Posts Tagged ‘scrapbooking’
5 Things For Your Scrapbooking Pages
There are lots of things you can do to your scrapbooking pages. Here are a few of them.
1. Ink the edges – Use an ink pad and wipe it around the edges of scrapbooking paper, cardstock, photos, flowers, tags, ribbon. You can basically try this on anything you put on your scrapbooking page. I like to do this because it defines the edges of your page and adds visual depth and interest.
2. Sewing- Adding straight lines of stitching to you pages is easy. All you need is a sewing machine. If you don’t have a sewing machine you can always hand sew. This is a quick way to attach items such as ribbon and cardstock to your page. Sewing on your scrapbooking page gives your page extra visual interest
3. Enlargements- If you print your own photos then it is easy and cheap to enlarge them. There are heaps of free programs that you can use to crop and enlarge your photo to the size you want. Most photos I use on my scrapbooking pages have been digitally altered in some way or another. I love using big photos on my scrapbooking pages. They had drama and focus. Large photos are also good for quick layouts and pages.
4. Circle in the title- You do this by cutting or punch a circle out of a piece of paper or cardstock and put the circle where your title is going to go and put the title on top of it. This helps to draw the viewers eye to the title and then to the rest of the page.
5. Mat your photos- some people forget to mat there photos. This one thing can make your pages look so much better. If you are using patterned paper then matting is a must. To mat your photo you stick it onto a pre-cut piece of cardstock that is a tiny bit bigger that the photo. You can even try and experiment matting a photo with two pieces of cardstock. This just draws more attention to that photo.
There are lots of things that you can do to improve your pages. Those mentioned above are just a few of them.
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Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Sarah_Dohrman |
Color and Your Scrapbook Album Pages
Color Coordinate Your Scrapbook Page For Maximum Impact
By Genie Balfour
A visitor to my website recently asked how to color coordinate your scrapbook albums page. A great question – since not everyone feels confident about the design aspects of scrapbooking. Of course its your use of colors which generates much of the visual impact of your page, so just how can you maximise the impact of your scrapbook page layout designs?
How to Choose Color Schemes that Work?
I stumbled across the concept of a Color Wheel a few years ago, and I’ve been using this kind of tool every since. Anyone who has studied Art will be familiar with this, but for those of you who are not, let me explain…
The Color Wheel is a circular representation of the color spectrum, in order to demonstrate how the various hues relate to each other – how they can complement, contrast, or conflict each other.
You may come across a few different types. For example:
* a six-segment wheel depicts the primary (red, yellow, blue) and secondary (orange, green, violet) colors.
* a 12-segment wheel also includes tertiary colors (referring to intermediate tones that link pairs of primaries with one of their secondaries).
Since some of these terms may not be familiar, so here’s a jargon-buster:
Primary: red, yellow, blue
Secondary: orange, green, violet, respectively
Terciary: red-orange, yellow-orange, yellow-green, blue-green, blue-violet, red-violet.
Tertiary colors are combinations of primary and secondary colors. The primary name is placed first to indicate an dominance of the primary over the secondary color.
Complementary: these are located opposite each other on the wheel.
* Mix them, and the result is gray;
* Place them side by side, and they enhance each other.
Analogous: located next to each other in the wheel.
* Used together, the result is visual harmony.
The color wheel illustrates several aspects of color theory, providing a basis for artists to make color choices to suit their purpose. Artists and designers use the color wheel as a guide in choosing colors to mix, or combine.
Since I first came across the color wheel, it seems online color matching tools have become readily available. One I noticed recently is from Scrapbook.com, who have an online photo matching service, with a color wheel you can use free of charge – and no need to sign up either… A great help for digital and traditional scrappers alike to color coordinate your scrapbook page!
Genie Balfour
A paper crafter and scrapbooker for many years, Genie is well-versed in the ins and outs of paper and digital scrapbooking. As the founder of the popular website ScrapbookingGems.com, she writes regularly on paper and digital scrapbooking topics.
Discover how Genie designs elegant color-coordinated Digital Scrapbook Page layouts, or click here to save yourself time and check out her digital scrapbook templates.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Genie_Balfour
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