Scrapbooking Techniques

Scrapbook journaling is a combination of words and images. Images are terrific because they bring to mind so many associations. They trigger memories. But recording thoughts and feelings about those memories is what journaling is all about.

[DFR::461038576-8362-ss|align_left_1]For some, that effort will be a simple recording of the events of the day or occasion: who came to the Christmas dinner, who brought what presents to a baby shower. Those words, even when plain, do more than just record the facts, though. They themselves will trigger memories later on down the road.

But many will want to go beyond the simple facts surrounding the images in a scrapbook. They will want right away to go to the personal meaning of those images and events. Anyone who does is in good company. Journaling is much the same as keeping a diary and that has been done by some of the world’s finest writers for centuries.

But don’t be intimidated. Your journal doesn’t have to be a world-class literary effort. After all, it’s for you and maybe a close friend or loved one. It only has to be what you want to put down and the way you want to say it.

You’ll find that over time your thoughts will flow more easily than they do at first. Like anything, writing is a skill that comes more easily with practice. The first day you may struggle to come up with anything beyond the bare facts. But before long, you’ll find your words flowing out to capture just what you want to say.

To help prompt your journaling you can look to any number of sources of inspiration. A cherished novel, a personal poem, a great song, a moving movie…. It could be anything. A simple search online will allow you to find a thousand quotes in a few seconds. Some of them will express just the sentiment you were reaching for. Use them freely.

Sometimes you’re in the mood to journal and sometimes you’re not. But whenever you can, take that passionate thought you just can’t hold back and put it down as soon as possible. That will make your scrapbook journaling so much easier because you’ll be on fire to get your words on paper. Use that emotion to drive your pen.

Don’t feel that you need to be limited to writing in formal sentences and paragraphs on one part of the page. It’s your scrapbook and your journal. Write around the edges. Start in the middle or at the bottom. Write upside down, if you want!

You can tell a story associated with the images on the page, real or invented. You can write a poem just for you. You can say how happy you were or how angry. Read what you wrote later and add to it, cross it out, paste a photo over it, or tear the page out and burn it. Or, share it with all your friends. It’s your journal and you can do whatever you want.


One of the most exciting aspects of scrapbooking is the opportunity to exercise your own creativity. Nowhere is that greater than in the process of making your own patterns. Patterns can be created in and on paper, plastic, die-cuts, metal, ribbon and cloth….  In short, just about anything!

[DFR::459621908-8362-ss|align_left_1]You might want a great border to dress up a page of your scrapbook. You can use crayons, pens, colored pencils or chalk to draw exactly what you want. You don’t even have to be an artist who can ‘draw straight lines’. Straight lines are easy, just use a ruler. But patterns are easy, too. If you can’t draw well freehand there are dozens of pre-made shapes to help you.

Suppose the photos on your scrapbook page are of a great vacation to the Bahamas. You can extend the theme and give your photos a great setting by creating a sky-and-sea pattern. A chalk swath across the top of light blue, a few white swirls, and voila! Or, you may have a heritage album with terrific photos of your grandfather from the 1940s. A cut-out pattern in subtle browns to offset the shades of gray in a black and white photograph works well.

But making patterns isn’t limited to drawing. You can pierce the paper, add ribbons and more.

You can make individual piercings in paper or fold it to create a repeating pattern. The holes can be purely decorative, say a pattern of hearts and diamonds to dress up your Las Vegas vacation. Or, they can provide a space to allow photos, text and illustrations to show through. You can even jazz up the border around the holes with colored ink and combine patterns of different types.

Baby-themed scrapbooks are a popular choice for exercising creativity making patterns with ribbons and cloth. You can make miniature ‘curtains’ that cover a delicate baby photo. Just use flexible cloth, thread sewing thread through a loop at the top and glue the string at both ends to the page. Repeat the ‘curtains’ across the page and you’ve got a whole gallery.

Or just dress up the page by finding a colored or patterned ribbon you like and frame a border around the entire page, separate it into four quarters, or underline some text. You can make a thousand and one patterns just using simple, decorative strips of cloth.

You can even use your computer to make patterns that would be hard to draw. Many graphics software packages allow you to easily create patterns unlike any you’ve ever seen. Or copy an image from the Internet that strikes your fancy. It’s easy to paste that image into a document and manipulate it. Then print it out with your color inkjet printer. You can crop it, cut it into an interesting shape to surround photos or text, or use it for a great looking border on a scrapbook page.

There’s no limit to the patterns you can find. And if you don’t find what you want, make your own!

SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline