January 1, 2007

Digital Scrapbooking 101


WARNING! This hobby becomes addictive!

What to do with your pictures on your camera card:
Go straight to Target (my favorite), Walmart, Walgreens, Sams or anywhere with a picture kiosk and print your photos. At the very least you'll have something concrete to hold in your hands and place i an album.



or



Upload, create organized shareable folders or order prints of your pictures at one of the following:


Snapfish


Shutterfly


Flickr (Though this is a popular site, I don't use it. People freely leave unsensored and profane comments that I don't care to read and don't want my children to see.)

or

Download and use Picasa2. This program is the best freebie anywhere on the web! You can upload, organize and edit your photos here. You can also email select photos, order prints or add pictures easily to a blogspot blog.


Once your pictures are on your computer:
You can start creating pages!

You need a scrapbook program or photo editor. The most popular on the market right now Photoshop Elements. (You can download and experiment with a trial version here.)

GIMP is an open source photo editing software, much like Photoshop, but FREE! You'll have to play with it to understand how it works but it's definitely worth checking out.

Creative Memories, the industry standard for traditional scrapbooking, is also setting the pace for digital scrappers. Their organizational program is called Memory Manager and their highly user-friendly digital scrapbooking program is called StoryBook Creator Plus. You can see their entire line up of digital products here. Betsy Dorton is a friendly and knowledgeable no-pressure consultant. If you'd would like to see any of CM's products in action, you can contact her via her site.

Now that you have a photo software:
You can download embellishments, fonts, papers and other enhancements! You'll find plenty to purchase, but many are FREE!

Here are my friends' favorite sites for freebies:
Digifree
Ikea Goddess
Lindsay Jane Designs
Free Digital Scrapbooking

Here are some of my favorite sites that offer lots of free stuff, but also some very inexpensive graphic kits:
Scrap Girls
Peppermint Creative
Cottage Arts
Two Peas
Shabby Princess

If you have a favorite site, add it to my comments section to share with the rest of us. :)

Now the fun begins! Go ahead and add your pictures to your pretty enhancements. If you need help with your software, you can use online tutorials (many of the above sites offer help, too, or you can google "digital scrapbook tutorials" or "nameofyoursoftware scrapbook tutorials."

Remember, too, to add some personal thoughts to your pages. Don't let the embellishments consume your layouts. Journaling boxes are easy to create and add to any page. You want to let your family, friends and the rest of the world know your thoughts and feelings about your photo, so share it!

Not only will you find inspiration on the web, but plenty of magazines offer layout ideas, too. When I'm in search for some variety, I go to Barnes and Noble and sip a mocha frappuccino while browsing the magazine rack. Trust me, there is lots of creativity inside those pages!


Once you've finished your designs:
You can upload your final pages to a book creator such as Blurb or Picaboo.

You can also print your pages at home or have color copies made of your pages and insert them into an album. Staples and Kinkos often run 49 cents color pages.

You can also add them to a blog.

Please share what you do with your final masterpiece in the comments section. :)

I hope this has encouraged and inspired you to get your photos off your camera card and into an album. Please feel free to ask questions or leave your ideas in the comments section. :)


September 7, 1996

Our Pride 'n Joy

Want some entertainment? Visit our kids' blogs!

Favorite Links

I'll get a list up soon, I promise. :)

Why We Homeschool

We homeschool so that I won't go to jail and leave my truant kids without a mother. I would never, ever to be able to get my overactive clan to their classes by the first bell. Of course, if I did get them to school on time, it would only be a matter of minutes before the principal called, begging me to please come get my rowdy girls before they try to take complete control of the school.

Besides, I love teaching my kids. It's such a blessing to be able to watch them explore the world around them. They are inquisitive and enthusiastic learners, and it's a joy to experience their education with them.

I have nothing against public education. I'm a proud product of it myself. Everyone in my extended family has something to do with the school system: my father is a retired principal, my mom currently teaches economics at a local highshool, my brother teaches science to middle schoolers and my sister is a therapist to autistic children. Though I don't hold a teaching degree, teaching is in my blood. I just don't have brick and mortar classroom of 30 kids--I only have four. And the entire world is our classroom.

Homeschooling my kids protects their relationships with one another, including their baby brother. My kids are delightfully close. They play well together. They are each other's best friends. They learn together, create together, play together. Sure, they get personal time, just to be themselves; but for the most part being together is a part of who they are.

Homeschooling also allows us to get all of the formal education out of the way by lunchtime so that the girls can spend the rest of the day being kids. The time I would spend helping each child do after-school homework, is spent being a family.


How We Homeschool

We use lots of materials for our homeschool, including the kids' imaginations and inquiries about the world around them.

About Our Family


We are a lively family of six (plus a dog and a cat and, at any given time, a few fish).
Matthew runs a courier contacting business.
Melinda is teacher, referee, chef, event coordinator, chauffuer, organizer, encyclopedia/dictionary/thesaurus, graphic designer, nurse, family historian, cheapo interior decorator, photographer, baton mom, proofreader, seamtress, sounding board, peacemaker, and maid. In her free time, she takes a shower and goes to bed.
Cayli Grace, 3rd grader, wants to be an author and/illustrator. She twirls a baton, loves dolphins and has decorated her room with Tinkerbell.
Kenna and Mabry are identical 2nd graders. When they grow up, they either want to live in Disney World or be cowgirls with lots of horses and no responsibilities. Though I suspect they will live on Broadway.
Micah, our spoiled 1-year-old, benefits from four mamas. He loves to hit most things and throw everything else. He's favorite creature is Clifford, the Big Red Dog.