Showing posts with label Scrapbooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scrapbooking. Show all posts

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Scrapbooking

Some of you who are just getting to know me may not realize that scrapbooking is not a new "obsession" for me. As a matter of fact, I have a long history with scrapbooking - not surprising since I have a long history with creative crafts and photography as well. In the 1890s my Great Grandpa Tisdale took photography classes at Hamline University in Minnesota. A few of his photos remain, which I think is really incredible!





Not surprisingly, he passed on the love of photos to his daughter, my Grandma Holly. She never really pursued it, perhaps due to lack of finances, but she always enjoyed looking at her daughters' and grandchildren's photos. As a young woman she took photographs of her adventures and family and of course her sweetheart, the man who would become my Grandpa, Alden Hopkins. I love this above quote, in my Grandma's exquisite and precise hand, which is on the first page of her photo album, which is about 11 x 7 in size. Currently I am scanning it. I plan on making an album using the full page to preserve her journaling. I will also extract certain photographs and photo edit them to restore or improve them and feature them alongside her pages. Added to that, I will fill in the blanks of information that I know from family history, chats with Grandma and my genealogy research. I think this will be a really fun album and I am looking forward to sharing that with my family.





If you click on this, you might be able to see the photographs better, but they are small in person too. Amazingly, my Grandmother's handwriting remained exactly like this until nearly the day she died about 75 years after this page was written! These photos are from her climb of Mount Baker in July 1926. She went with a group from Bellingham Normal School, which is now Western Washington University. It looks like they must have climbed from the Heliotrope Ridge trail, which I will have to hike some day myself. The same summer, Grandpa Tisdale, her father, climbed Mt Rainier. No small feat at any age, he was 56. I believe that it was the same week. Poor Grandma Tisdale! She must have been on her knees praying.

Well, move ahead some years and I began taking pictures. My first efforts are blurry and foggy from minuscule 110mm and 126mm negatives with a few Polaroids thrown in for good measure. My Aunt Grace and my Grandpa Johnson were both good teachers and even though my equipment was poor, I learned excellent composition techniques. Grace took a million pictures of everything, many gorgeous, many throw aways, many just for memory or to use in teaching her painting courses. Grandpa, like many male photographers I know, took his time photographing just a few shots and most of the ones he got were just right! I find that I fit somewhere in between the two.

In the course of putting all my photographs into magnetic (UGH!) albums, I felt that the pictures would be much more interesting if there was a story to explain. So, I began using strips of Scotch brand "magic" tape - the kind with the matte finish you can write on - and I labeled my photos, adding as many details as I could find. Whenever we went somewhere, I also picked up brochures and postcards to add to the mix. In 1977, I was 11 and went to visit family in North Dakota for the first time. How fun to take pictures of my grand adventure! At the end of the album I cut out "THE END ND '77". Later, in 1984, I was fascinated with the old fashioned scrapbooks in Germany that held bound pages of acid free paper with interleaves. I purchased one that now holds all my postcards, pressed flowers from hikes, stickers, beverage mats and other memorabilia from my first European experience.

Things progressed and I began using card stock and 8.5x11 sheet protectors with pigment ink pens and photo safe stickers. I cringe when I think of some of those creations. Next on the scrapping journey comes post bound albums and then Creative Memories, whose high quality albums I will continue to use for my paper scrapping.

In 1997 I began teaching classes at Treasury of Memories, which is still the awesome-est scrapbook store I've visited in 4 states! First I taught beginner classes and then I began developing a heritage album class, which incorporates more of my passions - family history, genealogy and old photographs! When I came to California in 1999, I developed the class further and taught at Scrapbook Station until I became a Mommy. About that same time I was excited to have some layouts published - a "My State" layout representing Washington in a contest run by Memory Makers magazine and a couple that were in their Quilted Memories book. My favorite from that was a layout about Grandma Hopkins entitled "All I needed to know in life I learned from a kindergarten teacher" playing off of the famous poem similarly named. On the layout and around the quilt square I listed all the things that I had learned from Grandma Hopkins. I'll have to find that some time and share.

While I was pregnant with D, I scrapped over 500 pages! Phew! That was a lot of fun too. After his birth, you can imagine how things began grinding to a halt and screechingly so when I had three babies under 18 months of age! lol

Enter my current phase - digital scrapbooking. It's such a delight to be able to work as I can, in pieces without having to worry about picking up a mess, keeping little hands out of it or finding room to work.

I can't wait to see what the future holds! :o)






Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Farmer's Market and National Scrapbook Day

I'm a bit behind...again! Almost everyone in my family is sick, including some late night croupers. Poor J was really miserable during the night and croup does get scary. It's much easier to triage the symptoms and give advice for someone else's child than it is to decide for your own! She is still feeling punky but improving thankfully.

Last Saturday I went to the farmer's market near here and I wasn't able to get anything because I wouldn't be home for about 8 hours. The first thing I saw were these mushrooms. The lady was amused that I was taking photos of common mushrooms, so she held up this for me to take a picture! :o)

In the flower stalls, I enjoyed seeing the graduated colors of these German Statice.

I don't know what these are called but they look related to phlox. I know several readers are avid gardeners - any hints?



I took this to show what wheat looks like to my kids. I should have bought some, but didn't think until afterwards. They seem me grind the wheat berries into flour but I don't think they totally get that it is a plant first.

Sweat Peas are always delightful, but you can see they don't tolerate the heat.


Even onions can be beautiful in the right setting with morning light! But the biggest surprise of the day was finding a vendor who sold Quark which is a bit like cream cheese, but generally softer and a little milder. It is fantastic when used for cheesecake and my German friends make bread rolls and pizza dough with it. I really like it but this is the first time I have seen it in California. I used to get it from a farm down the road from my folks. It is very healthy with probiotics like yogurt and I am excited to try it in baking or on our bagels. I won't be able to go back this weekend, but will try next.

So, Saturday was National Scrapbooking Day and I was invited by Dana, a friend at church to come to a Creative Memories crop with her. It has been FOREVER since I have scrapbooked! Dana and I know each other in passing as she is also a homeschool Mom and my D is friends with her kids. But, we hadn't gotten a chance to really talk and get to know each other. So we did nothing but talk all day on Saturday! :o) We don't have too many pages to show for it but we did enjoy some time out to relax. Michelle was the consultant. If you finished a page, you put this in front of you and periodically they had a give away. If you had it in front of you when that happened, you got to pick a prize. I didn't win anything but had a lot of fun anyway.



There were tables with ideas and products and all these great pages hung on a line across the room. We also had opportunity to sit in on some demonstrations. A yummy lunch was provided too and since my consultant Sonia "retired", I was glad to get back and connected with scrappers. I have scrapbooked with Sonia since moving here 9 years ago, so I felt like I was "cheating" on her by scrapping with other people! LOL

This year I am learning to scrapbook digitally. I need to do some posts about that in the future. After reviewing several options, I decided to stick with using Photoshop Elements 6, which I already had for my photography. It's easy to use and I have had a lot of fun. The next step is that I will get a 12x12 print done at Costco to see what they actually look like off screen before progressing too far ahead.

Do any of you scrapbook either traditionally or digitally?

Thursday, May 31, 2007

First Attempt At Digital Scrapbooking

It's a little "rough around the edges" but this is my very first attempt using a tutorial at Two Peas In A Bucket. I used one of their free kits which
was from February 2005. I don't know the designers name. The girls' names are smudged out on the journaling, just for this blog copy and this is low resolution. I need to learn some more so that my pics don't look just "plopped down" on the page. I plan on continuing to learn and hopefully I will improve. I don't know where I am going to find all this free time! LOL

Sunday, February 04, 2007

Treasured Tea Time



Yesterday I was invited to participate in a very special day. My friends Sonia (in pink) and Pamela (in ivory) have birthdays a day apart. They usually do something fun together and this year wanted to go to a tea house...and they asked me to come too. We had a nice tea together at Treasured Tea Time in Sacramento and afterwards went to Sonia's house for several hours of scrapbooking fun! :o)
We were given the opportunity to wear hats
and boas. This picture of me illustrates why "just because you can, doesn't mean you should!" LOL Hats have never looked good on me. We opted to forgo them!

Pam has such a generous giving spirit. She brought a gift for each of us. For Sonia she brought three tea cups that we can use when we are scrapbooking at Sonia's house. In this picture she is explaining about how a friend told her about a tradition of giving your dear friend a cup from your own china set because it is like giving a piece of yourself. Pam gave Sonia a cup from her beautiful Lennox china.

And she gave her these two lovely tea cups for Pam
and I to use at her house. My gift was fun, a tea for one set from Roy Kirkham

who is the designer that made my lovely Redoute Roses tea cup which I featured in a previous blog entry. I can't wait to use this! :o)
We all had lovely china to eat from and we each chose our own tea cup from a hundred or so they had displayed in the dining area. I have been to several teas which were quite nice, but never to a tea room. I thought the tea room was nice, the service was excellent, but the food was mediocre (hard and dry scones). The company was wunderbar, so I couldn't complain! I was so thankful to be invited. I think in these types of places you are paying for the experience as much as the meal.

In addition to tea sandwiches we had a soup that was potato, carrot and garlic. Our tea was served for us after steeping
in individual pots. Pam had a black tea that had an apricot scent/flavor, Sonia had a white tea called White Monkey Paw (I thought that sounded like the name of an Asian fertility herb treatment! LOL) and since I do not like tea...white, green or black...I opted for my standby, which is peppermint. It was very good too!

The tea room was in a little strip mall which surprised me because I think of them as being in hotels, Victorian homes etc. But they decorated nice...even the bathroom, pictured here! :o)

They had quite a large selection of china in
varying qualities displayed throughout the front shop area.

It was fun looking around and trying hats and I even purchased a book so I may try my own tea party at sometime in the future. I hope to also do it with my girls when they grow older and use some of my family antique china.

We had a lovely time afterward at Sonia's house visiting, listening to music, eating some more :o) and scrapbooking! I was able to get pictures down on 24 pages. I may go back later and add more embellishments and I always do my journaling when I am alone and it's quiet.

Well, we are having a quiet Sunday. The kids were too sick to go to Sunday School again. So we went out a little as a family and we are resting now. I taped the European Figureskating Championships so I hope to watch that for awhile. When we came home someone had left on our doorstep a loaf of sourdough bread, cans of chicken noodle and minestrone soup, goldfish and animal cracks and oranges! I think it might be my friend Sarah from church who knows that our family has been sick. Hopefully this week we will all be back to normal. I am really missing the fellowship and want to get back to my two Bible studies and church! I'm feeling a little disconnected!