by Debbie Hodge | Mar 18, 2015 | Design Your Story, Digital / Photoshop Techniques for Scrapbooking, Paper Techniques for Scrapbooking, Story Styles
Your best scrapbook pages reflect a visual storytelling style–your preference for certain kinds of stories and your way of telling them both visually and with words. We defined and illustrated 10 different story styles in the Story Styles LookBook that’s a part of the...
by Debbie Hodge | Mar 17, 2015 | Design Your Story, Events, Motif
Are you lucky? Or do you believe in something other than luck? Telling stories about your experiences with and attitude about luck is a great springboard for scrapbook pages that reveal personality and character. Scrapbooking ideas for a few “lucky”...
by Amy Kingsford | Mar 9, 2015 | Ideas via Product & Technique, Motif, Picture Your Story, Videos
In “flat geometric” works, the designs are rendered with geometric shapes on flat surfaces in a way that conveys depth and dimension. Color, value, and shape all combine to create the illusion of dimension. This trend is popular now in illustration, home decor, and...
by Debbie Hodge | Mar 2, 2015 | Motif, Picture Your Story, Videos
The family tree motif has been used to represent lineage since the biblical Book of Isaiah. Today this motif endures both for practical and decorative use. Below see a video version of a Get It Scrapped blog post filled with ideas for using the family tree motif on...
by Debbie Hodge | Feb 18, 2015 | Composition, Design Your Story
Your best scrapbook pages reflect a visual storytelling style–your preference for certain kinds of stories and your way of telling them both visually and with words. We defined and illustrated 10 different story styles in the Story Styles LookBook that’s a...
by Debbie Hodge | Feb 9, 2015 | Composition, Design Your Story, Videos
Here’s a video version of a past favorite blog post: When setting is key to your story, extend it from the photos out onto the canvas with these scrapbooking ideas. Click here to see the original blog post with written designer notes.