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Merry Christmas

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MerlotPoinsettiaw

I’m sure it’s true for almost everyone who celebrates Christmas–no matter how early you start to prepare, the last few days end up being hectic and so very busy. Somehow there always seems to be one last gift to purchase, one last trip to the grocery store. Then there was a much needed haircut, a rehearsal for the Christmas Eve service, a trip to school for a holiday breakfast, an annual Christmas breakfast with a friend, but for once, no last minute wrapping marathon!
I saved four days to bake this year and ended up substitute teaching all four of them. I enjoyed doing it, but had to put in a long day of baking to finish all the cookies for the cookie trays we give out each year.
Sarah and Adam were supposed to arrive here on Monday night, but like so many travelers this season, they missed their connecting flight due to delays. They had to spend the night in the Newark airport and were unable to get on a stand-by flight Tuesday morning. (There were no cars available to rent.) So Tracy left early Tuesday morning to pick them up. They arrived in time for dinner Tuesday night tired but in good spirits. Thank goodness their connecting flight was New Jersey rather than Chicago or Detroit which would have been so much more difficult.
Yesterday we baked miniature mint chocolate cupcakes for today’s dinner, delivered cookie trays to friends and neighbors, and attended our always beautiful 11:00 Christmas Eve Service. We’ve opened our gifts and stockings, and are taking some quiet time before Tracy’s family arrives at 4:00 for dinner and more gift exchange. This year there will be 19 of us; everyone is here from out of town except Tracy’s brother, Scott & family, who live in Arizona. 
I have completed several pages (in a rather random order) for my Christmas Journal, but decided not to upload them until I have pages in chronological order. I have notes, photos, and ideas for most days and hope to be caught up in a few days time. 
Hope you and yours are enjoying a blessed Christmas.

Yesterday’s Christmas Journal Page

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I’m now officially one day behind, although I do have the journaling done for today. It looks like I may be doing some substitute teaching for the next few days, so I may be even farther behind soon. I reread the Christmas journal pages from two years ago, and looked through last year’s album. Sometimes I’m finding I don’t have a lot more to say about a given prompt, and without kids at home, there’s not necessarily something interesting enough to document. So for yesterday I decided to do a little flow chart of the wrapping process, which was actually the prompt for today. All the paper, ribbon, tags, etc. are in our basement, and there’s a folding table set up for wrapping. I’ve never documented the process. For the first time (ever) I’m nearly done wrapping all the gifts. I think there are only two more gifts yet to arrive, so I have less than 10 to wrap. Usually I’m still wrapping on Christmas Eve day. I’m sure it’s another one of the benefits of being retired. 

Dec9w

Design Your Life: Week 10

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Another week for Elements, this time focusing on color.

TreeHunt2pg

The assignment was to convert the photos to black and white so you could use your favorite colors. I decided not to do that since the photos were pretty monochromatic, and using my favorite color (red) was not a problem.

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I took these photos for my Christmas Journal, but decided to do a page for this album, too. It’s almost a completely digital page, but I wanted a textured background paper and I added the snowflake to pick up the silver from the main photo. This green is not a color I would usually scrap!

Usw

I really “broke the rules” on this one. You were supposed to pick out four colors in your photo and use three of them to choose your papers. After I finished the layout, I found a more recent photo of the two of us with a lot more color in it. Oh, well. I like the layout, even though I didn’t follow the rules.

The little scalloped edge was cut with my new paper cutter. I’ve been having a lot of trouble getting a straight cut from my Fiskers cutter. I think the fold-out arm is the problem, so I used a 50% coupon and bought the Purple Cow dual cutter at AC Moore yesterday. At first I wasn’t too sure I would keep it, but I’ve used both the guillotine and the rotary cutters today, and they both seem to give straight cuts. Along with the variety of blades (and ease of changing them), I like the guidelines on the cutter and the way the paper guard literally locks the paper down to the cutter so it doesn’t move. 

Christmas Journal: Day 8

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I think I have completed all the Christmas cards for this year. Instead of 50-40 of the same design, there are multiple designs this year. Now to get them all in the mail. Here’s today’s Christmas Journal entry. I took a lot of photos of the decorations around the house. I didn’t think this page needed any journaling, but I added a title to a Hambly overlay. After I took the photo, I added an 8 to the overlay for the date.

Dec8w1

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Christmas Journal: Days 6 & 7

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Here are the most recent entries for the Christmas Journal. I’m not doing so well on the DYL layouts this week. One is started, but I haven’t even found the photos for the other two.

Dec6w
Found this photo of my father reading to my brother and me in 1954!

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Both these entries are based on Shimelle’s prompts.

Christmas Journal: Days 3, 4, & 5

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I was hardly home at all the last two days, so tonight I needed to finish up Days 3 & 4, and do Day 5. I did a little more Christmas shopping today at Eastview Mall and took some photos as I wandered (mostly at Pottery Barn which has such luscious displays).

Dec3w
These pages were inspired by Shimelle’s prompt about Christmas cards. I’ve written about them in earlier journals, but never considered how my designs had changed over time. 

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Dec4w
Another Shimelle-inspired page.

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Tradition

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I haven’t played along with HS, MS, HS in quite some time. All the online classes and projects have taken up my creative time. But I check in every day, and this so fits into the Christmas Journal mode. Today’s prompt is tradition: The passing of customs or beliefs from one generation to another.We have a lot of them, and most are sequential. Here’s the first, which always happens the weekend after Thanksgiving. We’ve been doing it for years. 

CarryingTreew

There have been a few years when it was pouring rain that we decided to buy a tree already cut, but they have been few and far between. Tramping around the tree farm searching for the “perfect” tree (even in the cold and snow) is a family pleasure. Even as adults, if the kids are home, they come to help and add their words of advice. This year there was no snow, and we tried a new tree farm. I think we found the perfect tree this year, but we have some pretty amusing stories of trees that didn’t turn out quite so perfectly when we got them home and set up. You can see the undecorated tree in our living room in the post below.

Christmas Journal: Day 2

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I decided I didn’t much care for the photo of our tree on the first page of my journal, so I took a better one today and replaced it.

Dec1R

Here’s today’s page. Shimelle’s prompt was to write about the weather, and I had more to say than I expected!

Dec2R

What Is a Journey?

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Keri Bradford has the most amazing YouTube video of a Louis Vuitton commercial on her site this morning. I am rarely impressed with a commercial, but this one is wonderful. Go watch it!

Here are the words from it:

What is a journey?
A journey is not a trip.
It’s not a vacation.
It’s a process. A discovery.
It’s a process of self-discovery.
A journey brings us face to face
with ourselves.

A journey shows us not only the
world,

  but how we fit in it.
Does the person create the journey
  or does the journey create
the person?

The journey is life itself.
Where will life take you?

Design Your Life: Week 9 & The Christmas Journal

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This week’s design focus was Elements with a focus on line. I was done early again this week, and it’s a good thing because I’m also starting Year 3 of the Christmas Journal with Shimelle. I love that once you’ve enrolled in the class, you are included in each subsequent class. It was probably the best money I’ve ever spent on an online class. My two Christmas albums are among my favorites. I’m trying to combine Ali E’s December Daily project with the Christmas Journal, but I’m determined to be flexible and create pages as they come to me. I started working on the journal last week, but wasn’t very happy with it, so today I started all over. I’m using an acrylic album which is much different than the standard 8 X 8 I’ve used the past two years.

SnapshotLO
None of these 12 X 12 layouts photographed particularly well, but I finally gave up and went with the best I had.

ThanksgivingLO

This is a two-page spread, but it doesn’t look much like it here on the blog. I’ll be glad to be back to the 
8 1/2 X 11 layouts I can scan!

ColorInspiration
 Cathy’s color inspiration came from this site. I didn’t have any papers that matched her choice, so I went to the site and found this lovely butterfly–much more my colors.

SmileLO

ChristmasJournalCover

The cover is actually three pages–the snowflake and border are on the acrylic cover, the title and date are on a Hambly transparency, followed by a piece of Basic Grey paper.

CJInteriorPgs

I created a few pages ahead and cut more 6 X 6 sheets to be used in the journal, but wanted to wait to see what kind of photos I had.

Dec1
I’m hoping to have a one or two page spread for each day, depending on the amount of journaling I want to do. This is one of my favorite times of year, and it’s a great way to record the journey.

Happy Thanksgiving

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Turkeys2w

Thanksgiving project from my time in Sandy’s classroom. One of my many blessings is the time I spend in this classroom each week.

Truly there is not a day when I am not consciously grateful for all I have. Stacy Julian posted a list she wrote yesterday on her blog, and I took a few minutes to quickly brainstorm some of my many blessings:

family·a lasting marriage with my best friend·friends·time
to think·love·good health·retirement·faith·comfortable home·time to
create·good (cheap) wine·gym membership·cell phone·Subaru Forester·my own craft
space·Sandy’s classroom·Starbuck’s coffee·Wegmans·hot water·warm house·having
options·happy, productive children·internet classes and
friendships·opportunities to learn·time to write·a beautiful neighborhood·walks
in the park·MacBook·iPod Touch·cameras·books·travel·good
food·time with family·holidays to celebrate

Enjoy your day!

Design Your Life: Week 8

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This week’s focus was a continuation of Emphasis and Contrast. Since we had received an enlargement alert from Cathy ahead of time, the photos were already to go. This layouts came together a lot quicker this week, with the exception of the Real World Color which I frequently find challenging. Here are Week 8’s layouts:

SanFranciscoLO

KiawahLOWk8

CA Wildflowers

Design Your Life: Weeks 6 & 7

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Tomorrow we’ll receive Week 8’s lesson and assignments. I thought I ought to get my Week 6 (Design Principle: Unity) and Week 7 (Design Principle: Emphasis) uploaded. Finding photos that work well with the templates we receive, tell a story I want to tell, and are decent enough to scrap is getting harder. It’s certainly not that I don’t have hundreds of photos to scrap, but many are in piles for theme albums (Disney, birthdays, a family Christmas album–over multiple years, trips), and many are old 3X5 photos. And, truthfully, a lot of our old photos are simply not very good. With both kids living away from home, there aren’t a lot of photo events happening any more. Once I finally find the photos, though, I’m generally pretty happy with the layouts. So here they are.

Week 6:

NovemberHikew
Another layout that was 90% digital, thanks to a lovely woman in class who provides templates for all of Cathy’s designs.

MattDrummerw
This was fun, and prompted by Stacy Julian’s Photo Freedom book where she encourages you to scrap photos from a variety of years.

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The Real World Color assignment.

Week 7:

TreeHunt2page
I love these photos from last year’s trip to the tree farm, so I was happy to do another layout. I had previously done a one page layout, but it is quite different.

Tough 
These photos were taken LONG before I even knew about scrapbooking, but it’s a story I don’t want to forget.

RWC7
The Real World Color assignment, which I almost didn’t do, but I’m glad I did.

Stories in Hand

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I signed up for Jessica Sprague’s free course “Stories in Hand” a little reluctantly since Cathy Z’s Design course is pretty time-consuming. But I knew all Jessica’s videos are available to you forever once you’re enrolled so I went ahead. I’m certainly glad I did, and I’ve been able to keep up with both classes. Jessica’s class is all about collecting–collecting the stories of your past and your present. She provided digital papers, tabs, titles, and over 1,000 journaling prompts to download and print. Here’s the finished binder and a little notebook to record current stories as they happen:

Binder

OpenBinder

This week we’ve been looking through the prompts and making checklists of stories we remember as we read the prompts. I’ve been amazed at all I’ve remembered! Compared to most of my friends I have always felt my memory of growing up has been pretty poor. Reading through these prompts and talking about them with Tracy has created three pages of possible story topics.

StoriesChecklist

I’ve typed up two of the stories on Google Docs.com. That’s another benefit of Jessica’s classes–I always learn about some new website or technological trick I didn’t know about before. It’s already been a lot of fun, and I’m looking forward to doing more of this on my own once the class is over at the end of the week.

Design Your Life: Week 5

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Cathy’s class is half over, and I already know I’m going to miss it. This week’s focus was White Space, and here are my layouts.

July4w

I managed to do the whole photo square in PSE 6.0. I think about doing this a lot, but rarely does it work out so well. And so quickly.

DiRosaw

MonthOfw

Cathy suggested using this format every month. I once started a monthly scrapbook recap. I think I did six or seven months, but didn’t keep it up. This would be much easier to do.