Archive for August, 2007

August 31st 2007

Five Freebies on Friday

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Here we go with Freebie Friday again. Have fun with more free scrapbooking stuff.

Remember to leave some love when you download your freebie. It costs you nothing and means a lot to the designer.

  1. Lots of freebies scattered around Live, laugh, Love with Kari
  2. Get over to KJoi Studios for a bunch of fabbo freebies.
  3. Over at Angelica’s Digi Scrap she has a really cute kit called Enjoy Life.
  4. Check out the great templates at OScrapMomO.
  5. And finally SeeBee’s Freebies has some nice little bits and pieces for you.

Other related posts:

Five Freebies on Friday 24 Aug 2007
Five Freebies on Friday 10 Aug 2007
Five Freebies on Friday 17 Aug 2007
10 Top Scrapbook Freebie Sites

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Free Digital Downloads
Digital Scrapbooking Freebies with each issue of Scrap Girls newsletter

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August 30th 2007

Hybrid Scrapbooking - what’s it all about?

What is Hybrid Scrapbooking?

Hybrid Scrapbooking is the combination of traditional scrapbooking techniques with digital scrapbooking techniques to make your scrapbook layout. And if any of you traditional scrapbookers have ever used the computer to do your journaling or scanned a piece of memorabilia to include on your layout, you’re already doing hybrid scrapbooking.

But the really exciting part of Hybrid Scrapbooking is when you start to incorporate digital elements into your layouts and then combine them with traditional materials like cardstock and ribbon etc. Or, on the other side of the spectrum, when you create a digital layout, then print it out and add some extra ‘real life’ embellishments to it.

Let me show you what I mean

big-eyes.jpgLast year I made the Big Eyes layout on the left, before I knew it was Hybrid Scrapbooking.

  1. I heavily cropped and enlarged a photo of my daughter Seona and added the photo corner, bevelled edge and pink gingham matt (from Valeri Brumfield’s Gingham Lace digital kit) on the computer.
  2. Then I printed the whole thing out and cut around the edge of the matt.
  3. I then digitally cropped a strip of the pink corrugated matt from the Ginham Lace Kit and positioned letters from the Metal Stencils Alpha by Alicia Hansen on top. I added a small drop shadow to the letters then printed and cut it out as a complete title strip.
  4. Finally I combined my digitally created elements with a quote block from Blue Cardigan and papers and cardstock from Grants. Added some flowers and brads and my hybrid scrapbook layout was complete.

Part of the charm of this for me is that I can always find the embellishments I need in my digital stash and even after I’ve used them on a scrapbook layout they’re still there to be used over and over again. And the other bonus is that I can always change the colour of digital components to match or coordinate with the papers that I want to use.

christmas-2006a.jpgNow I also approach Hybrid Scrapbooking from the other end of the spectrum. I will frequently create a layout digitally, print it out in 8×8, and then add extra elements or print a part of the layout twice to make a lift up flap for hidden journaling.

In the O Christmas Tree scrapbook layout on the right I created the layout digitally using Secret Santa Paper by Theresa Kavourkas and the chipboard title by Jan Hicks from Scrap Girls. Combining them with elements from the Christmas Bling Kit by Lorene Hill.

  1. Once the digital layout was completed, I printed it at 8×8 on my home printer.
  2. Then created a mini book by lining up 5 of the Christmas Bling journaling boxes side by side in my graphics editing software program and adding some extra photos and journaling to them before printing them out as a single strip,
  3. I folded the strip concertina-wise using a bone scorer to make nice crisp folds.
  4. I stuck the back of the pages together with double sided tape so it opened like a book rather than a concertina.
  5. The book was then stuck down on my layout, some fibres added for accent, a photo clip to hold it closed, some brads in the top right corner and at the top of the Christmas Tree in the title and the layout was done.

I really like the flexibility the Hybrid Scrapbooking gives me to get the best out of both the digital scrapping and the traditional scrapping worlds. So if you haven’t explored this approach to scrapbooking i highly recommend you give it a go. Hybrid Scrapbooking really rocks. And it can add a whole new dimension to your scrapbook layouts.

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Other related posts:

Hybrid Scrapbooking - the best of both worlds

Scrapbooking Techniques & Tips - Printing your Digital Layouts
Scrapbooking Techniques & Tips - Making your own Rub-ons
Scrapbooking Techniques & Tips - Personalising Your Backgrounds

Want to get into digital scrapbooking so you too can make cool projects like this?

Then click over to Step by Step Digital Scrapbook where you’ll find everything you need to know to get yourself started.

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August 29th 2007

Cosmetic Surgery in Scrapbooking

Scrapbookers around the world have embraced digital in some form or another. Most scrapbookers have been wooed over to digital cameras, if for no other reason than the scope to take hundreds of pictures at a time without running out of film. For traditional photographers there’s the option of scanning their photographs into their computer. And from there, the sky’s the limit!

Graphics editing software has opened up a universe of possibilities for how we present our photographs. I am a really poor photographer and rely heavily on improving and enhancing my photos in my graphic editing software (Photoshop Elements is my weapon of choice). I can adjust the lighting, improve the contrast and sharpen up a slightly out of focus picture. And I can also change the whole look of the photo.

Turning a coloured photo into a black and white one is a matter of seconds. Or maybe tinting it in a monochrome of green, or blue, or sepia. If the subject in the photo is facing the ‘wrong’ way for my scrapbook layout, I can easily flip the photo to change its directional focus. If I want to keep a photo in colour, but the shirt that someone is wearing clashes with the overall colour scheme of my scrapbook layouts, I can easily change the colour of the shirt.

And the other thing I can do is enhance the way someone looks in a photo.

Now this one’s an interesting topic I think. If you scrapbook to record it ‘like it was’ should you enhance the appearance of people in the photos? Should you be erasing those wrinkles and improving their smile? Is it right to erase that ugly zit on your nose that sprang up over night, just before your photo shoot? Are you creating a false picture for future generations?

Well before I throw it open to you guys to share your views on this topic, I’ll let you know what I think.

Human beings have never recorded it ‘like it was’ throughout history. Sorry, but it’s true. If you go to a portrait gallery and view the pictures there, are they an accurate representation of the visual image of the person? In the main I would say no. In the past, portrait painters were paid by their patron or client to paint their picture. If the client didn’t like it they wouldn’t pay for it (artists were very low on the social hierarchy). Well if you were an artist needing to keep a roof over your head and food on the table what would you do? You’d apply a level of ‘generosity’ to your painting. You’d be ‘gentle’ with some of the uglier characteristics, wouldn’t you? Have you ever wondered why none of those old portraits have scars, wrinkles or zits?

anne of clevesIn fact King Henry VIII of England married Anne of Cleves on the strength of a portrait which he sent the court artist, Holbein, over to paint before he’d agree to the marriage. He got a nasty shock when he discovered that the beautiful woman in the painting and the lady who stepped off the ship weren’t quite the same. I must admit, I do feel comforted at the thought that his gout, ulcers and other ill health gave him other things to be grumpy about.

But whilst that is an extreme example of artistic licence, is it such a bad thing to ‘be a little gentle’ on ourselves when we enhance our photos? I’m of the opinion that, although doing an ‘Anne of Cleves’ is not the way to go (unless you’re deliberately making a joke photo), it’s OK to do some light cosmetic surgery on your photos.

I usually apply a touch of healing brush or a light strength clone stamp to soften some of those wrinkles. Not to remove them entirely, because then you look like a doll, but just to take the harshness out of them. And I see no reason in the world why I would leave a zit on my face when I can easily remove it with the clone stamp. A careful application of the dodge tool to whiten the teeth and the eyes and my cosmetic surgery is complete. It still looks like me, but it’s a slightly enhanced me. A bit like the difference between how you look with your ‘glamour’ face on and your every day face.

So what about you? Do you ‘enhance’ the way you look in your photos through some digital ‘cosmetic surgery’, or do you ‘tell it like it is’? And if you do touch up your photos, what techniques do you use?

Other related posts:

Have you ever done a scrapbook layout makeover?
What resolution should you print your layouts at?
Scrapbooking is not a race

Scrap Girls: Making it simple for YOU to become a great digital scrapbooker!

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