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Random Me: A-Z

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Here’s my little notebook for the Big Picture Scrapbooking course Random Me:  A-Z.  It’s based on Amy Krouse Rosenthal’s book Encyclopedia of an Ordinary Life, which is a fun read. The week one project was to make this little notebook to record topics for our own encyclopedia entries. I used the new Scenic Route papers and stickers which I’ve purchased for the scrapbook project as well. This one is going to be fun.

Azblog

Sarah’s Shower

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My friend, Tina, hosted a wonderful bridal shower for Sarah Saturday. She and Adam received such lovely gifts, and everyone seemed to have a great time. Wonderful food and great company. Plus it was so nice to have Sarah and Adam here—if only for a day.

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I altered little notepads from Target as favors for the shower.

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Sarah’s Aunt Evelyn sent these beautiful flowers. The bridesmaids will be carrying flowers like these in just two months!

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Such a happy time!

DW 2006 Challenge

I’m really enjoying the Designing With 2006 Calendar challenge on 2peas. I’m creating layouts of pictures I thought I would scrap years from now when I retired! But the challenge to scraplift four or more layouts from the calendar each month is inspiring me to look for photos that will complement the layouts. So this week I did one of Sarah in 1980 with her great-grandmother, a two-page layout of her 6th birthday (this is for a current album of all her birthdays I’m working on), and a photo of her college graduation. For someone who scraps primarily by theme this is an unusual approach–but an enjoyable one.

Some of the layouts are of cards and I’ve been on a real roll with those. Doing them for the challenge has prompted me to make cards from scraps of  layouts and just because! All the photos are now in my album on the sidebar. Took me a while to get an album going. As always it was a lot easier than I thought it would be.

Inherit the Wind

We saw a moving and thoughtful production of Inherit the Wind today at GeVa Theater. We are so lucky to have this wonderful professional theater in town. Then we had dinner at The Olive Tree–another Rochester treasure–to celebrate Tracy’s St. Patrick’s birthday. He decided that St. Patrick’s Day on a Friday would be too crazed to go out. Dinner at The Olive Tree was totally relaxing. Great Greek food and great service.

It’s Beginning to Seem Real

A few of the wedding invitations went out last week–local ones before the bridal shower invitations arrived! The rest of the invitations go into the mail tomorrow. but the exciting part was receiving six RSVPs so quickly, several with lovely notes on the bottom. There have been hours of planning, but it’s just now beginning to feel real.

The Weather

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My daughter loves to rub it in. But here’s what we’re faced with in the Northeast–plus high winds!!

Temps

Hard Work?

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Blogging has seemed like hard work the last few weeks so I’ve just avoided it. Getting back to it reminds me of how hard it is for me to get back to the gym if I haven’t gone in a couple of weeks. I could plead being busy and it would be true, but it’s not the real reason.

Yesterday I went with a couple of friends to our lss and took a card class compliments of the Arctic Frog company. One of the design team members for the company lives near Rochester. She came to last weekend’s all day Saturday crop and we made a cute matchbook album. Yesterday we made this:

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The little wooden box came from AC Moore and we make these six cards to go into it. I know exactly who to give this to, and will make another one in colors to match my study later on.

Here are the cards that go in it:

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I’ve actually gotten a lot of scrapbooking done recently. Made two batches of cards for the March DW 2006 challenge. You can see them here. Thanks to an all day crop in January and another one in February I have years 1-10 finished in Sarah’s birthday album. I can identify all but two of her friends in the photos. I’m hoping she’ll be able to tell me who they are when she’s here at the end of the month. She doesn’t seem to have much confidence that she’ll know either.

Sarah and Adam’s wedding is only 76 days away and although we have many, many plans in place and I have absolutely wonderful help from my sister-in-law, I am beginning to wake up in the night and worry about what I don’t know about or the little details that we cannot yet make decisions about. Finding something to wear is also preying on my mind. A friend and I spent one entire day looking (only tried on three things–none right) and I’ve ordered and returned several other items. No more ordering! I’m going to assume that if I don’t see something here before we go to Atlanta in April that I will certainly find something there. It’s the little things–or maybe that’s a big thing.

Well, I’ve done it. Back to blogging. I’ll try to be more conscientious although this is not a week to make promises. I have commitments after school or in the evening  every night except one.

10 Things

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This was a blog challenge listed on 2Peas yesterday.

List 10 things that you couldn’t possibly live without.

  1. My family (Can’t imagine life without any of them.)
  2. My cell phone (More dependent on it than I like to admit, but being able to press one button and talk to my daughter in Atlanta is priceless.)
  3. iBook (For work and for pleasure!)
  4. Target (What did I do before Target showed up in our area?)
  5. Coffee (Love my Starbucks and need one cup in the morning of any kind)
  6. My study ( I love having my own space.)
  7. My Forrester (Love this car; so dependable and fun to drive.)
  8. My cameras (I have two Canons and love them both.)
  9. My printer (Got a new Canon Pixma for Christmas. Rely on it for work and for scrapbooking
  10. Scrapbooking and stamping supplies (Does this count as one item?)

Understanding Differences

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Annually our church shares a weekend of  interfaith dialogue with the congregation of a local synagogue. Today was the dialogue between our pastor and the rabbi and, as always, it was thought provoking. I thought the quote on the cover of the bulletin by Jonathan Sacks from The Dignity of Difference was worth sharing:

"So it is with faith. If we cherish our own, then we will understand the value of others. We may regard ours as a diamond and another faith as a ruby, but we know that both are precious stones. But if faith is a mere burden, not only will we not value ours, neither will we value the faith of someone else. We will see both as equally useless. True tolerance comes not from the absence of faith but from its living presence. Understanding the particularity of what matters to us is the best way of coming to appreciate what matters to others."

Another Challenge

Another blog challenge from 2Peas:

1. Where were you born?
    Hays, Kansas
2. Name something you’ve always wanted to do.
    Travel extensively–no one place in particular
3. What do you want to be when you grow up?
    A great photographer
4. What’s the number one problem we face in the world today?
    Poverty
5. If you could change the world, what would you do?
    Provide meaningful, paying jobs for everyone
6. What’s the most dangerous thing you’ve ever done?
    I’m a chicken. I don’t think I’ve ever done anything particularly
    dangerous.
7. Favorite word?
    Can I have two? Love you. Love saying it; love hearing it.

Blog Challenge

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Found this challenge on 2Peas tonight:

List 5-10 blogs that you read online on a consistent basis.. and also journal/write why you love these blogs so much!

Since I’ve become a regular blog reader here are the ones I read regularly. I read almost all of them for the same reasons:
inspiration for scrapbook layouts
inspiration and techniques for taking better photographs
information on new products
information on techniques
great quotes and funny stories–great for journaling ideas
book reviews (all kinds, not just scrapping)

Here are my favorite scrapping blogs:
fertile press
altogether too happy
{bits and pieces}
ali edwards
the  possibilities are endless
simply me
{me}
There are some others, as well, but these are my favorites. I have subscribed to most of them at bloglines.com so I can go to one site and see all the updates at once. It’s a real timesaver.

And then there is my daughter’s blog. She’s a seminary student, a great writer and photographer (no prejudice here). I read her blog for uplifting messages, to keep current on important issues, and to find out what’s happening in the lives of young seminarians. One of my favorite entries is “Failures of Imagination.”

Organized . . . again

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Organized_1

I really, truly tried to resist the urge to reorganize once again but . . . when I read that Stacy Julian organized all her embellishments in shallow drawers by color, I was immediately intrigued. I resisted for over a month, but the idea stayed in the back of my mind along with her comment that having all the embellishments in one place increased her creativity. So since I already had some shallow drawer units doing other (rather insignificant) duty, I decided to give it a try. It only took one evening and I organized mine in six drawers rather than ten. I put pink and purple, green and brown, yellow and orange, and black and white together. I can already tell you that it was worth the time and effort. Stacy is right. We scrapbook by color and seeing all the embellishments you have prompts you to consider things you might never have thought of using. The only expense was the purchase of some small ziplock bags to hold the tiny embellishments. Thanks, Stacy–once again.

One Down, One to Go

It’s the end of the semester. Today I turned in 23 updated literacy profiles and 10 week plans. I have all but six report cards ready to turn in next week. Then the flurry of paperwork will die down for a while. Whew! I’m ready for some serious "me" time.

Challenges

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One of my goals this year is to scrap more and keep track of the layouts and cards I make. I see people post on 2peas and they have an ongoing list of their accomplishments. I made a little Sweetwater calendar to keep track of what I accomplish as well as what I spend on scrapbooking and cardmaking.

When I saw the post on 2peas asking people to join a challenge scraplifting 4 (or more) layouts each month from the Designing With 2006 Calendar, I decided it would be a good way to motivate me to get some work done. I’ve already enjoyed it and have all four of my layouts done and posted for January. Posting my work in the gallery was also a goal. I’ve gotten involved on the message board but avoided the gallery because scanning seemed too much of a bother. I still haven’t tried to scan a 12 X 12 layout, but most of mine are going to be 8.5 X 11 this year anyway.

This is my fourth January layout based on the January 1 page and Ali Edwards’ Christmas layout posted on her blog. I had taken all the photographs on Thanksgiving with another layout in mind but the photos from 2peas pictures (2 X 2) were so perfect for this. It’s a 12 X 12 (too many people in our family for an 8.5 X 11) and I took a photo of it rather than try to figure out the scanning and stitching. It was a fun one to do, but more tedious than I expected because I had to cut all of the squares rather than punched them. But I do like the final result. Next challenge:  How to make a photo album with the DW Challenge layouts to put on the blog? I’ve started the process, but it’s not up yet.

Familyblog