How many of you readers live here on the Gulf Coast vs. The Frozen
North? If you do live here, then you know that we don't have winter (and
if you don't live here, well, now you know, too), and most of us like
it that way. We like snow as a diversion, not a way of life. We like
snow as decoration, not as something to be scraped and plowed. We like
snowflakes to be in our scrapbooks and on our walls, not in our hair.
And since so many scrapbook companies make gorgeous wintery,
filled-with-snowflakes products, we have to find our own, unique,
Southern way to use them. "How?" you ask? Well, let me tell you.
First
of all, you can use them the obvious way: for a wintery layout or card.
Say your family goes skiing every year in Utah - that'll be easy to use
these papers and embellishments for a snowy project. Or your family
gets stuck in the Atlanta airport for a day because of a threat of ice -
again, easy. Just use the snowy, wintery themes on a snowy, wintery
layout as they were designed to be used.
But say you never
get to see snow...or you spend your winters at the beach or on a cruise
ship...What do you do then? There's still this pretty new stuff you
want to use, but you just can't figure out how to do it. And that is
what we are going to work on and discuss today.
ScrapHappy
has recently gotten in a large order from WeRMemoryKeepers, including
cute, excellent quality albums (both 12x12 and 6x6), and some of their
new paper lines. I was asked to make a minibook using wintery papers for
a non-wintery project. After many hours of thought, I realized this
morning that there's a minibook I have been wanting to do for several
years: Our Year in Sports. Our family is active year round. We joke that
you can tell what season it is by what sport the Girls are playing, so
when it came time to make a minibook for the store, this seemed to be
the perfect fit.
The WeRMemoryKeepers Winter Frost line is a lovely collection of pale
blues, greens, and greys. A few of the sheets have small snowflakes in
the background, but most of the papers have simple patterns, such as
stripes or polka dots. I pulled out enough papers to fill each included
page protector, then I sliced the other papers into 2x6 inch strips,
inked the edges, and glued the strips to the edges of my 6x6 papers - no
rhyme or reason - I just grabbed what was on top of the strip pile and
glued it to what was on top of the 6x6 pile. .
The next step was to adhere
my photos to my prepped pages - 1 photo per page. I typically print my
photos 3.5x5, because my printer lets me get 4 of this-sized photos on 1
piece of letter-sized photo paper (I'm cheap, and I want my photo paper
to last as long as it can, so I try to maximize the number of pictures I
can print at once). When choosing which photos to adhere to which
backgrounds, I, again, just chose the top photo and attached it to the
top page - no stress, no decision-making, easy. The colors in this line
are muted and neutral enough that all the bright colors from my Girls'
various uniforms all blend. The Winter Frost line provides a consistent
base for the album and helps the project feel cohesive. To create a
title page, I used an additional paper from the 6x6 pad, added some
Basic Grey chipboard letters and some Perfect Pearls, and called it
done. Journalling for the entire album was done on 1 lined page from the
collection (TIP: These lined papers that many companies are putting out
now are PERFECT for backgrounds and journalling. I buy them in bulk and
use them A LOT).
If I wanted to, I could have stopped there and called my book complete.
But I've been in Big Time Inky Mode lately, so I decided to add some
messy, inky play to my book. First, I pulled out a stack of my
handy-dandy, plain, manila tags. Next, I stamped and embossed some old
sports stamps that I have had in my stash for years (seriously, every
year I use these same stamps for any and all sports-related layouts I
make. You would think I would get tired of them, but I don't). After
embossing my sports icons and the name of the seasons, I pulled out my
Tim Holtz Distress Stains and 'colored' my tags. I used 3-4 colors/tag,
layering them and misting them to get the colors to blend. I finished
off the tags by adding some black and white gingham ribbon to the top
(TIP: Black and white gingham ribbon goes with EVERYTHING. Buy a whole
roll. You won't regret it).
Again, I could have stopped here, but I decided to keep playing- this
time with a Hambly transparency that I've been hoarding. I cut it into 4
6x6 squares and
used my Crop-o-dile to punch holes to fit the new pages in my book. I
stamped a WeRMemoryKeepers journalling stamp on one of my leftover grey
papers from the paper pad, cut them out, and adhered them on the front
and
back of 2 of my transparency squares (TIP: When you work with
transparencies, adhere similar-sized and shaped elements to the front
and back of the page. This both hides your adhesive and keeps one side
from having unattractive, unmatchy spots). I glue-dotted (Is that a
word? If not, it should be) some Heidi Swapp Disco Stars to another
transparency (again, front and back to avoid ugliness). On the last
transparency I also added stars, but these were white chipboard stars
that I recolored with spray ink to match the rest of the album. I then
adhered more inked stars throughout my album to provide a bit more
continuity, added a wood veneer title to the spine of my album, and
declared myself done.