600 is the total of my latest scrapbooking endeavor but
before you judge me, I really wish you’d hear me out.
So what am I talking about... Pictures? Pages? Types of albums? Dollars?
So what am I talking about... Pictures? Pages? Types of albums? Dollars?
part of my stash |
Yes, I mean dollars.
The answer is definitely dollars.
600 of them. And before you ask,
I’ll just tell you how this whole debacle came to be… I’m an avid scrapbooker who has always been
up to date with my photos and albums.
ALWAYS. I used to start scrapping
an event before the hubster had all of the SD cards unloaded. I’ve been caught up with our albums since
before the kiddo was born and I’ve even gone back and worked on the eight years
the hubster and I were married before our duo became a trio—that honeymoon time
in our lives we refer to as b.k. (before kiddo). Done.
I was always done. And boy was I
ever proud of myself as I scrapped my heart out and chronicled our lives and
kept my photos out of tubs and totes and digital shoeboxes.
Then one day I looked up and realized I was behind. Way behind.
Like several months behind.
Somewhere between the time I’d worked my last page and the moment I
realized I’d fallen off the pace, the entire scrapbook industry had
changed. Gone were simple pages that
told a story and in were multi-layered works of art that barely left room for a
picture on the page, let alone a double page spread featuring six to eight
pictures. Gone was the company (and the
pages and albums) I’d always used. My
son had fourteen custom made, perfectly matched albums at this point. How was I supposed to just run to the craft
store and cobble something together? I’m a planner. Things match in my world, especially when
they decorate a shelf in my living room, which is where our albums live.
Lo and behold my despair was quickly remedied when said
company announced they were moving into digital scrapbooking and creating new
software and albums for we loyal few. So
I migrated and learned a new way to create pages and albums and I loved it. These weren’t your photos on paper bound
books like you can create at Shutterfly or Snapfish. While those make great gifts and I utilize
that product every holiday season, they aren’t what I want to sit and sift
through with my grandkids. I want
archival quality memory albums and digital scrapbooking met my need. So I got caught up a bit and felt pretty good
about the state of scrapbook affairs in my world.
Until I got behind again and the next time I looked up from
life, I realized while I’d been looking through our pictures each year to make
those grandparent albums, I hadn’t actually been doing much scrapbooking of my
own. It was then it hit me that I was
farther behind with chronicling the story of our lives than I’d ever been and I
was so mad at myself for falling off the pace, I carved out a few hours the next
day to get caught up. You can imagine my
surprise when I plopped in front of my computer only to learn
the company had gone bankrupt and taken their software with them.
At the start of 2016, I was thousands of pictures away from
being able to catch up with my photo life.
There were more questions than answers and I couldn’t see a path
forward. What system would I use? What albums would ever match what I already
had? How would I just pick up in the
middle of a year in progress and blend in new pages? How much was this going to cost? How far behind was I really? Was it even possible to get caught up? Would the hard drive fail? Would it still work?
Did I save all of the pics on my phone through numerous device upgrades? What would I do with all of the phone pics the hubster takes? The more I thought about the
task at hand, the more I wanted to abort the mission. Who needs these ridiculous creative goals,
anyway?
more of our albums |
Now before you freak out—yes, I know $600 is a lot of
money. But that’s truly only $86 a year
to preserve our family memories had I been keeping up with things. Some might ask if it’s worth it and the only
way I can answer that is to say this…
today's bone pile |
Just this afternoon as I was putting the finishing touches
on the last album, our 2016 album, the kiddo came in and grabbed the newly
minted 2012 album. “I remember that
haircut,” he said with a huge grin on his face as he stared at a picture of
himself taken during his long-haired, aka Bieber, days. “What in the world was I thinking?” We had a good laugh and as I hugged his
shoulders and watched as he walked down memory lane, I think I landed on the
biggest answer of all. It is entirely
possible to get caught up with that thing you’ve been putting off and as of
three hours ago—I’m caught up with my
scrapbooking.
Seven years worth of photo memories in seven months of catch
up isn’t for the faint of heart and it isn’t easy on the checkbook. But is it worth it? It only takes seeing the smile on my son’s
face to know that answer. Absolutely.