Scrapbooking the Love Stories of Your Family
January
25
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Everybody has their own style of scrapbooking, and it is easy to translate that style into decorating the top of boxes of chocolates making them suitable for anything from Valentines decorations to holding trinkets and memorabilia.
Does your family have a love story?
The most romantic story in our family is that of my Uncle Everett and Aunt Velda’s 50th wedding anniversary. Their children sent them to Hawaii, since they had never went on a honeymoon. Mid-flight, my uncle talked to the stewardess and she let him have the microphone where, at 32,000 feet, on a plane full of people, he beautifully sang, “Let Me Call You Sweet Heart” to his blushing bride . . .
Notes for the Digital Scrapbooked Heart…
- I used Photoshop to assemble this digital scrapbook image.
- I started by putting my box of chocolates in the scanner to get the precise size and shape of the top of the box.
- I added interest by having the photos going in different directions.
- I got “texture” photos by searching the internet for Gold and Red Fabric (for personal use only)
- I put a copy of her marriage certificate as a top layer, at 70% opacity. Erased wherever there was a body/faces or other important images.
- I used a bevel and drop shadow on the marriage license newspaper clipping and the rose and crochet hearts.
- To add variety to the photos, I used “photo filter” to shift the tone of several of the black and white photos, some warm, some cool, and hand-colored one of the black and white photos.
- I was able to put 2 completed hearts on an 8×10″ file (that I then had a high quality commercial print of) so I could keep one box and give my sister the other.
- Between New Years and Valentines day, I found small boxes of chocolates at Walmart costing as little as $1-$3. That is less than an empty heart-shaped box from a craft store.
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