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Now In: Chicken Soup for the Scrapbooker's Soul
| Chicken Soup for the Scrapbooker's Soul
(Paperback)
Stories to Remember . . .
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List Price: $14.95 HCI-Online.com: $10.47
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Book Description
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Read an Excerpt
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About the Authors
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Customer Reviews
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Book Details
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For anyone who appreciates the value of memories found in a photo.
Afternoons spent creating pages of recent and distant memories. Clipping colorful images and adding stickers to adorn your favorite photos and letters while capturing a friendship in pictures surrounded by ribbons and various textures.
Scrapbooking is a labor of love for the millions who spend their spare time engrossed in new layouts and inspired ideas. For some it is a hobby that turned into their life's passion, while others see it as a way to uniquely record family history for generations to come.
Chicken Soup for the Scrapbooker's Soul will inspire you or your favorite scrapbooker by offering a glimpse into the lives of these creatively gifted, generous souls who have found lasting friendships, rekindled love and helped those in need through the heartfelt gift of a scrapbook.
Reminisce with scrapbookers about the deep relationships they formed creating pages and teaching the art to their children, how siblings bonded over a Saturday afternoon spent with scissors and glue, and how some stay-at-home moms turned their creative outlets into lucrative scrapbooking careers. Chicken Soup for the Scrapbooker's Soul is for the millions of scrapbookers already out there, and for those who aspire to crop, journal and embellish their cherished photos and memories. |
"OUT OF MY WAY! I have an idea, move it!"
Off they go scattering like dry leaves on a breezy
fall day, four kids, a dog, a cat and a husband—who know
those words mean business. Mom is scrapbooking and
inspiration has struck! Well, to be honest, inspiration may
come at any moment over anything, usually in the
shower, which is why I have been known to scrap in a
towel, Abandon the computer, don't get near the scrapspace,
"everyone out," she is "at it again"!
OK, so I am half nuts—my family would say "more than
half," but when inspiration smacks me in the nose, getting
out of the way is the best, and safest, idea. Not moving fast
enough has been known to cause frustration and grief.
There was the time my toddler did not get away from me
with all due haste, and I took a pair of scissors to get a lock
of his hair. It would have been OK if he hadn't moved.
I suppose the bald spot can be combed over till it
grows back.
My seven-year-old knows that when I have the
camera in hand, he better be on his best behavior or his
worst will be caught on film, notated and scrapped. I am
certain future generations will want to know all about his
fart jokes, really. My poor infant can't crawl yet so he is
made the subject of all sorts of odd layouts. All I can say
for him is that perhaps he should thank his lucky stars
that I have not been motivated to do a layout about a diaper
change yet.
My husband has learned that nothing is sacred in this
house when it comes to his "obsessed wife." Duct tape, a
screen door repair kit, hinges he bought to fix the bathroom
door, even playing cards have all been sacrificed to
the scrapbook demon living inside me (who I have named
"Mo"). My poor husband doesn't even ask anymore when
some implement is missing from his toolbox; he just heads
to my scrap spot—which is very well organized, I swear.
Just because no one else can figure out where anything is
does not mean I am not the Queen of Organization.
Anything and everything is fair game when I am on a
scrapbooking tear. There is not a store I have been to that
has not had items placed on my pages. From the grocery
store . . . a scan of a bag containing coffee for an "Addiction
Page." From the hardware store . . . easy, practically every
aisle is represented (one of these days I am going to do a
layout with a carpet remnant, I just need the right "spin").
From the Animal Feed store . . . well, in pages about our
pets, of course. The rare store that does not have actual
product in my books is represented by photographs; after
all, what is a book in relation to our lives without pages
regarding an average day?
Fonts are another "problem area" of mine. When complaints
started registering in my beleaguered husband's
brain about the slowness of my computer, a quick peek
(OK, OK, it took three minutes for the file to open, it was
so large) into my font folder illuminated the problem. I am
not sure why four thousand fonts would slow things
down so badly. I think Microsoft Word should be able to
handle all those, don't you? I am now limited to one thousand
active fonts at a time. Dire warnings about consequences
having to do with my ability to journal and print
were levied in my general direction from my techie husband,
who was trying to look stern. He was so adorable I
grabbed the camera and took several photos to scrap
later. I can see the title now "Why You Should Not
Have 4,000 Fonts" or "Font-O-Holics Anonymous."
By the way, limiting fonts is completely unfair! How
I can find the perfect look for my journaling with such
a small selection to choose from? Perhaps I should start a
letter-writing campaign.
Time seems to be another issue. Because we have four
small children I am often too busy with them during the
week to scrapbook, which means I play "catch up" on the
weekends. Translated, that means I go into long scrap sessions
that you cannot pull me out of even with the promise
of fresh-brewed coffee and Krispy Kremes. I suspect if
the house was on fire I would not notice till some hunky
firefighter dragged me out, and even then I would have to
take notes for later scrapbooking—it is not every day you
are saved by a hunky firefighter. Often I look down at 10
a.m. only to look up again at 5 p.m. wondering where the
time went. Since I am the chief cook and bottle washer
around these parts that means that I still have to make
dinner. Rachel Ray and her "30-Minute Meals" have nothing
on me. I can prepare a five-course dinner in fifteen
minutes, and that includes the time it takes to open the
cans and start the microwave!
Why is this so important to me? Why do I get excited on
days I plan to attack the local scrap store? Despite the
many references to a "midlife crisis" by close friends and
family (who all get scrap projects for birthdays and
Christmas), it is more than that. Scrapbooking allows me a
creative outlet. It gives this forty-one-year-old mother of
four, two of whom are in diapers, time to grow and learn
something precious about her. It offers me a break from
"Mommy, he is looking at me" and "The Wiggles."
Scrapbooking inspires me to reach beyond who I am
expected to be and attain something that is simple, special
and sacred—creation itself.
-Nancy Ann Liedel
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Jack CanfieldJack Canfield is a best-selling author and one of America’s leading experts in the development of human potential. He is both a dynamic and entertaining speaker and a highly sought-after trainer with a wonderful ability to inform and inspire audiences to pen their hearts, love more openly and pursue their dreams. He is the author and narrator of several best-selling audio- and video cassette programs, including Self Esteem and Peak Performance, How to Build High Self-Esteem, Self-Esteem in the Classroom and Chicken Soup for the Soul – Live. He is regularly seen on television shows such as Good Morning America, 20/20 and NBC Nightly News. Jack has co-authored numerous books, including the Chicke Soup for the Soul Series, Dare to Win and The Aladdin Factor (all with Mark Victor Hansen), 100 Ways to Build Self-Concept in the Classroom (with Harold C. Wells) and Heart At Work (with Jacqueline Miller). Jack is a regularly featured speaker for professional associations, school districts, government agencies, churches, hospitals, sales organizations and corporations. Jack conducts an annual eight-day Training of Trainers program in the areas of self esteem and peak performance. It attracts educators, counselors, parenting trainers, corporate trainers, professional speakers, ministers and other interested in developing their speaking and seminar-leading skills. Visit the Chicken Soup for the Soul website, at www.chickensoup.com. [ More] Mark Victor HansenMark Victor Hansen is a professional speakers who, in the last twenty years, had made over four-thousand presentations to more than 2 million people in 32 countries. His presentations cover sales excellence and strategies; personal empowerment and development; and how to triple your income and double your time off.
Mark has spent a lifetime dedicated to his mission of making a profound and positive difference in people’s lives. Throughout his career, he has inspired hundreds of thousands of people to create a more powerful and purposeful future for themselves while stimulating the sale of billions of dollars worth of goods and services.
Marc is a prolific writer and has authored Future Diary, How to Achieve Total Prosperity and The Miracle of Tithing. He is co-author of the Chicken Soup for the Soul Series, Dare to Win and The Aladdin Factor (all with Jack Canfield), and The Master Motivator (with Joe Batten).
Mark has also produced a complete library of personal empowerment audio- and videocassette programs that have enabled his listeners to recognize and use their innate abilities in their business and personal lives. His message has made him a popular television and radio personality, with appearances on ABC, CBS, HBO, PBS, and CNN. He has also appeared on the cover of numerous magazines, including Success, Entrepreneur and Changes.
Mark is a big man with a heart and spirit to match — an inspiration to all who seek to better themselves.
Visit the Chicken Soup for the Soul website, at www.chickensoup.com. [ More] Allison ConnorsAllison Connors is the editor of Scrapbooking.com Magazine. Allison has her own product line of 3D embellishments. Her design work appears at national trade shows, on packaging and in national publications. [ More] Debbie HaasDebbie Haas has been a scrapbooking enthusiast for over thirteen years. She has been marketing manager for Colorbok, one of the largest manufacturers in the scrapbooking and craft industry and teaches scrapbooking events nationally and internationally. [ More] |
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Inventory: Available usually ships within 24–48 hours
ISBN-10: 0757304095
ISBN-13: 9780757304095
HCI-Item: 4095
Book Format: Paperback
Page Count: 384
Publication Date: 07/25/2006
Category: Self-Help / Inspiration / Craf
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