Where to find scrapbooking ideas




















Get creative with how you arrange your photos on the page. It can feel very formal to stick every single picture perfectly straight on the page.

Shake things up a little bit. Try tilting some to give an off-kilter look, or follow the rule of thirds to divide and arrange your scrapbook pages in a way that adds way more visual interest. To create visual and textural interest, get some lacy or patterned ribbon to add to your pages. You can use the material for accents or to add borders to your photos. Another interesting, easy way to visually enhance your scrapbook is using rubber stamps. You can buy rubber stamps online in sets or as individual stamps.

There are even companies that will create custom stamps for you, if you supply the stamp image you want. Stamps have been used for centuries to create unique effects on paper — and the tradition is still going strong. We offer an easy way to record your memories both digitally and as prints. Plus, with our adhesive-backed photo paper, you can spend less time dealing with sticky glue and more time creating your masterpiece with artistic scrapbook page ideas.

Gather your pens, your paper, your thousands of rolls of washi tape, and get started! But seriously, get yourself a Lifeprint printer first. Then, get started. Log in or Create account. Cart : 0. The Scrapbook Capturing the future of photography, tech, and sharing memories Lifeprint News Lifestyle Photography scrapbooking Technology. Once you have the photos ready to go, combine them with fresh scrapbooking ideas to create a book that presents your photos in cool, unique ways: 1.

Use a Map for a Background Did you take your Lifeprint portable photo printer on vacation and print lots of photos? Having only previously used Project Life starting out with a blank 12 x 12 inch sheet of paper was quite daunting, but after some research and deciding on what items I wanted to include everything came together relatively easily. Page layouts can be created in any size, 12 x 12 inches is the most common, and provides sufficient space for you to be able to annotate the page and add any additional memorabilia.

Planning is key when creating page layouts. Start by looking at what patterned and plain cardstock compliments your chosen images, then lay the components out on the page. Layering vellum over cardstock works well if you want to mute the colour ever so slightly. Do you love arts and crafts? Is DIY totally your thing? Why not blog about it and make extra money! Learn more about starting a DIY blog of your own! Countless bloggers, including me, make full-time income on their blogs.

And many of us only work part-time hours. Click here for a step-by-step tutorial on how to start a blog. You can also check out my income reports to get really inspired. Why not turn your passion into a blogging side business? Choose a map that is specific to where you visited…. Check out more on how here. And here is a great map you can use as your background. I especially love flipping through the pages with kids — they go crazy about seeing their pictures in a book!

You can create vintage looks with old magazines or glue, too. Seaweed Kisses combines art with mementos to create beautiful, patterned paper pages. A photo posted by JP jennie. Vanessa Perry blends gorgeous hand lettering with images to create a truly romantic page. Highlight a single, important moment by using one photo per page.

Tiffany Tillman-Emanuel used digitized mementos to craft this mixed-media scrapbooking page that celebrates her daughter and mother. American Crafts Studio uses a single photo and the rest of the scrapbook page to tell the story behind the image.

These pages practically giggle. Something about using repeating shapes and vibrant scrapbook paper really soothe our souls. These examples are almost like visual quilts. Gina Lideros uses paper and paper scraps from an Amy Tangerine collection to create an exciting and interactive page.

Lisa Dickinson came up with a layout that minimizes a reality that all of us face: bad photos. Lisa printed old photos from her Blackberry and used a bright page to provide contrast to her dark, pre-iPhone photos.

In this design from Christine Newman for American Crafts Studio , Christine used white cardstock and paper punches to create impactful silhouettes for both a photo and her colorful paper collection. The keepsakes that manage to turn up in your coat pocket, float up from the bottom of the suitcase, and hitchhike home within the pages of your favorite books, all have a permanent address in a smash book.



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