podcast + me

I subscribe to a single podcast. I don’t even get how to search for them or find good ones or whatever. I’m tech-challenged friends. Now I’m a huge fan of the roundtable podcast. It’s the one I subscribe to and have been listening to happily. LOVE IT! I love the discussions they have and that it feels like scrapbook friends are chatting while I crop since I usually listen to it on my ipod. It’s a weekly podcast and it’s all about scrapbooking – what’s not to like?

Imagine my delight when I was invited to participate in the Paperclipping Roundtable podcast this week! Ok, so I was sweaty and nervous before hand just because, well, I’ve never done anything quite like this! Ah but it was a total blast. Chatting with regulars Nancy Nally and Noell Hyman as well Ali Edwards made the time just fly – and wow it was so fun.

You can check it out here:
http://www.paperclipping.com/2010/03/11/prt-010-the-drop-shadow-haters/

I have to give a shout out to my mom who made taping possible. Both girls were sick and she popped over last minute to watch them so I could record in peace. and if you have itunes I suggest subscribing to it so each week you can get it as soon as it’s available. I hope you like it. I will be here in the batcave hiding and not really believing I got to be a part of such a cool thing…

PS – I’m sorry drop shadows. you have your place in the digital realm, just not in my paper world.

PPS- I’m working on a page with cookie cutters now to share here. (listen to the podcast and you’ll understand)

3.11 book round up:

Upside of being sick + having 2 sick kids for nearly a week? I got reading time like I haven’t had in months. I just went to put a few of the books away and thought I’d take a pic + throw a blog post together real quick with 2 sentence reviews. Here we go, top to bottom.

1. Something about you has gotten rave reviews from some book blogs, and yeah it was funny and really well done but I just didn’t care what happened to the ‘beautiful and perfect’ looking people in the story. I like to care.

2. Sweetheart’s knitting club gets my award for most amazingly AWFUL book in a long time. SO NOT what I was expecting, and really some stuff that made me roll eyes, gag, or even laugh and not in a way author meant for me to.

3. Bliss Factor – no idea where/when/how I got this one but it was entertaining. He’s an FBI agent with amnesia who thinks he belongs in medieval times, she’s a pretty cool accountant.

4. Waking up in the land of glitter is probably the most memorable of the bunch. You can read my full review at Scrapbook Update – and it’s WAY more than 2 sentences.

Overall? I want to read some rockin’ mysteries now. Enough with the love stuff for now. (just for now – I’ll be back to romances soon enough I imagine) Have you read something great? I’d love to hear about it!!

digi masks

Nancy Nally (editor/owner www.scrapbookupdate.com) was comparing digital masks to being kind of like a die cut machine. Put your paper (or photo) in, and out it comes shaped like whatever image you chose. I think that’s a great paper comparison, but to show you even more here’s some examples of masking in action:

Digital masks = awesomeness. I’ve fallen in love with how easy it is to make totally customized and awesome looking stuff. They’re pretty easy too. Just open the desired mask and the image you want to ‘clip’ to it in PSE (or full photoshop).

Then drag the paper (or photo) over the mask and hit ctrl + g . This one shown is by Katie Pertiet.

Bam! That one click and whatever you had covering the mask is now clipped to it. It blows my mind every time in the best ways. LOVE it!

If you’re in my Hybrid class right now and thinking you’d like more detail, you’ll get it and soon! Tomorrow is frames, brushes, and overlays in class so you’ll get loads of info.

I’ve got one more thing I want to share – it’s my favorite right now. Open up a .png file, any file! Ok, well it’d work best with something that’s text or some kind of design/shape you can envision wanting to clip a paper or design to. I’m going to use an Ali Edwards family circle accent and a Lynn Grieveson stamp…

I’ve done this with some title brush/stamps, letters, frames… it’s just FUN. Follow the same steps of putting the image over the thing you want masked, ctrl + G, and…

FUN.

I’ll be back to share some actual examples. I’ve been taking care of 3 of us sick girls (while daddy has been at Spring training in AZ) and to say nothing has been getting done here would be an understatement. We’re recovering for sure.

Creative Journey: pre-industry

I’m calling this segment “pre-industry” and what I mean is, it’s about the stuff I made before I got hired as a scrapbook store manager back in 2003. So consider this the “1987 – June 2003” part of my scrapbook story…

In the beginning it was always about 1 big thing, and enough to fill a whole album. I’d make a “scrapbook” about something. I’d complete the project and put it on a shelf for others to enjoy. It was very common for my Aunt Mad to take a lot of photos of our vacations/trips/visits and send me copies along with a partially started book. They consisted of a plain paper book or a 3-hole folder set up like this. With copy paper.

Stickers + words + photos. All my 13 year old hotness and fashion excellence aside, I love these old books. The photos show so much of my world, so much of the way things were- they’re priceless.

Then in about 1999 or so my aunt (the same one) sent me a gift of some stuff from a company called Creative Memories. Now by this time I had 10 years scrapping under my belt, not to mention the attitude of a 20 year old and a lifetime of general crafting going for me. So I did NOT buy into their philosophy nor did I agree with some of the rigid rules.

In other words, I used the products they had that I liked and added in whatever I felt like.

I was very into sticker “art”, cutting out photos by hand to just have the people/things I wanted, and conversation bubbles. Lord help me, I loved my conversation and thought stickers. Most of my “CM” albums were 5×7. It was a good size for the amount of photos I was taking during trips at this time.

You will find loads of movie references and private jokes in my old scrapbooks. Looking back, my only regret is that I didn’t make more. The ones I have are priceless- that’s one regret from my youth: I didn’t take more photos. Of course I was busy traveling for fun with my boyfriend as well as working full time, going to school, and showing horses on a very competitive circuit so it’s not like I wasn’t busy! Scrapbooking + photography were not even connected in my mind. When you had a big event/vacation with enough photos you scrapbooked it. THAT WAS IT.

May discovers the scrapbook store.

If memory serves me it was called the Scrapbook Garden. I fell in love the first time I walked in. Jason and I were engaged at the time, and I knew I wanted to do a honeymoon scrapbook for sure, and I think I was working on some other project as well. I wasn’t overwhelmed at first, just excited to see some things I had dreamed of/wished for actually existed. This is where I bought my first 12×12 album. I was thrilled that such a thing existed, and that I could get so many more photos and do so much more with the size.

The honeymoon album took me 11 months to complete. I worked in the order that I was inspired by, and I did whatever I felt like doing.

The above page might look easy – it wasn’t. First I drew (and re-drew, and re-drew) dragons until I was satisfied. Then I cut them out and all their parts including individual teeth. Then pen work, glitter, etc… it took over a week. Then for the title I printed out the words on white printer paper then used a pen and traced over the papers (with cardstock below) so that a slight indentation was in the cardstock. I took my metallic pens and hand drew the title at that point. To this day I look at this page and think “my goodness I had wild ideas.”

Then I went “easy” by re-creating the Jurassic Park gates. The title is printed out (on computer printer paper) and then I hand-cut around the dinosaur and backed it with red cardstock and edged with gold pen. All that grass and the trees and such were hand cut too of course.

To this day I thank my mom for giving us a “do whatever you want” and “if you can think of it, you can make it” attitude towards crafting. All that playing and exploring and making stuff for our barbies as kids gave me the idea that I could do whatever I wanted- I didn’t know there were boxes I should fit within.

About half way through the album I discovered crops. The store had Friday night affairs where the owner cooked up dinner + dessert and you could just bring your stuff in and scrapbook. Actually, I’d known about the crops but I was afraid to go by myself until the owner convinced me I would enjoy it. Since my family was living in New England and Jason was working tons at the time I was alone a whole lot – I figured “why not?” and went. It was culture shock to me. I’d never before done any crafting with anybody but my own family or girlfriends if we were making something specific.

My stash pretty much was a little folder of stickers + cardstock + scissors + trimmer. Some of these women had tools, stamps, embossing stuff, quilling papers, wire and beads… it was INSANE. It blew my mind. It also made me feel like I needed to get in on all that other stuff.

Around this time EK Success introduced something called “Jolee’s Boutique”. I was blown away that I could have all these detailed themed things on my page that I hadn’t made myself.

The above page is sky vellum, with rock patterned paper cut out and layered over it, and hand cut/drawn title letters because I wanted that EXACT brown. So while I learned about “matting photos” and “double matting” and such I still worked in my own ideas and custom stuff.  Overall I really loved the crop experience because the ladies were so super friendly. Sure, at 22/23 years old I was 10+ years younger than most of them – but they didn’t care and nor did I. This was a place you could be creative and have fun!

I just didn’t realize at this time that I would move to a new town over an hour away, work at an exclusive Napa Valley resort, and make a move that would forever change my career path…

{If you’ve got questions or anything as I tell my tale – please feel free to chime in and ask!!}

My craft journey: part 1

I was talking to a friend who’s just finding her way in crafting, and it got me thinking about my own craft journey.

You see there was a time I was convinced I needed to make layouts more like Cathy Z. A time when I thought I had to ink or sand everything. A time when I was convinced I didn’t have a single good idea.

There was a time when I was lost.

Funny enough, this darkest period of mine was only about 5-7 years ago – and nearly 20 years after I made my first scrapbook. I was doing whatever I wanted craft wise and I had no idea that there were styles or rules or anything else when it came to paper crafting or scrapbooking. In 2002 I found my first scrapbook store and not only did I fall in love with all the new possibilities (and a new size of album ’12 x 12′) and that’s when I started my modern scrapbooking journey. I got pulled into a world of paper and themed stickers  that I thought was the “right” way to do things. I matted every photo. I journaled almost exclusively with the computer since my handwriting was far from perfect. I did stuff like the magazines said.

Now I’m not down on the magazines, or gathering inspiration from outside sources, or anything like that! I’m just giving you an intro. You see, when I discovered all this product available to me – I had been making due with Mrs. Grossman Stickers + cardstock – I found myself lost in possibility. Sometimes in a good way, often not. This was a time when a single layout would take me from 4-7hours. (you’d never know it by looking at them)

I’ve decided over the next few weeks to share some of my old layouts, talk about my journey from there to here, and well, just share!

I figure it’s my blog so I can, right?!

Stay tuned…