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    Interview with Debbie Hodge

    Wednesday, April 23, 2008, 08:50 AM EST [Featured Book]

     

    If you have stacks upon stacks of photos and are not quite sure how to begin, you will love the amazing inspiration and ideas in Memory Makers latest release, Get It Scrapped!

    Here author and artist Debbie Hodge shares some thoughts about the scrapbooking process and authoring a book.

    Snapshot: 3 Quick Questions
    1. How did you get started scrapbooking?
    I started scrapbooking as it's known today as many of us did. I went to a Creative Memories party when my first son was born. Before that, though, I'd always kept photo albums, but they didn't have the kind of journaling my current scrapbooks have.

    2. What other hobbies/interests are you involved in outside of scrapbooking?
    I knit every other Wednesday night with my "Wild & Wooly" friends. I also really love blogging – which does end up tying into my scrapbooking. My blog has become my journal and my roadmap: I look to it to see what I've recorded and what I, thus, want to get into my family's scrapbook albums. The best part about keeping up with my blog is that it provides ready-made journaling for my pages.

    3. What scrapping product can you not live without?
    My computer—I love it for planning, cropping photos, journaling, and printing to my pages.

    The Deep Stuff
    1. This book is all about getting different types of layouts scrapped. What is the most important thing you’d like readers to get out of the book?
    If you: 1) establish an easy-to-maintain system for keeping your photos in order as they arrive, and 2) take time to periodically review what you have and make a plan for pages to be scrapped, then you'll be able to grab a group of photos and scrap when you feel like it without a lot of start-up effort. You can get it scrapped!

    2. What gave you the idea for the book?
    I love process (I have an MBA with a concentration in Operations Management) and I love scrapbooking. As I watched my friends get digital cameras, I saw them become overwhelmed by the quantity of the photos they now had—to the point that they stopped putting them into the photo albums they'd once kept. Chapter 1 in "Get It Scrapped" shows an approach for culling, organizing, and storing photos as you receive them, and for figuring out which ones are going into your album, and what type of pages they are going on to. The rest of the book looks at 6 page types (Event, Everyday Life, Collection, Moment, Yourself, and Leaving a Record) and offers processes for each that will help you scrap your photos efficiently and appealingly.

    3. What surprised you most about this whole process of writing a book?
    That the best thing to come out of it would be two new friendships. Hillary Heidelberg was writing Scrap Simple at the same time I was writing Get It Scrapped, and I loved being able to touch base and talk with her about the process—to see her getting it done and to share with her as I got it done. Sharyn Tormanen contributed to the book, and I'd admired her pages in magazines and online for a while, and was a bit nervous to ask her if she'd work with me, especially since she'd just given birth to her 4th child. I'm so glad I got over my hesitancy since she has turned out to be generous, enthusiastic, funny, smart and just a great-all-around-online companion throughout the process and afterward.

    4. Tell us something unexpected about yourself.
    At the same time I was getting my MBA I decided I didn't want to work in business—that I really wanted to write the "great American novel." I did get a job, but I also studied and studied and wrote fiction for the next 10+ years--and I have the stack of manuscripts to prove it. As I started scrapbooking, I found that writing the stories of my family became more compelling than writing fictional stories.

    5. Your blog is called “Unexpected Destination.” Why that title?
    When I was a girl, I told people I was going to live in a city and have 8 kids and a nanny to take care of them and a maid to clean the house and I was going to travel the world doing important, businessey things. I’m a stay-at-home, sometimes-work-at-home older mom with two kids and a professor husband, and I live in a small town in a house with no closet space on a river in the woods, and I like to craft and read and write. That’s just one of the ways that things in my life have gone differently than I expected. The tagline to “Unexpected Destination” is “and not a bad one at that.”

    6. Do you have a favorite layout from the book?
    Every time I see Sharyn’s layout “Monkey Love” I fall in love with family-life and scrapbooking all over again. There is something very grounding about seeing this day--in which her preschooler waits for his stuffed monkey to be cleaned and dried--in photos. What's more they're the right photos for the story. Sharyn has used the perfect combination of detail and portrait to achieve a page that conveys both her son's perspective and hers.


    To keep up with Debbie on a regular basis, check out her Web site and blog.

     

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    Contest CLOSED - Get It Scrapped!

    Monday, April 21, 2008, 04:30 PM EST [Featured Book]

    Do you have stacks and stacks of photos just waiting to be put to good use? Author and artist Debbie Hodge has your solution! Whether your photos are digital files or prints, everything you need to know for organizing your images, analyzing what you have and making a plan for the layouts you'd like to create is right at your fingertips in her new book, Get It Scrapped!, due out this week. Inside you'll discover a wealth of information on basic page formats, photo storage and organization, creative journaling, photography and more...

    (THIS CONTEST HAS ENDED - THANK YOU TO ALL WHO PARTICIPATED!) To celebrate Debbie's book release, we're offering one lucky reader a free copy of Get It Scrapped! Just leave us a comment on this post and you'll be entered to win. We'll draw the winner this Friday, April 25th.

    Stay tuned this week for an interview with Debbie and for posts about how our own team was inspired to Get It Scrapped!

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    Giveaway Winner!

    Friday, March 21, 2008, 01:29 PM EST [Featured Book]

    It's Friday afternoon, and the F+W office is pretty quiet. I need a little excitement around here, so let me announce the Show it Off! book giveaway winner.

    Congratulations, Keelyyowler!!! You've won a copy of Memory Makers Books' fabulous new book. I've left a message for you on your mycraftivity page; please reply to the message to receive your book.

    Thanks to everyone for your enthusiasm about the contest and the book. Look for more book giveaways soon.

    Have a great weekend!

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    Book Giveaway + Guest Blog

    Thursday, March 20, 2008, 08:38 AM EST [Featured Book]

    As you all know by now, it’s Show It Off! week here at the S+P blog.  I asked Show it Off! contributor Nic Howard to share her thoughts in a guest blog today:

    (above) One of Nic's Show It Off! creations



    If I wasn’t a scrapbooker I think I’d still be a writer of some sort.  I wrote in various diaries and journals as a youngster so it was natural that the love of writing would carry on into my adult years.  As part of a retail team in my early working days, I wrote a weekly newsletter for the store customers.  Many returned each week to the store just to read my newsletter.  I enjoyed writing it as much as they enjoyed reading.   I did the same with my weekly coffee group as a new mother.  We didn’t need a monthly newsletter but it seems I needed to write one.  It seemed to be part of my territory.

    Then came scrapbooking.  Like others, I love sitting and playing with gorgeous product. (Who doesn’t!)  I love sculpting paper and creating something I can stand back and look at and think “Yeeeeeeeeeeeesss! I love this!!” (Well usually!)   Creative is good, but storytelling is where it is really at for me.  I go through each day and mentally note down conversations and inspiration-triggers that need remembering.  Those are the things that usually kick-start my pages.

    As scrapbookers I think perhaps many of us are the same in this regard.  It seems we are driven to scrapbook by various things but for many of us the love of telling the story is paramount.  Some of us like to play with artistic product.  Some need time away from family or work pressures.  Some of us want to preserve photos in an archival way for those that follow in our footsteps.   For lots of us though, it’s our voice we want to preserve.

    Next time you are stuck for inspiration for a page, think of the stories in your mind.  You’d have dozens of tales if you recorded your day as a series of stories.  Grab one of them from the recesses in your mind and write it down.   Photos, paper and embellishments will soon follow quickly behind. 



    Want to learn more about Nic?  Check out her blog and her book
    That’s Life. (By the way, we're runnning a Launch Celebration special in the mycraftivity store: Save 30% on any purchase through March 25th).  To see more of her fabulous art in Show it Off!, pick up the book

    And don't forget to enter our giveaway to win a free copy of Show it Off! To enter, visit my Monday post by noon (eastern time) this Friday.

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    Show it Off! Project

    Tuesday, March 18, 2008, 08:28 AM EST [Featured Book]

    Memory Makers' book, Show if Off! is not only loaded with cool and creative out-of-album projects, but also includes several simple but creative techniques, from antiquing chipboard to making alcohol ink designs. One of my favorite projects is this adorable accordion album. You can read more about this project here.

    In fact, I was so enamored with the album—and its clever tag-filled pockets—that I adapted the design for my wedding programs (see below). I included just three pages and added only one tag which holds our new address. My abbreviated version of the album is, of course, great for wedding programs, but you can also use it as a fancy card, a homemade brochure, or a super-quick mini-album.

     

    Want more great mini album and home décor project tips and ideas? Check out the book!

    Kristin

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