
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!
BLOG LATEST [ see all ]
3 Techniques for Using Copic Marker Inks on Fabric (copic marker tutorial no 24)
by Michelle Houghton I promised to share some of the new tricks I learned with my Copic inks and here is the first post of several with fun ways to add Copic magic to your crafting projects! I'm going to show you how to do the following: dripping technique, monoprint...
Use Masking to Combine Stamped Images on Cards and Scrapbook Pages
by Sharyn Tormanen Years ago, I attended a home stamping party and the demonstrator taught us about masking: I was in awe. Masking opens up a whole new world of possibilities for your stamp collection. In fact it has remained one of my favorite ways to work with...
The Art of Photo-less Scrapbooking
By Paula Gilarde What do you do when you have a memory that you want to preserve, but no photo? Here are a few of my favorite things to use in lieu of a photo: 1. Words One day when my kids were very little, I was having an awful day. Everything went wrong. It was...