by Debbie Hodge | Aug 16, 2010 | Hybrid Scrapbooking
by Debbie Hodge I love printing digital elements directly to cardstock and patterned papers for my scrapbook pages. To make the vertical border on “Five Star Attraction,” I opened a photoshop document 12” x 12” and 300 ppi resolution. I stamped a digital star brush...
by Debbie Hodge | Aug 9, 2010 | Hybrid Scrapbooking
Betsy Sammarco made this page of her niece while she was on vacation! “Hybrid is vacation friendly,” she said, explaining that she doesn’t usually scrapbook on vacation. She began the page with a Jen Martakis template and American Crafts digital elements from...
by Debbie Hodge | Aug 8, 2010 | Hybrid Scrapbooking
by Amy Kingsford Making your own digital invitations, announcements and greeting cards can be simple, inexpensive and speedy…especially when you use helpful tools such as digital templates, that most of us digital scrapbookers already have on hand! Read on to see how...
by Debbie Hodge | Aug 6, 2010 | Hybrid Scrapbooking
by Debbie Hodge What are you going to do when you don’t have just the right embellishment for a page? This is what I do: I search the digiscrap world for something to print. I began this page with a variation on one of my favorite page sketches/layered digital...
by Debbie Hodge | May 18, 2010 | Digital / Photoshop Techniques for Scrapbooking, Embellishments, Hybrid Scrapbooking, Paula Gilarde
by Paula Gilarde You don’t even need to have some fancy-schmancy photo editing software to try this digital technique. All you need is word-processing software like Word. I used a dingbat font to create a fun custom embellishment for my page. Dingbat fonts are...
by Debbie Hodge | May 12, 2010 | Design Your Story, Digital / Photoshop Techniques for Scrapbooking, Hybrid Scrapbooking, Journaling, Paula Gilarde
by Paula Gilarde I like to incorporate letters and drawings into my scrapbook layouts but sometimes my little ones are not too enthusiastic about letting me use the original copies. Scanning the item in question is an easy solution to that problem. I’d like to...