
Hey, you, with your photos in the cloud!
Are you recording the stories of those photos you’re taking?
Are you noting the details that will trigger rich memories later on?
Or are the photos piling up, unculled and unlabeled, in your ever-growing cloud drive?

I’m Debbie Hodge, the owner of Get It Scrapped …
. . . . and I want you to make sure future generations aren’t left guessing whose house that is in the picture, or what kind of car is parked behind the kids playing on the sidewalk, or who those kids even are.
Recording memories–and breaking down and making that process accessible–is a passion for me.
Here at Get It Scrapped, I’ve combined my skills (an MBA concentration in operations management and 20+ years of study and practice of creative writing) with my passion (telling personal stories) to make a business of showing you how to organize your memories and photos and use writing and design to record the stories and events of your life.

How can we help you “Get It Scrapped”?!
Click on one of the blog categories below for your next scrapbook page idea!
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Father Quotes and Word Art for Your Scrapbook Layouts
Use father quotes and printable word art on your paper or digital scrapbook layouts and projects -- for titlework, embellishing, and even journaling. Any man can be a father but it takes someone special to be a dad. -Author Unknown My father didn't tell me how to...
Scrapbooking Podcast Talks to Memory Keepers about How, When, Where and, most importantly, Why
If you love scrapbooking, personal blogging, memoir, art journaling, keeping photo albums--or any form of memory keeping, please check out our early episodes of "This Memory Keeper's Life," a new scrapbooking podcast. And then tell us what you think, what you'd like...
Study Digital Scrapbooking Pages for Ideas and How-tos | Title, Text, and Shapes
layout by Jana Morton This is the first post in a series that shows you a digital scrapbook page and connects the dots between the elements on the page and the Photoshop techniques that were used to create them. Jana Morton's "Sisters" is a page that looks a lot like...