Showing posts with label a. Show all posts
Showing posts with label a. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

It's all in the details

I'm putting the finishing touches on a test I'm giving this week today; a colleague of mine, who is a big picture guy, put together questions, and one I needed to double check the answer on. I emailed him and asked, Which one is the answer?

What's my point? I appreciate the big picture, but I am a detail gal. It's how I roll. Whenever I get an email from this colleague with big plans, I am always the one who responds, "What do you mean by number three?" He gets meaning out of the global picture, I get meaning piece by piece.

That's how I design scrapbook pages too. I work from an idea, but to make it real, it's all about the details: the photo, the title, the paper, the colors, the embellishments. They all have to go together for my page to really click.
Here's some examples from LOAD:


This LO idea came from a conversation with my students that made me feel old (what's an LP?), plus a MB conversation about this typewriter sticker on Studio Calico. I paired the two in my mind, went to some October Afternoon Thrift Store products, and made this page. I love the journaling.


This is a photo from vacation that didn't make the album. It looked symbolic to me--my son looking out into the great unknown--so it inspired me to pen this sentiment. I used my Studio Calico kit to try to reflect Seattle in summer. Just a note: to make the chipboard stand out against the photo, I sanded the edges.


Years ago I bought a couple of these spinner cards from Cosmo Cricket. So cute--but so BIG! Hard to use on a page. When my husband was away last week, I had a particularly difficult week parenting this one, so this song from the 80s popped into my brain: "You spin me right round baby right round..." Also popping into my brain was the spinner card. I couldn't put the whole card on (too big)...but when I pulled out my kitchen shears and trimmed it, I found it worked. And fit the theme perfectly.

So for me, I feel most satisfied when the details come together into what I'm trying to say.