Digiscrap Nirvana – My Workflow
I'll go into step-by-step detail of how I take a ZIP file of new supplies and bring them into my Digital Element Library.
I'll go into step-by-step detail of how I take a ZIP file of new supplies and bring them into my Digital Element Library.
Within the past several months, I’ve hit a total state of Creative Nirvana where I can see what I have, find what I need, and use it all when and how I want.
I think this is pretty much every scrapbooker’s nightmare. And I did it to myself.
In late June, we traveled to the Big Island of Hawaii to celebrate the wedding of two of our dearest friends. As I worked my way through the photographs I shot of their wedding, an image of their flower girl jumped out at me. I thought, “You know, this looks like one of those vintage …
My gift to them was photographing their wedding, but I wanted to give them something tangible before the ceremony...
Ever have a memory that’s fuzzy and splotched with time, but there’s one element of the memory – a person or a thing – that stands out clearly? This image represents the clarity of that pair of rocking chairs, just waiting at the lake for someone, or a pair of someones.
...My mother’s sure-fire solution, in particular when we were in public, was to wrap her arms around me and sing “Put On A Happy Face” at the top of her lungs....
I fell in love with this sentiment the moment I spotted it on Pinterest. I decided it was perfect for my studio. I used the digital kit F-Stop by Heather Roselli along with styles by Mommyish and some of my recent photography.
I collect quotes + words + bits of wisdom on several of my Pinterest boards. I love being surrounded by words. Maybe it’s the voracious reader in me … but I’d rather see words + ideas on my walls than simply photographs. I created this for a 16×20 frame in my studio.
“Never be afraid to trust an unknown future to a known God.” – Corrie Ten Boom I’ve got a bunch of 16×20 frames I picked up on sale somewhere, so I’ve begun creating artwork to fill them. I created this poster with one of my favorite quotes by Corrie Ten Boom: “Never be afraid to …