Sunday, March 27, 2011

A Shift in Approach

I have been contemplating my approach to scrapbooking for quite some time. The chronological approach has me frustrated and overwhelmed. There is a lot that plays into this - the fact that I printed over 700 photos from half of 2010, the fact that my scrapbooks are starting to feel repetitive, and the fact that I want my albums to be more meaningful for my children later in their lives.  When one night I realized I felt stressed about how "behind" I was, I acknowledged the absurdity of that situation. My hobbies should not feel like chores. I also realized that same night that I have three pages in one album titled "Joy." Someone was getting stale.

Because I was ready to start thinking about things differently, I found the iScrap class I took from Stacy Julian at Big Picture Classes to be perfectly timed for me. I was ready to play with a different approach to scrapbooking. Within two weeks I completed an 8X8 album, which could be considered a 2010 introspective. What I liked about this approach is that you start with the story or the message and then find the photo to go with that message. What I also found interesting is that by connecting the photo to the statement I originally brainstormed, I learned something about myself. For example, one of my statements was I went on a lot of train rides. This sounds simple and frankly not very meaningful beyond reporting on an activity, but as I journaled using Stacy's technique, I discovered that the reason I love trains so much is because they allude to a simpler time, a time free of iPods, cell phones, video games, and email.

So while I am not ready to completely drop the chronological approach - I will still scrapbook major events - I am ready to branch out more into the other approach. When I have some sun light and some time, I will photograph and upload images from the project.

In the meantime, here are some other projects. This is a card I made. The flower is made from a scrap of black cotton quilting fabric.

 These are hearts the kids and I made for Valentine's Day. Sawyer is clearly in love with scissors.


This page reflects my new approach in that its topic isn't event-centered, but rather relationship-centered.


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