Well I am still on the journey to discovering my own style, what makes me happy. I continue to experiment with how I do my journaling and ways to identify which are the best ways for each layout.
Creating layouts is taking me longer but this is because I am playing around with items on my pages till I get the “feel right, look right” moment. I know the advice from “Finding Your Way” was just to stick things down and not think about it but I just can’t make myself do it. I don’t want to fill my scrapbooking albums with more layouts which I do not like.
Sunday, 15 May 2011
Sunday, 1 May 2011
Cheap and Lazy Embellishments
Embellishments can be very expensive in the UK and as I am on a tight budget, and would rather spend the money I do have on paper, I am using up embellishment items I already have or making my own things using items/ diecut machines etc which I invested in some time ago.
I tend to make my own embellishments in batches so they are there ready to go as I need them when scrapbooking. I think that I can do this as I tend to use “standard” items which are not specific to the latest fashion in embellishments or specific patterned paper.
I think before investing time in creating your own embellishments you need to know:
I buy chipboard items such as swirls, borders, shape chipboard pieces but don’t actually use them on my layouts. Instead I use them as a template, drawing around and then cutting out on whatever cardstock or patterned paper I want to use. I may stick these down flat on my layout as it was the shape rather than the dimension I wanted or use foam pads to give it additional dimensions. (I know not something all those scrapbooking manufactures want to hear!)
I have learnt that I prefer to use black lettering and the preferred size of font. I have therefore invested in a pack of 12x12 black cardstock and am currently cutting out different style alphabets using my Cricut machine. This means that I have been able to cut out more of those letters you always run out of when you buy stickers/thickers and it works out a lot cheaper.
To make my own chipboard letter I have also bought a sheet of black mount board to cut out the Lollipop alphabet using my Sizzix machine.
All of this is time consuming and does mean I spend some of my scrapbooking time preparing these embellishments but when I do actually sit down to create they are there and my work flow is not interrupted. I suppose I consider it a bit like organising my scrapbooking room and supplies so that the most used things are close to hand.
I tend to make my own embellishments in batches so they are there ready to go as I need them when scrapbooking. I think that I can do this as I tend to use “standard” items which are not specific to the latest fashion in embellishments or specific patterned paper.
I think before investing time in creating your own embellishments you need to know:
- What your “go to” embellishments are.
- What effects you always use/like (e.g. embossed, distressed, glitter effect).
- What colours you will use the
I buy chipboard items such as swirls, borders, shape chipboard pieces but don’t actually use them on my layouts. Instead I use them as a template, drawing around and then cutting out on whatever cardstock or patterned paper I want to use. I may stick these down flat on my layout as it was the shape rather than the dimension I wanted or use foam pads to give it additional dimensions. (I know not something all those scrapbooking manufactures want to hear!)
I have learnt that I prefer to use black lettering and the preferred size of font. I have therefore invested in a pack of 12x12 black cardstock and am currently cutting out different style alphabets using my Cricut machine. This means that I have been able to cut out more of those letters you always run out of when you buy stickers/thickers and it works out a lot cheaper.
To make my own chipboard letter I have also bought a sheet of black mount board to cut out the Lollipop alphabet using my Sizzix machine.
All of this is time consuming and does mean I spend some of my scrapbooking time preparing these embellishments but when I do actually sit down to create they are there and my work flow is not interrupted. I suppose I consider it a bit like organising my scrapbooking room and supplies so that the most used things are close to hand.
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