Scrapbooking Your Memories

Making scrapbooks is very popular these days and a great way to combine photos and stories in a creative, fun way. Scrapbooking memories is a good idea if you do not have that many family stories about your subject person, but plenty of old photos. It is NOT a good idea if you’ll have lots of siblings clambering for a scrapbook, too. Of course, you could tell them to make their own. If you think there will be a lot of family members wanting to put their hands all over your album, it might be a good idea to record memories in a more durable format, or at least use acid-free sheet protectors.

Scrapbooking can be as easy or as complicated as you want to make it. Hobby stores, like Michaels or Hobby Lobby, carry all basic supplies. A friend might lend you some equipment if this will be a one-shot deal for you. Beware – scrapbooking is addictive! Make sure you will be able to find time for this hobby before you start buying loads of equipment and supplies.

You will probably want to attend a Scrapbooking Club at least a few times, or take lessons from a friend or hobby store. There are plenty of websites online to help you learn basics, such as www.genealogy.about.com or the articles on http://www.scrapbookinghow.com/. One bit of advice is to stick to a color scheme in order to coordinate and make the book flow well, and if you are a beginner, keep the format and layouts simple. Be sure to use archival quality (acid-free) papers and pens and photo-safe glues or adhesive tapes for fastening down the papers.

For those with little time and just a few tidbits of information, you can create a simple, but nice, photo album of memories. Use an archival quality photo-safe album, the kind where you can slip photos into their slots. Type or hand-write on acid-free paper the stories or captions explaining the photos and insert the paper, cut to size, into a photo sleeve. I use some scrapbooking techniques on my own family photo albums to jazz them up a bit – cutting photos into shapes, making collages of little photo cutouts, adding cutouts from used greeting cards, etc. Double-sided tape holds the items in position.

Whether you are a beginner or an old pro at scrapbooking, creating a heritage scrapbook will be a sure delight for you and your family.

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Memories – How Many Do You Have?

When deciding on a method to record a family member’s memories, think about the scope of the project. Our oldest elders now have been through major historic times, from the Depression to World War II to the development of television and computers and other great technological advances. There may be an immigration to talk about. What a lifetime of stories to tell! If you’re not up for writing a big book, you’d better whittle down the number of questions to ask them.

For you with not so much time (that would be most of us) who have grandparents or great-grandparents with so much to tell, you’ll want to focus on certain major points of their lives. Always include the basics of birth, parents and siblings, general childhood, marriage and birth of their own children. Consider also how talkative and forthcoming your subject person is about their life. From there, you decide how much time and effort you can spend on the project and what your talents are in this area. Those considerations will help you choose the recording method to pursue.

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Methods of Capturing Family Memories


If you choose to write down family memories, you can write and publish a book as I did with Cherry Blossoms in Twilight: Memories of a Japanese Girl. That was a lot of work, but then it is a hundred-page book. You can instead create a booklet of stories that a copy shop like Kinkos can take care of. This is economical and fairly easy to do. And wouldn’t it be a great idea to include recipes among your family history stories? Some people just create family cookbooks filled with “heirloom” recipes from mom, grandma, and great-grandma, and maybe a few stories about the recipes or memories of dinners and cooking – a different focus.

To make writing down memories really easy for you, there are quite a number of family-memory books available that have pages of questions for you or your family member(s) to answer. I’ll write about the pros and cons of this later.

Scrapbooking is really in fashion now and lots of fun. If you’ve got some creativity and plenty of great old photos, this may be the way to go. Scrapbooking can be as labor-intensive (and costly) as you want to make it. Related to that, you could just do photo albums using some scrapbooking techniques. Can’t include that much in the way of stories that way, though.

One of the easiest and perhaps best ways to capture memories is to videotape the storyteller(s). Nowadays you can even take that videotape to a camera shop and have it made into a DVD. I have videotaped two relatives together with good results, even though I was almost a total amateur and one of my subjects was not very forthcoming. I have plenty of advice to give on this method.

The final method is to hire somebody to do any of these other methods for you. I have seen stunning scrapbooks and homemade books done for clients. There are companies that will shoot and edit videotapes, too. Expect to pay a good bit for someone else’s time and special talents.

I’ll write on each of these methods in future entries.

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