Project Life...
A few weeks ago I didn't know what that meant.
I heard about it, I saw it on pinterest and read about it on some of my favorite blogs.
It looked interesting yet difficult, time-consuming, fiddly...
Until I tried it...
I am hooked...
I was behind in two years worth of photographs that I just had not gotten around to scrap booking. I am a traditional 12x12 scrapper. I have albums. I love looking through them and so does my family. It feels good to capture our memories, our life and document each year, every special moment so that they are not lost in the pages of time.
But let's face it, that thing called Life often get's in the way of documenting all we want to. So I slowly fell behind, doing the occasional page or mini album...
When I read up about Project Life, I knew that the big album size was not for me. The whole package cost an absolute fortune. (R990 or $110 or £70) Plus I knew if I went big I would once again "not keep up". I have come to realize I do much better with smaller projects, mini albums etc.I also didn't want something that was going to be bulky, heavy and take up a lot of storage space as I already have my albums taking up a large amount of space.
But I wanted to do Project Life...
So I went to our local scrap booking shop and found Simple Memories and OhSnap plastic sleeves that come in different sized pockets. Perfect! I then had 150 photo's developed. I first sat down at the PC, opened up PSE and set about cropping, editing and fitting sometimes 2 or 4 on a 10x15 size. So technically I managed to get over 400 photos printed. Bargain.
I started and within 4 days I had done 2011 and 2012!
I was amazed. It was a thoroughly enjoyable process-something new, something exciting, and of course wonderful to go back over the past two years and document things I had forgotten about!
I started on 2013 on Sunday and so far, so good! It's easy to keep up with this method, enjoyable and not at all time consuming! Me thinks cheaper too!
This is a good idea when you have more photo's you want to include, but don't necessarily want them to have their own front page spot. So you just stagger them underneath each other. They are also put back-to-back. So when you lift the photo and look on the back, there is another one. So you would stick another photo upside down in order to achieve this affect. I had 5 photos in this stack. (the bottom photo is stuck to the paper.)
Book-type flaps that open up to reveal more photos and journaling.
Some flaps to hold more photo's underneath.
Besides the plastic sleeves and pockets, I also make these "files" to hold more photo's and to add interest.
Lot's of flaps with more photo's

So that brings me to 2013. I wanted to be organized so that when I came to do each week, It wasn't a huge process trying to find everything first. I searched on pinterest and found this organizer that a lady had made.
It looked pretty easy to make your own using various sized box's. So I put this together. It's not meant to be a work or art and I didn't do it to look pretty. I wanted it to be presentable and functional. Besides it's only me seeing it on a daily basis.
I simply used masking tape and pieces of cut of cardboard from cereal box's to make the dividers.
I labeled the dividers for easy reference and put my Journal cards into the relevant compartments. (I know it's not the neatest project, ignore that!) I can't tell you how much easier it makes the process. Everything I need is within arms reach.
Today I have free printable journal cards for you. I designed these myself. They are only for personal use. Feel free to print and use in your PL pages! Click on the image to download.






































