Old School Scrapbooking
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Old School Scrapbooking I certainly remember my scrapbooks from high school - pictures of my favourite bands, lyric quotes, pictures of friends, feeble attempts at poetry and all that other embarrassing stuff! When I first started "grown up" scrapbooking, I eshewed my past habits and stuck to pictures on pages and only occasionally using pocket pages to save cards or certificates. Recently though, I've been reverting to my old habits and I've been including all sorts of bits and pieces of memorabilia on my pages. Of course now I'm careful to mount it all properly on archival quality paper and in photo safe plastic pockets, but the feelings are still the same. Here's an article I found with more ideas on different bits to include in a scrapbook.
Adding Other Items to Your Scrapbook by Audrey Okaneko
Scrapbooks are not meant just for photos. I tend to often date myself. When I was in elementary school, I had a scrapbook. Of course back then I used paper that is now yellow and I used glue. However, what’s important is I remember the contents of that scrapbook.
I kept movie ticket stubs, concert ticket stubs, love letters from boys I like, a test with an A+ on it and many other items.
Today, we can still preserve those memories by adding these extras to our scrapbooks. I always recommend making copies of everything. Unless the original paper is acid free, it will yellow and crumble with time. So, do include the original in your scrapbook, but also keep a copy.
So, what types of “extras” are fun to put into scrapbooks?
• Report Cards • Essays from School • Birthday Invitations • Maps of Cities Visited • College Brochures • Greeting Cards • Post Cards • Decorative Napkins • Place Cards from Table Settings • Pressed Flowers • Receipts from a Favorite Restaurant • Play and Concert Programs • Sporting Event Tickets and Programs • Magazine and Newspaper Articles • Old Drivers Licenses • CD Covers
These items can be added to individual pages or they can be left in tact and put into a sheet protector alongside photos of the events they represent.
There is no limit to the items you can put into your scrapbook. Extra items can help tell the overall story.
Audrey Okaneko has been scrapbooking for several years now. You can reach her at audreyoka@cox.net or http://www.scrapping-made-simple.com
Article Source: http://articlebeam.com
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