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Scrapbook pages and something special

scrapbook page ©twopeasinabucket.com. Supplies: Butterfly rub-on, butterfly stickers, patterned paper and buttons all by Jenni Bowlin Studio. American Crafts Thickers letter stickers, border punches by Fiskars and EK Success, label punch by EK Success (my new favourite thing!) and brown precision pen by American Crafts.

Perhaps I should call this post Reading between the pictures because there’s a little something special for you today, but it’s quietly tucked away in the middle of this post that is otherwise a bit of a crafty catch-up. I do love to reward those who read closely and pay attention, after all.

Lately I’ve been scrapping away to a crazy extent but I haven’t posted much here to show for it! So here’s a little look at just a tiny bit of what I’ve been creating – my projects for Two Peas and Banana Frog over the past week or so.

scrapbook page

I’ve been scrapping up a storm with Jenni Bowlin’s last few releases, and although I can’t share it all just yet, I do want to show you these butterflies. Yes, I’m a total sucker for butterflies on scrapbook pages, but I must admit I had been quite afraid of these rub-ons because they are huge and we all know what a mess can happen if a rub-on goes a bit wrong in the process. So I’m hoping you can see just how perfectly these designs transfer from this close-up shot. Seriously amazing – not a worry or a problem at all. Just thought I’d share in case you were looking at them with similar concerns.

scrapbook page ©twopeasinabucket.com. Supplies: patterned paper by K & Company and KI Memories, American Crafts Thickers in brown and white, embellishments by KI Memories, border stickers by Doodlebug and Narratives and Studio Calico journaling cards.

But really the reason I have been scrapping up a storm and not sharing so much is because I’m working on two big projects at the moment: my summer online class and also a smaller project that is going to a very good cause. More details on the smaller project soon, but let’s talk a little about this summer’s online class, yes?

I don’t want to give everything away today, but I do want to give loyal followers of shimelle.com classes a little something special, so here’s the deal: today I’ll give you just a few hints at the class content and the chance to sign up at a discount. Later this week I’ll post all the formal details too, so you’re more than welcome to wait for that and sign up then! I just wanted to give a little something special for those who read carefully and those who happily come along for all my online class adventures, hence a few days of some mystery and a special price!

handmade card Click for details at the Banana Frog blog.

If you haven’t guessed by the increased picture posting lately, this summer’s online class has a photography focus — but it’s not a technical photography class, nor is it a class that is just about taking pictures. It’s definitely a scrapbooking class, with projects that can be created in your choice of paper or digital formats. It’s a four week course with 24 full-colour PDF prompts, 3 resource workbooks, exclusive designs for printing or digiscrapping and more goodies along the way. You can participate from anywhere in the world with any type of camera and any scrapbooking style. And of course there are all the things you expect: prompts are delivered to your inbox and you have permanent access to them online, there’s a private message board and gallery and so on. This class will cost £16 or $24, and starts on the 5th of July.

Like I said, I’ll be posting the formal details later this week, but if you know you want in now and you fancy a bit of a discount, you can sign up early for £12 or $18. Sound good?

Sorry, this offer has now ended. Click here for full class details.

If you’re reading this in Google Reader and you’re just about to click over so you can use one of these buttons, just click here instead, because for some reason Google Reader is sending people to some weirdo address instead of the actual blog post. Cheers!

Later this week, these early bird buttons will be turned off when the class is formally launched — they are just something special for those of you who have been waiting for something new and are ready for whatever it may be! I wanted to say thank you for your loyalty and your enthusiasm, and I can’t wait to see you in class!

One last little note: Tomorrow I’ll be hosting a live chat at 4pm UK time, 10am Central time and all corresponding time zones from there on out. You can find it on the Two Peas message board here — when the chat starts tomorrow you’ll see a new thread that invites you to come and say hello! It’s hosted on their digiscrapping board but ALL scrappers are welcome – I’m more than happy to talk paper as well as digital at those chats. In fact, sometimes we barely talk about scrapping at all and talk about other things instead! If you have a question or just want to say hello, I’d love to see you, so please stop by and give us a wave! The chat winds down after an hour, and you’re welcome to just stop by for five minutes if you prefer. Thanks!

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

Travel photography tips for Scrapbookers

travel photography for scrapbookers
travel photography tips for scrapbookers Brighton Beach, Sussex and Seattle, Washington.

Keeping with this little theme of the occasional photography post, the start of summer seems a good time to discuss travel photography. For me, travel and my camera go hand in hand and I can’t imagine going somewhere new and not taking pictures, though I hear it can be done. Instead, I tend to take several hundred photos only to return home and wish I had taken even more.

There are also approximately twelve billion and three things one could say about travel photography, but I fear that is just too much for a blog post. In fact, everything I’ve included here is probably too long for a blog post, but it’s the sort of thing you could take in stages so I’m just going to keep it all right here in one big post and call it my ten big tips for taking travel photographs you will love to scrapbook. Sound okay to you?

Remember creative frames.
When we go somewhere new, we’re surrounded by things we’ve never seen. So we pick up our camera and start shooting, right? Oooh. We don’t have that at home. I should take a picture! Which is all well and good, but it is very easy to let that feeling take all our creative energy and leave us with a big stack of pictures that are somewhat less than inspiring. The kind of picture where we’ve just pointed the camera at some noteworthy object and clicked the shutter. Oh goodness — we do know how to take more interesting pictures than this! We do it at home all the time! Or most of the time. Or some of the time when we’re really thinking about it, anyway. How on earth did we leave that ability at home?

Whenever I start to be distracted by the Ooooh, look at the things I have never ever seen effect, I use the up and down shortcut to jar me back to the idea that my favourite photographs are those that use a creative frame rather than just pointing and clicking. The up and down shortcut just means to stop wherever you are and take and up and a down picture — either by moving your camera up high in the air then down low on the ground or by pointing the camera up at the sky then down at the floor. The shot of the pier in Brighton was taken with the camera actually sat on the pebbles at the beach. The Space Needle on the right was a case of looking up — and standing under the tree to add some interest to a flat, grey sky. The up and down shortcut is a quick way to find a new perspective, and it’s that quick reminder that helps get me back to the way I would shoot pictures when I was on more familiar ground.

travel photography tips for scrapbookers Courcheval, France.

Sometimes the creative frame comes from another object, like the branches of the tree, but other times it can be done just by moving the camera so each item isn’t exactly in the middle of the frame. This picture in snowy France is obviously a carousel. You can’t see the rest of it, but you can tell what it is anyway. The part I found unique was the style of the painting at the top of the carousel, and the quirky effect created by the row of unlit lightbulbs. The rest of the carousel really didn’t matter, and if the rest had been included, you wouldn’t notice what I actually wanted to remember. So a second shortcut I tend to use is this style of composition that crops the scene, leaving about a third of the photo with quite empty space (like the sky). It changes up the look of the photos on a trip, but it’s also super handy for scrapbookers, because you can use this empty space for journaling, titles, embellishments or anything else crafty that you like. (Actually, Ali just posted about scrapping with that space in photos — find it here.)

 

travel photography tips for scrapbookers Tsukiji Fish Market, Tokyo, Japan.

Capture language.
I like to think this isn’t just something I appreciate from my days teaching English, but I find the essence of language to be one of the most amazing things about travel. Going somewhere and not speaking the language forces you to find entirely new ways to communicate. Or you might be lucky enough to meet someone there who does speak your language but is terribly self-conscious about not speaking it very well — when you don’t speak more than three words in their language at all! The language of a new place can be enthralling or terrifying — but how on earth can you capture that on film?

travel photography tips for scrapbooking Volcano National Park, Hawaii.

My answer is to photograph the written language you find — like that on signs. I love the politeness of the safety warnings in Japan (and in fact, I never experienced anything in Japan that wasn’t draped in politeness. I love that so!) and the signs near the volcano made me laugh at their contradiction: apparently this place is so calm and civil that there is a trail, and yet you may fall victim to a giant crack or cliff at any moment if you are not always careful! Great examples to scrapbook because they say so much about the surroundings even though these particular photos don’t show much else. Just pair them with other images. I paired the first with images of the busy market scene and the second with photos of the steam coming right through the path.

travel photography tips for scrapbooking

Also helpful for scrapbooking? Taking pictures of signs of the places you’ve been! If you asked me the name of the place where we went kayaking (and I got run over by someone else’s kayak, but that is a story for another day), I wouldn’t be able to tell you! The name was long and for non-locals, quite tough to pronounce. But hey — I can take a picture of the sign. That I can do! So there you go: apparently it was Kealakekua Bay! And a little bonus: by stepping back just a bit for this picture, I could include the actual bay in the shot! So we started just down the road off the left of the picture, kayaked over to the peninsula you see at the other side of all that water, and then back again later that day. At Kealakekua Bay, obviously. Because it’s in the picture. Now I can’t forget! (I can, however, forget quite how it’s pronounced.)

 

travel photography tips for scrapbooking Somewhere on the Big Island in Hawaii.

Modes of transport.

If half the fun is getting there, we better take some pictures of the journey! Provided there are at least two of you in the car, you can do that easily on a driving holiday. This road shot was taken right through the windscreen, and I love how it looks like by the time we hit the road work, the road will run straight into the ocean! I’m also trying to get better at taking pictures of the rental car itself if we have one. It’s always funny to see what car someone else chooses for you, like when I asked for the smallest car available (I am hopeless at parking large cars!) and got one of these giant things as a result!

travel photography tips for scrapbooking Húsavík, Iceland.

It’s even more fun to find less everyday modes of transportation to photograph. Going somewhere with a coastline? Find the harbour and take pictures of boats! I’m not a big fan of the open sea but I am a big fan of finding the boat with the funniest name or the prettiest paint colours. Or you might find yourself at a destination known for bicycles, tuk-tuks, bullet trains, rickshaws, elephants, motorcycles or rollerblades! If you do a fair bit of walking on a city trip, take a picture of a road crossing since the signs vary so much from country to country. Modes of transportation are often things you can photograph quickly and you won’t even have to persuade members of your travel crew to smile for the camera — and they will add a bit more reality to your pages when you come to scrapbooking your adventure.

 

travel photography tips for scrapbookers Park Guell, Barcelona, Spain.

Get yourself in the picture.

Hey you — you with the camera! Just how many photos from your last trip actually prove you were there? It’s time to get yourself in the picture, at least a few times per destination! You’ll notice from these examples that most of my travel photographs don’t really include people at all, so I have to make a concerted effort if I want any pictures to actually show I was there. Even when scrapbookers know they should get in the picture, it’s often the standard sort of ‘stand in front of this landmark and smile’ shot that almost looks like you are just standing in front of an overgrown postcard. I actually feel really awkward and self conscious posing for pictures like that, so my answer has been to find ways that are either quite natural or silly fun.

travel photography tips for scrapbooking Butchart Gardens, Victoria, Canada.

This is definitely silly fun. I take pictures of my feet anywhere I travel (I even have a minibook about it!) and I often decide to take those pictures on bad hair days or days that for whatever reason, I’m just not feeling like smiling for the camera. Find somewhere that shows your surroundings and aim the camera at your feet rather than your face! Plus you can use the camera’s timer for this sort of shot without a tripod, since you can just rest the camera on the ground. That makes it work even if you’re traveling solo.

travel photography tips for scrapbookers Shinjuku Gyoen, Tokyo, Japan.

This bridge picture and the park bench above fall under the more natural category and admittedly both of them required someone else to pick up the camera — though you could recreate the first with a tripod. There’s no looking or smiling at the camera, and both scenes were things that actually happened. I was going to walk across that bridge even if there were no cameras involved; I had been sitting just like on that bench for quite a while talking to The Boy — he just happened to get up and take the picture making it look like I was waiting alone on the bench. So perhaps both of those techniques could be useful for times when you want to take pictures of your friends and family, but please remember to include yourself in some shots. Don’t make me come over there and kick you.

 

travel photography tips for scrapbooking Central Park and many a building, New York City.

See the skyline.

If you’re heading to a city destination, rest assured its locals know the skyline. Whether it has giant skyscrapers, giant ferris wheels, or giant modern art installations, it will be something unique to that place on earth. So you better get a picture!

Unless you just don’t do heights, viewing decks can be the best place to see an entire city at a glance. Rockefeller Center, the London Eye, the Eiffel Tower, the Space Needle, the CN Tower and the like all make it pretty obvious that you can see the entire view for a price. On a beautiful day, it’s often worth the price of the ride to the top. On a less than perfect day, you might be better off with a free but less glamorous equivalent, like riding the elevator to the top of a relatively tall hotel and taking a look through the hallway windows.

travel photography tips for scrapbooking from Gasworks Park, Seattle, Washington.

If you prefer to keep your feet on the ground, you’ll just need to back up far enough to see the skyline! Check your travel guide or a map for large open spaces like parks that are outside the downtown area, and you might just find the perfect mix of all those modern buildings set against something more natural and green. If you like to write on your photos when scrapbooking, skyline photos are great. Just grab a list of all key locations in the city and write them in following the lines made by the buildings in your picture.

 

travel photography tips for scrapbookers Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland.

Get close to the architecture

It’s always worth getting close to all those buildings too! When you’re walking around, you’ll find details that you could never pick out in those full skyline shots. Sometimes the details are so fine they’ll fill your entire frame, but my favourites are the shots that show the architecture as we see it with our own eyes — looking up at buildings against the open skies.

travel photography tips for scrapbookers Hotels in Honolulu.

Whether the buildings are centuries or just decades old, their designs will tell quite a story about the places you visit. The architecture of Trinity College in Dublin is certainly older than the campus where I studied! And the courtyard appeared to be such a suntrap in a town that is known for its often grey weather. The two hotel buildings filled with balconies show just how much everything in Waikiki is created with the beach in mind! Some resort towns see so much change as hotels are demolished and new ones built that the photos of what you saw will be even more interesting years from now when the place looks entirely different. This is extra true if you ever visit Las Vegas. I’ve been there twice, ten years apart. On the second trip, I noticed the hotel where I first stayed wasn’t there at all. Consulting an older map, it turns out it was most definitely now underneath the Bellagio, and there was another hotel on the strip ready to be reduced to rubble just a few days after I left, so I’m sure I wouldn’t recognise it in another ten years!

 

travel photography tips for scrapbooking Empire State Building, New York.

Stay out late

No matter how dense the population of your holiday destination, things will look different after dark! The tricky part is figuring out how to photograph them after dark without ending up with a big blurry mess!

First, resist the urge to turn on your flash. If things are close enough to be effected by the flash, it will just light everything up to look like a synthetic day. If they are too far away to lit by the flash, it will just add grain and noise and throw off your camera’s focus system. So just turn it off and work with what you actually see.

travel photography tips for scrapbookers BC Parliament Buildings, Victoria, Canada.

From there, it’s a case of balancing ISO (the light sensitivity of the frame) and exposure (the length of time the shutter stays open) so you can get the lights and reflections you see to be accurately translated to your pictures. If your camera has very high ISO options, you can keep your exposure quite fast so you can hold the camera in your hands like normal. If your highest ISO doesn’t help, you’ll need a way to keep your camera steady so you can keep the shutter open longer. Use a tripod or sit your camera on something stable and use a long exposure. (If you don’t know how to change the ISO or exposure on your camera, get out your manual and find out before you go on your trip! The buttons are different on every camera but you can adjust these on pretty much every camera, even a point and shoot, and once you know how it will be easy!)

 

travel photography tips for scrapbooking Jidai Matsuri, Kyoto, Japan.

Find the traditional.

Of course, big city buildings are rarely the emotional heart of any travel destination. This place had a story long before you arrived, and that’s what you want to observe. Even if you’re not a history buff, it’s hard to ignore the elements of traditional culture that make every location unique. If scrapbooking is about storytelling, then this is exactly the angle we’re looking for as we explore somewhere new! One of the best things you can do to catch all available photo opportunities is in the preparation. With your travel dates in mind, search online for festivals and celebrations that might coincide with your travel. In just a few minutes you can find out about parades, parties and traditional festivities, and all you have to do is show up and soak up the experience. If you’re traveling with the whole family, it can make a nice change of pace from the regular itinerary too (and you can choose whether you stay all day or just a short while).

travel photography tips for scrapbooking Totem Poles in Stanley Park, Vancouver, Canada.

If nothing appears on the calendar, you can always find a bit of history standing still and practically posing for your camera! Travel guides are likely to point out some historic locations to visit, but you can also search photo sites like Flickr for the name of your destination and see all the different images that have been posted. Many of the photos there will include additional information in the post, and you can always ask if you can’t tell where a particular picture is located. Flickr can be a great way to prep yourself with ideas for your travel photos since you can find images specific to your travels.

travel photography tips for scrapbookers Royal Horse Parade, London.

Of course, there’s also the notion of just having your camera ready all the time so you can catch what happens spontaneously too. Like for days when you’re walking down the road and a Royal Horse Parade comes marching past! I definitely understand not wanting to feel weighed down by heavy equipment for all of the journey, so even if your best camera is something substantial, don’t discount your camera phone or a small point and shoot — something lightweight that you can keep in your pocket or purse.

 

travel photography tips for scrapbooking Ginza shopping district, Tokyo, Japan.

Pretend you know where the locals go.

When you’re a tourist, it’s quite likely you’ll end up in places filled with other tourists. Ask a group of Londoners if they’ve been on the London Eye or toured the Tower of London, and you’ll find many of them haven’t even thought of it. But most of them have been the equivalent tourist magnets in the places they have visited elsewhere — just one of those funny things about the urgency of the places we visit briefly compared to the ‘no hurry’ atmosphere at home.

I always feel a little cheated if I only see the big touristy landmarks — real travel feels like some of the time should be spent doing just what the locals would do. Except without having to go to work, of course. We’re on holiday, right?

travel photography tips for scrapbookers Granville Island, Vancouver, Canada.

Thing is, unless you have a contact in that location, it can be down to just guessing what the real locals do – especially if you don’t speak the language very well. Some of the time you’ll find so many locals you’ll know you have it right — like when you go into a restaurant and have genuinely no idea what you’re ordering because it’s the sort of place that would never consider printing menus in another language! Other times, you’ll find yourself at some sort of halfway point, like markets that are popular with both tourists and locals. Embrace it, photograph it and just go with the flow: sometimes it’s just as much about pretending you know what the locals know. You might even find you blend in well enough that another tourist will ask you for directions. Consider it a compliment!

 

travel photography tips for scrapbooking Crumbs Bakery, New York.

Don’t forget your dinner.

And one last note: if you’re anything like me, one big part of travel fun is what’s on the plate! I love trying the local specialties, and falling in love with a few new foods for each place on the map. Admittedly, if you’re not a foodie this could possibly sound insane, and that’s fair enough. But if you do love the culinary part of the adventure, get some pictures! Use a macro lens or the macro setting on your point and shoot so you can shoot the details of pretty dishes up close. Again, you’ll want to avoid your flash so you can be discreet if you’re taking a picture in a quiet restaurant (plus flash is usually quite pesky with reflective surfaces like plates and dishes). On a short trip, you can even use your camera phone to keep a record of everything you eat. May you not have the same reaction I did when I tried that experiment and realised that I may try to eat healthily at home but take me fifty miles away and I transform to a junkfood junkie! Even if you do — there’s an instant scrapbook page in the making!


As long as this is for a blog post, this is really just a tiny bit of what’s up for discussion in travel photography. If it’s something you’re really interested in, you may want to check out the new Transcending Travel book from Digital Photography School — it’s an instant digital download, so you can read it in the planning stages of your trip or you can take it with you for some reading on the plane if you’re more a last minute traveller like me!

And that new shimelle.com class I mentioned last week? You’ll be able to sign up before the end of this week! Not long to wait now! Plus a little extra bonus project coming up too.

Wishing you a photogenic week and a lovely summer at home or far away!

xlovesx

Shrinky-dink fun

fabric flowers and stamped butterflies

Just a quick share and link for you today! This little project for the Frog Blog has a giveaway attached, so don’t miss out. (Remember, the giveaway is not on this post — you need to follow the link.)

You’ll also find more details there about those butterflies stamped on shrink plastic!

I hope your weekend is wonderful!

xlovesx

Ten looks with a new digital scrapbook page template

digital scrapbook page

A little something new in my divi shop today…this template and alphabet set featuring some of my favourite things: blocks of four patterned papers, zig-zag stitches and woodgrain-filled letters.

digital scrapbooking kit

Click to make this set your own for just two bucks! And that alphabet can be printed out for hybrid projects and you can change the colour to match your papers, like the green title in the first example.

digital scrapbook pages

The Baker’s Dozen have been putting their own touches on the page template over the last few days, and I love how they’ve created pages with so much variety in the mix of photos and papers.

hybrid handmade card

Here’s what this alphabet looks like all printed out for a paper project! Love this card by Avital.

winner of Banana Frog stamps

Thanks for all the comments from the Banana Frog Birthday Hop. The random number generator pulled an actual birthday girl! Alissa, Bev from Banana Frog will be sending you some stamps — email me with your mailing address so I can get that all set for you!

I hope everyone had a lovely long weekend and these four days are good to you too! I have a bit of a special scrapbooking project to share with you later this week, if you’re up for that? It’s in its final pieces on my desk right now!

xlovesx

Win Banana Frog stamps on today's blog hop!

handmade card
Supplies: Kawaii Kokeshi stamps by Banana Frog, Cosmo Cricket patterned papers and letter stickers, cupcake transparency by Hambly Screen Prints and punches by Martha Stewart and EK Success.

The Banana Frog girls are blog-hopping today to celebrate the stamp company’s fourth birthday this month, and there are presents for you of course!

Each stop on the hop has a chance to win a free set of Banana Frog stamps just by leaving a comment. Plus you get to see all the stamping and scrapbooking projects everyone has made on a birthday theme too — so what are you waiting for?

handmade card

The next stop on the hop is Jofy, or visit any of these blogs also participating today:
Debbie, Audrey, Nat, Michelle, Anthea, Julie, Kirsty and Annlouise.

And leave a comment on this post for a chance to win a set of Banana Frog stamps!
Entries close at 6am tomorrow morning, London time! Winner will be posted during the day on Monday.

Plus don’t forget to enter the £100 giveaway here — it closes today and you’d be crazy not to enter, right?!

Have a lovely Sunday, and happy birthday or unbirthday to you, as they case may be!

xlovesx

Worth getting out early

photography tips for scrapbookers
Click for wallpaper size.

I am not a morning person. It’s something you learn within about two days of meeting me. Morning and I just don’t get along and over the years I’ve developed strategies for putting morning in its place. Things like getting up ridiculously early so that 8am won’t actually feel like morning when you’ve been up since 4, or the classic staying up all night before a long-haul plane journey not just to lessen the jet-lag, but also to make sure I actually get to the airport on time! But most effective is something far simpler: finding a reason for the morning to be motivating.

photography tips for scrapbookers

Like when the sky looks like this and casts such a pretty light on everything. These cherry blossoms (or whatever they are technically — I’m far from a garden expert!) are so fleeting that I’ve learned to take my camera everywhere once they appear. These first few shots with the rich blue sky were all taken before eight in the morning. (That ‘sun’ glare in the first shot isn’t actually the sun, but a spot of brightness at the edge of a cloud.) Perfect because the light is amazing and also perfect because only a very few people appear in the park at that hour and they all share an unspoken respect for others who go there at this hour. They are extra polite. The park is extra quiet. And no one will disturb you while you spend nearly thirty minutes photographing a single tree.

photography tips for scrapbookers

That is the sort of thing that could make me a morning person. Shame it really only lasts a fortnight if we’re lucky.

photography tips for scrapbookers

I know the sky isn’t that blue later in the day. And it really was that blue early in the morning — these shots are all straight from the camera, imperfections and all. I have long loved rainy days, but I could get lost in these blue skies for hours, I do believe!

photography tips for scrapbooking

Not long ago, I asked what kind of camera you used and more than half of you replied that you use a digital SLR. Which is both exciting and a little daunting! Exciting because so many of you really have all the options that create a real look or style to your photos, but daunting because we all have a different mix of equipment and every piece has its own look.

photography tips for scrapbooking

All the shots above were taken with a wide angle lens, which isn’t my default lens. It’s so easy to get used to shooting with the same lens almost all of the time, and I fall into that trap just because I have one lens that is easier to pack, lighter to carry and it’s adaptable to lots of situations. If I could only have one lens, that would be the one I would pick, and when I need to pack light I will leave all the others at home. But half the fun of having an SLR is having the ability to change lenses! It’s no good just collecting them and taking them out once a year. I think part of the adventure is to try lenses in situations when they wouldn’t be so obvious. Wide angles aren’t what you think of for shooting flowers; wide angles are for shooting mountains or skyscrapers or other giant scenes that won’t fit in a single frame any other way, right? The last time I really spent time with this lens, I was shooting a gigantic inflated bunny floating in a market building! (No, really.) So trees and flowers were something different, but oh how I loved being able to look past individual blooms and frame them with the greater scene of the sky. Definitely worth zooming out sometimes – even amongst pretty flowers.

photography tips for scrapbookers

But three photos to show you a little contrast. I headed back to the same trees in the same park with the same camera, but a different lens and a different time of day. In the middle of the day, you still would have described it as sunny, but those gorgeous blues were gone and the sky now appeared just white in the background. Not as much fun at all!

photography tips for scrapbooking

I also used a macro lens this time — exactly what you would expect for photos of flowers and little details. These three images are my favourites from that midday stop, but I can’t help but think they would be so much lovelier with that clean blue edging of the early morning.

photography tips for scrapbooking

So what on earth can I gather from all that rambling?
…I think we can learn a great deal about our photography by looking at the same thing in different ways.
…Sometimes using things against their obvious purposes can create your favourite results.
…There really is truth in that old chestnut that early mornings and dusk have the best light. If it’s enough to make me a morning person, it’s got to be more than just a little bit better.
…And also, that I may have a small obsession with trees that turn fluffy and pink in the spring.

By the way, some of you have heard that I’m teaching a photography-ish course this summer, and that’s true. But it’s not a course based on how to use your camera. (I’ll be sharing more about it soon but I have some things to finish before I start to dish!) If you’re looking for a class that will help you with the mechanics of using your SLR or bridge camera, Cheryl at Feel Good Photos has a class open for registration now that you might find useful.

Have a lovely long weekend and take some gorgeous pictures, won’t you? (Anybody have anything exciting planned?)

xlovesx

Technical details: wide-angle shots taken with a Canon 17-40mm lens and macro shots taken with a Canon 100mm lens, both on a Canon 5Dm2.

Care to share a minibook?

minibook

Hey there. My name is Shimelle and I seem to be living in crazydeadlineworld. How about you? (Actually it’s okay as it is all fun work! It just never fails to amaze me how things bunch up on the calendar.) But I wanted to take a minute to let you know two things…

First, volume two of Scrapbook Inspirations Ideas Books will hit UK shelves on the 8th of June. It’s our summer edition and it’s pink this time! Also, if you have volume one, be sure to go download your free kits from Two Peas, as the code expires at the end of May. (And all the elements are printable so don’t miss out!)

Second, I’m looking for a dozen fabulous minibooks to feature in an upcoming project. Would you be interested? If so, please send me an email and let me know the basic topic of the minibook you would like to create and a link to your blog or page gallery. Don’t worry about project details just yet. I’ll be in touch with more details over the coming week if your book looks like a good match to the project. Thanks!!

xlovesx

PS: Scrapamia girls: it was lovely to meet you all last weekend! PDF is coming to you tomorrow, so watch your inbox!