterns. As it’s late here, I’m going to listen tomorrow and I’ll share a few more pages and thoughts. I was frantically scribbling a few notes during the show when I thought of a page that was relevant to what we were discussing, but can I figure out what those notes say now? Of course not. Plus if you have listened to the last few episodes you’ll know there is this new thing that happens with Skype where you can’t always hear the full discussion, so although it can be ridiculously tough to listen to my own voice on the recording, I’ll have to get over it so I can hear some of the things I knew I was missing!)

This is the first time I’ve ever chosen a pick of the week I don’t have in my own hands just yet! I ordered it and am so excited for it to get here. It’s the Dewey Decimal collection by Lawn Fawn. And I wanted to pick something relatively school-themed to also mention that the International Day of the Girl is coming up soon – the eleventh of October (so in the US, that date would be 10.11.12). I’m working on a little project for that day here, and if you’re interested in putting together something in your own corner of the world that helps all the girls of this world who don’t get awesome opportunities like free schooling, go for it and get involved. Lots of good time now to plan something, and there is no thing as too small.

Click here to listen to this episode of the Paperclipping Roundtable!
(you can also listen or subscribe in iTunes – the PRT is free.)

Hope you enjoy!

xlovesx

A farewell blog hop for the American Crafts 2011-2012 scrapbooking team

American Crafts Scrapbooking Blog Hop
American Crafts Scrapbooking Blog Hop
Today I officially say farewell to the American Crafts design team, as my term has ended and the new team will spring into action. It’s been such a pleasure to work with these talented ladies and some of my very favourite products on the market. (Hello? I cannot possibly scrapbook without Thickers. You know this.) You can see a variety of projects I’ve created for American Crafts over the past year in these posts.

minibook
If you’ve just hopped over from Amy Heller’s blog, then welcome! You can find further details about the full hop on the American Crafts blog. For my stop on the hop, I wanted to show you my notebook I’m keeping for Learn Something New, a little project I work on every September. This year I’m really focused on using materials I have and really should use for this project. The sorts of things we buy because we love them, but we don’t get them onto a project straight away so they can sit for quite a while until we forget about them. So an Amy Tangerine daybook is part of that for me. I have one of each daybook Amy has designed. I have used… two. One for a travel mini and one for a personal collection of tickets, notes and daily ephemera. That still leaves me several that need a purpose in life! So I grabbed this one and dressed it up just a bit so it can be my place for thinking on paper for the next thirty days. (And no, it wasn’t complete without washi tape and Thickers. Obviously.)

minibook
I’m not actually using it as a completed minibook for my album. Instead, it’s a bit of a playground for thoughts. It will go everywhere with me for the next thirty days. I’ll use it to answer daily questions from the Learn Something New prompts and to work my way from the goings on of each day to some perfect bit of learning I can take away from that day. Those thirty lessons will be recorded separately somewhere just a bit more dressy. But this is the perfect place to have no fear of making mistakes, crossing things out and thinking things through. That two part process is so very good for my soul. (Definitely worth trying some time if you’re not usually a journal-keeper. These books make it possible to keep a journal for just a short time rather than getting intimidating by something big and formal!)

american crafts design team
Your next stop on the blog hop is Paige Evans, our fearless leader! She’s the hostess at the AC blog and keeps us all in check, which is not always easy with lots of creative people! She kept everything running smoothly this summer even though she delivered a brand new baby in the middle of it! So much appreciation goes to Paige, I tell you. Visit her and hop along to say hello to all the team members in this day of farewell.

AND HOW ABOUT A PRIZE? Leave a comment on this post and one randomly selected commenter will win an American Crafts prize pack. Entries close at the end of next Thursday, and the winner will be posted Friday.

Two classes start today - one flash giveaway!

scrapbooking giveaway
30 days to done online class
Oh, the first of September: it’s like my own personal version of New Year’s Day! I love the back to school season. And today I have a special FLASH giveaway to celebrate that. There are two online classes starting today – one I’m teaching and one I’m taking as a student. And I have a class pass for each!

First up is 30 Days to Done, taught by the lovely Relly Annett-Baker. (Relly has co-taught with me before, as the special guest on True Stories.) Outside of her crafty scrapbooking endeavours, her full-time job is all about the stuff that makes websites useful: content! I’m taking her class as a student this September, because I have about a zillion things I’ve been meaning to make happen on this little blog, but I need a bit of a kick to make sure I get them all done. Relly is awesome at giving that kick. AND she’s extra awesome because she said I could give one of you a chance for such a thing too. For free. It’s perfect for taking your scrapbooking or personal blog and making it just that bit better you wished it could be!

Web content strategist, Relly Annett-Baker is running the online class 30 Days to Done to help you get your blogging on.
30 days.
30 simple tasks.
30 kicks up the bum.
No more putting it off.

It starts on September 1st and it’s £25.
This class asks you to make the simple time commitment of 15 minutes a day for 30 days. In this time you will plan, research, execute and refine your pet site – whether new or existing.

You’ll get a daily prompt for action and some advice via email each day and there will be a forum to chat with your fellow classmates. If you can manage more than fifteen minutes, say thirty or even – gasp!– forty-five, there will be bonus content to explore, so it pays to be teacher’s pet.

You might be a completely new blogger, an old hand who wants a kick into redesigning a site, or someone with an idea for a site you’ve never quite got around to.

There is no time like the present! So you can sign up here, and if you win the giveaway, Relly will happily refund your purchase price (or you can gift it to a friend if you want a buddy for your thirty-day journey).

Learn Something New online scrapbooking class
And of course I’m teaching a class that starts today too – Learn Something New Every Day. You can sign up any time, but I’ll give away one class pass today. (And like 30 Days to Done – if you sign up and win, I’ll refund your purchase price. Please note I can only refund that if you’ve signed up in 2012! You can always gift it to a friend if you prefer.)

Learn Something New is a month-long project all about simplicity and learning from our world, while getting a bit crafty too. But you knew that already. (Members, the first discussion topic is up in the forum!)

TO ENTER just leave a comment on this post. But BE QUICK! This giveaway ends today at 7pm UK time, so the winners can get started with the classes as soon as possible. Two winners will be randomly selected – one for each class.

scrapbooking giveaway winner
Beautiful things winner

Congratulations to Carolyn, who wins the hand painted sign from Just Beautiful Things.

Carolyn, please email me (shimelle at gmail dot com) with your address.

There’s a new giveaway every weekend, so check back next week for another chance to win just by leaving a comment.

We want you
Do you have an online store full of creative and beautiful things? Are you passionate about spreading the love for handmade? Would you like a post like this to share your work with a new audience? We have some availability for weekend giveaway spots and would love to hear from you, drop us an email and tell us a little about your handmade adventure.

Online Scrapbooking Class Learn Something New starts tomorrow!

Online Scrapbooking Class :: Learn Something New Every Day
Online Scrapbooking Class :: Learn Something New Every Day
Tomorrow is the first. of. September. Crazy, I know. But I have a plan. A plan for grasping hold of this quickly passing year and making sure I have some sanity in the month known as September 2012. It’s something that makes me exhale and know everything will be okay. It’s Learn Something New Every Day.

Learn Something New is an annual class I’ve been teaching online for ages – this will be its sixth year. And that meant it was time for a big refresh. So while I’ve been a bit quieter on the blog here, I’ve been working on getting this ready and finding my new focus with Learn Something New, when I was reminded of a little video from last year. Remember this?

That very idea – of taking scrapbooking to the everyday and making every day an adventure all its own – is at the core of the newly refreshed Learn Something New.

There’s a focus on simplicity and story-telling and finding your own style.
I’ll be sharing ideas for making projects like this work without preparation – meaning you could join today or tomorrow and not feel behind for even one second. (And it’s something you can take on into other projects of your own – definitely something that has helped me find an amazingly productive groove throughout 2012.)
I’ll be limiting my supplies to just the stuff I have on hand and have classified as ‘things I really should use’. You know: the kinds of supplies we buy because we think they will be great but then we don’t actually use them before the next shiny thing comes along to grab our attention.

Of course you are welcome to follow along in any style, with any materials.

Learn Something New is all about being aware of the world around you and taking away one little lesson from that world each day for a month. You can approach it in terms of gratitude. Or patience. Or steps toward a goal. You can then take on the documentation in any style you want: write in a journal. Make a minibook. Write daily blog posts. Take a daily photo. Use pocketed page protectors for a one-month addition to your albums or a September focus for an on-going Project Life album. Work with paper or pixels. Write a little or a lot. Total creative freedom to make it work for you.

Just like Journal your Christmas, Learn Something New includes annual membership, so once you sign up, you can participate as many years as you would like at no extra cost. (Alumni: an email was sent to you earlier this week, but this is often blocked by email providers. If your email address is correct on the forum and you can access the class there, then you’re all set. Just let me know if you don’t receive the first prompt on Saturday, of course.)

The class includes:
…thirty daily full-colour pdf prompts emailed to your inbox
…a collection of new videos throughout the class
…printables for paper scrapbookers and a digital kit for digi scrappers
…access to a private class forum at shimelle.com to chat and share your work
…permanent file archive so you can come back to the materials at any time

Ready to sign up? You can choose to pay in UK Pounds or US Dollars. If neither of those is your currency, you can choose whichever you prefer – you don’t need to do anything special to change the currency from your account.

These buttons will allow you to pay by your choice of credit/debit card or Paypal account – your choice. Please make sure you are using a valid email address. Registrations can take up to twenty-four hours to process. If you do not receive an email in that time, please email me at shimelle@gmail.com. If the email address on your paypal account is not where you would like to receive class materials, please let me know that too. (If you would like to gift the class to a friend, just sign up as normal and in the comments or an email, let me know her email address. Simple as that.)

I’d love to see you in class tomorrow!

xlovesx

Glitter Girl and scrapbooking with ombre techniques

Glitter Girl and scrapbooking with ombre techniques
Glitter Girl and scrapbooking with ombre techniques
This week Glitter Girl goes a little trendy with the ombre look, prompted by this discussion on the message board. Ombre is essentially a fade – it’s often a monochromatic look with one colour starting as a saturated hue and fading out to pale or white. In scrapbooking, there are two different ways to achieve that look – one is tidy and one is messy! The tidy version involves cutting different pieces of paper, like using the same punch on ten different shades of pink paper, then arranging them in order from lightest to darkest. Just paper and adhesive – no mess. (Have a look at this project by Jen Gallacher for a great example of that style.) Or the messy way: using mist, ink or paint to create the faded effect on paper or embellishments. In this week’s video? It’s the messy version.

Because really: chevron patterned paper AND a bunch of different shades of Mister Huey’s spray inks? This is the sort of thing that gets Glitter Girl out of bed in the morning.


You can find all the supplies used in this week’s video here. The orange-and-white chevron paper I started with is from Bella Blvd and takes the colour really well. I’ve included the full line of Soup Staples as well, as they are perfect for creating this chevron-ombre look in any colour – just pick the paper then mist, ink or paint to match. The b-side of each of those is a tiny polka dot, which also works for ombre. Try it with a distress ink pad or two and the foam applicator to blend. All sorts of things to fade in and fade out!

ombre scrapbook page
It’s been a little while since I went back to the stack of kraft cardstock and the equally large stack of backpacking photos. I have to admit I am now reaching the point where I get a little sad when I’m telling that story, because it’s hard to admit it actually wasn’t so recent any more! But not so sad that it’s not fun to work on, of course. Just a little bittersweet. One thing I’m really looking forward to after moving house in the next couple weeks is to sit down with the now four volumes of this trip and plot out what sections need the most attention and really look at it objectively to see how the story is being told on paper. I love that part of the process, and it’s very different from deadline work and that sort of thing, so it’s a good change of pace now and then. This message board thread inspired me to head back to the kraft cardstock, and I love that the ombre look worked so well with something that wasn’t trend-led or focusing on any sort of fashion in the photos. Ombre is truly just a fade, and that’s something that is always around us – not just a fashion trend. So there’s more to this look than first meets the eye.

This week Glitter Girl challenges you to take on the ombre trend in your own style, with whatever you would like to make. Share your project in the gallery at Two Peas and let us know how it all comes together for you.

Onward, covered in glitter, my dear scrapbookers!

adventures of glitter girl

The Adventures of Glitter Girl is a weekly series on Two Peas in a Bucket, and goes live every Wednesday. I’ll share each adventure here shortly after that. I hope you enjoy her quests for crafting happiness, and if you ever have a scrapbooking dilemma yourself, you can always call her to action on the message board.

Sketch to Scrapbook Page with a JBS Summer Games Twist

Sketch to Scrapbook Page with a JBS Summer Games Twist
scrapbook page
Just as I’m trying to get back to my real post-Olympic life, here comes an interesting challenge: make a page from a sketch, she says. It’s really simple and geometric, she says. It’s a diagram of a tennis court, she says. A TENNIS COURT? Yes. And there you have a new sketch to scrapbook page project with a twist, for the JBS Summer Games – something that is still ongoing and still has time to win some amazing prizes.

So yes: this page starts with a tennis court diagram as the design sketch, and by the end it looks… pretty much nothing like that. But have a look anyway!


For this project, I used pieces from the JBS Mercantile August kit plus a few other JBS supplies – some label stickers, a butterfly rub-on and one of the new flag tag embellishments in kraft.

scrapbook page
I know that photo is ridiculously cheesy, but it was so perfect for all the crazy energy of that moment so I make no apologies for the cheese. In fact, I’m planning to scrapbook it more than once, as I’m thinking this page will go in my regular yearly album and I’ll also include it in my upgrade album all about my experience with London 2012. (Upgrade album? I promise it’s not mumbo-jumbo: it’s what I call any album on a specific topic that deserves its own book in a whole and thought-out way. It’s something I talk about at a ridiculous length in Cover to Cover, if you find it intriguing!)

JBS summer games
Several JBS designers took on this tennis court challenge, so do check out the projects by Megan Klauer, Waleska Neris, Doris Sander, Leah Farquharson, Jill Sprott, Louise Nelson and Betsy Sammarco. There are three amazing prize packages up for grabs in the JBS Summer Games, and entries are open until the 2nd of September (details here), so grab a bit more summer inspiration and a picture of a tennis court and get crafting! (To enter, use either a JBS Mercantile kit or at least three Jenni Bowlin Studio products on your project.) I’d love to see what you create!

By the way, if you love Jenni Bowlin Studio products, there is a rare opportunity right now to apply for the brand’s design team, the JBS Ambassadors. Find all the details here. The call ends on the 16th of September. Good luck!

xlovesx