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Re: embossing
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She did this one set for a seminar we had in the fall. Using two different leaf stamps, and three colors & the embosser, she stamped the edges, some all the way, some halfway on the edge - first in one color, then the others, then she embossed the rest in gold & bronze. She did the place cards & placemats the same way. They were absolutely lovely!! I just don't think I'd have the patience to do 200 things like that! I have quite a few stamps & the heat embosser, but they're at my house. :( I'm thinking of retrieving them for Valentine's Day, because I simply cannot find any cards that say "You're wonderful but I hope you marry somebody else". |
Re: Re: embossing
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Hating the double post but...
t*p, I want to hear all about the scrapbooking party!! I have a TON of things that I want to put together, but I don't want to do it wrong.
I want to do somewhat of a send up on my one family tree line (I know, I'll go straight to genealogical hell!). There are just too many funny parts to this lineage. My favorite part is the Union soldier who filed a statement that he was shot in the groin during the battle for Richmond, and the minie ball was lodged there for the rest of his life, "causing him excrutiating pain at awkward moments". Well, not TOO much pain - the guy had 15 kids!! I keep saying that I think the real shooter was his wife! A few of his kids manage to become fodder for the Darwin Awards, and I think everyone will either love it, or have me killed! |
yea i have a ton of things to put together too.. i figured with something like this I would HAVE to do it.. otherwise I would feel silly just sitting there while everyone else is scrapping!
i think it would give me the opp to learn about different ppl's techniques as well. I do a pretty good job, but nothing compared to the master scrapbookers that I have seen! :eek: |
I know what you mean! I got all these scrapbooking goodies for the past few holidays, and I just sit and think that I don't want to do it wrong.
One question I've been wanting to know about: do you know if it's better to have copies made of old photos, or should I use the real things? I'm somewhat loath to mess up old photos... This one that I mentioned will be a lot of journaling, too, and I don't know if I should write the things, or type them. And the people I have no photos of - should I just use their descriptions? |
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Journaling always seems to look more personal if it's written out, as apposed to typed. But that's my own personal style. I'm sure typing it would be okay too. Depends on how you'd like the book to look. |
My old neighborhood used to have craft night once a month. Everyone from the ct. got together in the evening and did her favorite UFO. As some of us sat and stitched or quilted, the scrapbook ladies traded scissors and books etc throughout the evenings. No costs, it wasn't a sales thing or even a fundraiser. Just a freebie night away from the kids.
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I agree with JenMarie journaling appears more personal if hand-written but there are so many fonts out there that printing it out could look just as lovely. Definitely, get detailed with your descriptions for the people you don't have a photo for. |
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There are many beautiful journaling pens you could use, but you would definitely have to be careful to not "mess up" if you are going to journal directly on the scrapbook. Or you could do the journaling on a seperate piece of paper that is color-coordinated and work it into the page after you have a "final copy". I've done it both ways - typed and actually hand-writing, but I try to stay consistent in the entire book. |
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http://cgi.ebay.com/Janlynn-Cross-St...QQcmdZViewItem |
The Washington Post had 2 articles in the A section (local edition) regarding scrapbooking. If the link below doesn't work use scrapbooking as a search & get yourself a free account.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...67.html?sub=AR |
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Thank y'all for the scrapbooking hints! I have a vague idea of what I want to do - and I thought that copies would be the better way to go. Some of the Kodak machines that are do it yourself even have sepia now, too! Some of the newspaper accounts are frankly so lurid, they're funny. The headline is in a 48 pt. font, for heaven's sake! I hate to shrink that, but I'll have to do so, even a little. If you've ever read a Victorian newspaper, you know the sensationalism I mean! |
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I've always seen ads for these type of kits in Bust but I never ordered one. It's great to see a book is coming on the patterns.
For the subversive cross stitcher |
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