Pages

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Photo Books??

Q&A from Julie:
What type of scrapbooking system do you use to preserve and display your regular family photos?

I’m in a quandary right now about what to do with our pictures.  

Here is my experience:

I have not done photo albums from our first few years of marriage.  After Autumn was born, I made a digital photo book using MyPublisher.  I was disappointed in the graininess of the pictures, so I decided to try another company.  I gave Nelson a photo book for Father’s Day from Costco, and one of the pages ripped really easily, so I decided to try another company.  I made Anna’s baby book using Shutterfly.  The quality of the photos was not way better than MyPublisher, but I did like the options and user-friendly website of Shutterfly.  I stuck with them and have made several more photo books through them.  In 2012, I decided to make digital photo books of our family in 2011.  I had to divide the year quarterly and made four good-size books because I had so many pictures.  It took forever.  So in 2014, I decided to try Project Life by Becky Higgins.  It is basically lots of options of photo pockets for you to put your printed pictures in, then you can put their cute cards between pictures to write what’s happening in the photo or just be decorative.  While I really like the finished product, it seems like it has taken about as much time as digital scrapbooking, and I think it's been more expensive.

Here is my dilemma: 

Digital Photo Books
Pros:       You can fit lots of pictures on one page
                There are many options for backgrounds, stickers, etc.
                I like the finished product of a bound book.
                You can “highlight” special pictures easily.

Cons:      The quality of the finished pictures is not always perfect.
                I am a perfectionist and it takes me a very long time.
                The websites are often running slowly.
                I don’t love staring at the computer screen for a long time.
                I won’t let my kids look at or hold these books alone for fear that they’ll rip the pages.

Project Life/ Pocket Scrapbook Pages
Pros:  The quality of the pictures is as clear and good as where you have them printed.
            The pocket pages are thick and kids can look at the books without ripping them.
You can add in pictures and written text later, and you can add memory stuff like ticket stubs or programs in envelopes at the back.

Cons:   It is costly to print your pictures and buy the Project Life supplies.
            You can’t always fit the pictures exactly how you want with the pocket pages available.
It still takes a really long time.  I don’t know if I take too many pictures or write too much (probably both), but scrapbooking isn’t just something I can do fast!
It is much easier if you have all of the pictures printed before you start (you’ll be shuffling pictures and cards around if you try to get started before having every picture ready to go).


I would love your advice!  What do you use, what do you recommend, how do you include scrapbooking in your regular life with kids, ANY tips?  

Monday, February 23, 2015

Tips for quick birthday party prep

I've come up with a pretty easy way to throw birthday parties the last couple years, and wanted to share my experience in case anyone is hoping to have some fun activities that don't take too much money or effort to prepare.

1. Pick a theme. Although this isn't necessary, it makes it easier for me to make all our regular toys/activities look like they are actually a fun birthday activity. My kids the last few years have done monsters, under the sea, monster trucks, Frozen, Tron, and dinosaurs. Some other fun ideas I've seen friends do include chefs, mad scientist, fairy princess, etc.

2. Use what you've got. I rarely buy new activities or toys for birthday parties. I simply gather our favorite group activities and rename them to fit the theme. So PlayDoh becomes "Dino Dough," "Monster Goop," etc. Pin-the-Tail games can be "Fix Olaf's Nose," "Attach the License Plate to the Monster Truck," etc.

Our favorite group activities are art (coloring pages, decorate a paper bag for goodies, etc.), PlayDoh, dance party with ribbons or scarves or balloons, egg/treasure hunt, bean bag toss, pin-the-tail, cake walk or musical chairs, and sensory activities (bean box, play in shaving cream or pudding, dig in sand, etc.).

3. Keep the take-home simple. I don't like getting a bunch of trinkets and junk food from parties, because the toys get broken easily and the junk food is not something my kids need more of. I've gone to sending home something really simple that the kids will likely have fun with. When we did Tron, we sent home glow sticks. When we did monster trucks, we sent home a dollar store can of shaving cream and a little toy car so the kids could drive the care through the shaving cream. When we did dinosaurs, we sent home an activity we just didn't have time for during the party (little excavation kit made of a toy dinosaur skeleton, plaster, and sand). All the toys have been about $2 or under each, and the kids have fun using them at home. And I don't send home sugar because I know what it does to my kids and I don't need parents hating on me.

4. Interact with the kids. I've found that the kids seem to have the most fun when Matt and I really interact with them throughout. They enjoy being complimented on their artwork or PlayDoh creations. They like getting to brag about themselves a bit. And the kids that don't know many of the other kids at the party can always use an extra buddy or two (even if it is the parents).