App for kids on IPAD and IPHONE

Social Media Etiquette and Copyright

Category : Craft Room, Family Room, Featured, Photography, The Web

Pinterest is taking off in a big way. The virtual pin board site lets you visually organize favorite projects, wish lists, tips, recipes, and books. Or pretty pictures like this shot of a gerber daisy that my son recently took. With Pinterest, you can use a special little bookmarklet to add the image to one of your boards. Other people might see the picture on Pinterest and think it’s lovely and RE-pin it to one of their boards. There is some really cool stuff showing up on Pinterest.

The GeekMoms are loving Pinterest. (And yes, of course we have a Downton Abbey board!)

But here’s the rub. While Pinterest allows users to share some great inspirational images, it’s also opening up a can of copyright worms that’s working its way across social media. I noticed several months ago that many of the images on my Pinterest feed were also showing up on Facebook pages that I followed. But instead of sharing the image as a link that would take viewers to the original post or even to the pin board they’d found it on, people were uploading the image directly to their Facebook photo albums. On Pinterest, folks are sharing images without maintaining the link to the original source.

Hello, copyright infringement!

As an author, I’m acutely aware of copyright issues. My work has been plagiarized and turned in as student work, and it’s shown up on websites – copied verbatim – under another person’s byline. Those incidents notwithstanding, most of us were taught in school that it’s not cool to plagiarize the written word. But photos are another matter entirely. Who didn’t cut National Geographic images from magazines to enhance a geography report? While our teachers recognized that using an author’s words as our own was unfair use, utilizing a photographer’s work without proper credit didn’t give them pause.

But those were just simple book reports. Now we have the Internet, where we encounter countless images every day and with a simple cut and paste, can share those great images with our friends and followers. Easy, peasy.

But wait! Don’t you think the photographer who took that great shot of Niagra Falls would want credit for his work? Don’t you think the blogger who took the time to take pictures and write out instructions for how to make Princess Leia cupcakes would want you to visit her site for the details?

Think of it this way. What if you knit a sweater and I took it and gave it to my mom and told her I made it? Even though I suck at knitting? That would be unfair, yes? Or what if you brought your killer vegetarian chili to a potluck at my place and I told everyone that I’d made it? So not cool, right?

This has been a sore spot with me as I watch some really fabulous ideas appear on my Facebook and Pinterest feeds without the artist receiving credit. I’ve mentioned my concerns to some Facebook page owners, but they’re just not getting it. Others are still posting photos to their own albums in what I think is an effort to drive traffic to their pages, adding a cursory link to the original photo. Sure, people can now locate the origin of the photo or idea, but the person who posts in this manner is still giving the impression that the photo is theirs. If you go to my Facebook page and click on ‘photos’ you’ll see this across the top of the page: Attainable Sustainable’s Photos. Does that lead you to believe those photos are mine? And that I have the right to post them? I’m betting so.

It turns out I’m not the only one who’s taking issue with all of this uncredited sharing. Link with Love is working to encourage people to share photos responsibly. While they don’t address the Facebook issue at all (that’s my particular gripe) they’re suggesting a neighborhood watch type plan to protect  intellectual property. Their Dear Pinterest post has some simple suggestions for pinning kindly. Retain links. Post credits. Link with love, they say.

Photographer Sean Locke takes a stronger stand, questioning whether Pinterest itself is actually infringing upon artists’ copyright.

It sure sounds like copying people’s photographs without authorization would be copyright infringment [sic].  Yet, Pinterest seems to be encouraging people to scour the web, pinning (copying to their servers) artwork created by others: “Pinterest lets you organize and share all the beautiful things you find on the web.”

In a follow up post, he discusses the idea of fair use. Is it fair use to share a photographer’s “all rights reserved” image from Flickr? I’m going with no. In this case, the photographer has explicitly spelled out the fact that s/he is reserving all rights, right there in black and white.

Here at GeekMom we have this discussion a lot. We like our posts to have great photos. But at the same time, we’ve passed up some really fun stories simply because we didn’t receive a response to our request for permission to use a photo. We can’t just grab an image we love and use it. We use images that are in the public domain, creative commons, or images that we have permission to post.

Being cognizant of the fact that photos on the web are someone’s intellectual property and not a free for all is the first step toward making sure that artists are credited for their work. I’m no lawyer and who knows if Pinterest will face legal issues for copyright infringement down the road, but it seems like there are a few simple steps that pinners can take to reduce the frustration of artists.

1. Always pin from an original source. This way, it’s easy enough for people to get to the original content, which is especially important if there is a recipe or instructions to go with an image.

2. For goodness sake, don’t copy the text of an entire post and share it along with the pinned image. Again with the copyright infringement! Plus, it makes my feed really hard to read.

3. A site or blog that features a “pin it” button welcomes your pinning. Artists websites that feature a portfolio, probably not so much.

4. If you’re an artist or blogger who’s concerned about having your stuff out there on the web sans credit, consider using a watermark on your images as I’ve done with the gerber daisy photo.

Artist Kal Barteski offers even more suggestions. I truly hope you’ll go have a look and join me in making sure that the hard work of artists and bloggers you love is credited to the right person. I also invite you to pin this post, using the gerber daisy image (which, incidentally, my son has given me permission to use) with a note about pinning responsibly.

Daisy photo: Evan Bordessa

Rainbow text: Link with Love, used with permission

 

Kris Bordessa is the voice behind Attainable Sustainable: Reviving the Lost Art of Self-Sufficiency. She's authored several hands-on books for kids, including Team Challenges: Group Activities to Build Cooperation, Communication, and Creativity. She lives in Hawai‘i with her husband, two teens, 5 million Legos, and 5 ‘ukuleles.

App Review: Fotopedia Women of the World

Category : Photography, Travel

Image: © Olivier Martel / Fotopedia Women of the World

The Fotopedia Women of the World app, released this month for the iPhone and iPad, is truly an eye-opening experience. Showcasing a collection of photographs from a career spanning 35 years and 75 countries, the app brilliantly fulfills its goal as a “tribute to the diversity, beauty and strength of women around the world.”

Photographer Olivier Martel captures the inner and outer beauty of women across the globe in this collection. These are vibrant women with stories to be told: a bride in Kyoto, a young woman in Moscow, a judge in France, soldiers in Mozambique, and hundreds more leap off the screen.

Each powerful photo is accompanied by information about the country of origin and the fight for women’s equality there. You can explore a map of the photos to see where in the world these women live, and even sort the images by country and region to find related pictures. This app has given me glimpses of places I’ve never heard of before, and I look forward to learning more about cultures across the globe.

The app also features a “Stories” section with promises of frequent updates. These stories are reminiscent of a photo collection at an art museum, with descriptions of the featured time and place. The “Eternal Mothers” visual story is especially touching on a personal level.

Image: © Olivier Martel / Fotopedia Women of the World

Fotopedia Women of the World is a beautiful reminder that there is a whole world outside my little slice of life. The app available for the iPhone and iPad in the Apple Store for free.

 

Kelly Knox and her husband live in Seattle with their adorable three-year-old daughter, who insists that Darth Vader is a nice guy. You can find her on Twitter at @kelly_knox.

One-of-a-Kind Valentine with Stickygram

Category : Holiday Crafts, Photography, The Web

Instagram has over 5 million users and was named Apple’s App of the Year for 2011, and it’s easy to see why. Your iPhone photos can easily be transformed into mini works of art and shared to your friends. As GeekMom Laura mentioned earlier this month, there is a lot you can do after creating your photos. With the online printing service Stickygram, those photos can then be turned into magnets – or in my case, a valentine.

Stickygram magnets come in sets of nine. Inspired by a post on the Stickygram blog, I convinced my daughter to pose for nine photos, which is no easy feat for a three year old. Once I explained that we were making a valentine for Daddy, though, she was happy to assist. After you log in to the Stickygram web site and grant access to your Instagram account, the magnets can be made in a manner of seconds. Good thing, too, because I was nervous that my husband might see the pictures in my feed before I could remove them!

This is the magnetic valentine headed our way soon.

Image: Kelly Knox

Shipping is free, but can take up to 12 days, so if you’re going to make one for your loved ones, I recommend ordering as soon as you can. You can add even more fun to your set – different settings or backgrounds for the photos, poses of everyone in your family, or even a different phrase can all make your one-of-a-kind valentine.

 

Kelly Knox and her husband live in Seattle with their adorable three-year-old daughter, who insists that Darth Vader is a nice guy. You can find her on Twitter at @kelly_knox.

This Geek Mom is now the newest Clickin’ Mom – Plus! Giveaway!

Category : Craft Room, Education, Family Room, Photography, The Web

Photo: Kristen Rutherford

Holy Cats! The anniversary of my very first Geek Mom post is afoot! On January 31st of last year, I wrote about my love affair with my daughter and my camera. So it seems fitting as I approach my GM birthday (cake all around!), that I talk about my latest photography obsession: A community called “Clickin’ Moms.”

I had never heard of this website, despite the fact that they’ve been around for four years now. It wasn’t until I was at a playdate with a friend of mine who also has a Nikon D90 that the subject came up. This is my “photography friend.” We love to talk endlessly about our struggles and achievements with getting the perfect shot. We talk about the lenses we are trying out, speedlights, working with moving targets, and basically any tips or tricks we’ve discovered. Both of us are self-taught, so it’s very rewarding to triumph over an obstacle – and equally as frustrating when you can’t figure out what you are doing wrong! (In the interest of full disclosure, I did take a class in 2010, but found that I learned more about photoshop than about taking the actual shot. Tragically, I don’t use Photoshop. I use Aperture. Sad Panda!)

So anyway, I am at her house, and we’re talking about making the big jump to manual, and how nervewracking it is. And how once you’re in manual – you can’t just hand off your camera to someone else at a party or something and say “Hey! Take a picture of me!” And she says to me, “Well, even if I was in full auto, I couldn’t just hand my camera off because I do this crazy back focus thing now.”

This is me: “??!!?”

She says, “Oh yeah! I found this amazing website called Clickin’ Moms! I signed up for the trial period of a week and really committed myself to getting the most out of it, and found all these amazing tips and tricks. You should take a look at it.”

So off I go!

Turns out that back in March of 2008, a professional photographer named Kendra Okolita established Clickin Moms as a safe place for women to share their photos and passion for photography. It used to be made up of about 100 women – but in the last four years it’s grown to nearly 9000 members – and thankfully, it hasn’t lost the warmth and camaraderie of a small community.

This community is described on the site as “artists, hobbyists and professional photographers,” which basically means that there are people from all walks of life and all levels of experience on there. The first thing I noticed when I started poking around the forums was that they lacked the snobbery and elitism found on so many other enthusiast websites. You know what I mean? It’s extremely warm and friendly there. What a nice feeling to know that you aren’t going to get made fun of, or looked down upon because you don’t know the technical term for something. Otherwise, how are you supposed to learn? For instance, when I first started taking pictures, I didn’t know what bokeh was. I knew I wanted my pictures to have the subject in sharp focus and the background to be blurry. ButI had no idea how to achieve that effect. How lovely it would have been to have a resource where I could ask, “How the heck do I do that?” and not worry about being looked down upon, or flat out ignored for being a rube. This is the advantage to having all levels of experience in one place. Layman’s terms! You’ve heard the phrase, “There are no stupid questions,” right? It rings true here. Your question may help someone else who is wondering the same thing. I saw people asking things like “Hey, how do I get my subject’s skin to look all velvety?” and people took the time to answer them in detail, guiding them through camera settings and after effects.

BOKEHHHHH Photo: Kristen Rutherford

Within the first week of having access to the forums, I learned how to back focus, found someone sharing a great work flow for Aperture, and a step by step guide to making that scary switch to manual.

And DUDES, I haven’t even scratched the surface of the forums! I’ve been working my way through ONE sticky post called “CM New Member Guide – UPDATED.” – It’s a comprehensive guide to Clickin’ Moms meant to help new members feel less overwhelmed. (Meanwhile, I feel overwhelmed just trying to tell you about how awesome this website is.) Within this post, written by a CM Pro Mentor, it’s suggested you check out the following tutorials:

Learning to shoot Manual
Skinny Wednesday: The Basics of Skin Color Correction
Metering Tutorial
Let’s talk focus
Using curves to get that “creamy” skintone….
Lesson/Challenge on getting proper exposure
Natural light during the day
Sharpening Images
Tutorial: Making grass and colorful clothes POP!!!
Catchlight lesson
Relationship Between ISO, Aperture & Shutter Speed
Masking Basics Tutorial

DON’T YOU WANT TO DO/LEARN ALL OF THESE THINGS? I DO! Even if I forget my address and home phone number because I have all of these awesome new facts to stuff in my brain, it will be worth it. (And besides, I can always ask Siri to tell me my address and phone number.)

If you are a hobbyist and decide that you want to take it to the next level, there are guides to going pro. There are tons of business tips and workshops, as well as support from professional photographers. In 2010 Clickin Moms established CMPro – a place for professional, more advanced photographers to discuss their craft in a warm and friendly environment. I love this definition from the website: “the mark of professionalism is defined not by a business license but by the mastery of the craft.” 

Seriously, you guys, there is so much that this community does/can do for an aspiring photographer, or people that just want to take better pictures, that there’s no way I can talk about all of it.  Here’s a link to a succinct guide to what all of CM has to offer.

The Clickin’ Moms blog is free, and if you are into photography at all, I highly suggest you put it on your RSS, because it’s quite inspirational and features fantastic interviews with professional photographers, as well as interesting photo challenges. If you want to dive in, read the forums, and participate, you must pay to join the community. I recommend you take the plunge.  The price of a lifetime membership is ONE THIRD of the price I paid for a class that I got maybe 2 things out of – but you can pay for a week, 6 months, or a year.

Here’s some good news! I contacted some of the amazing women that run Clickin’ Moms, and they agreed to do a giveaway! So, go right now to Clickin Moms, and put in the code GEEKMOMTRIAL and you will get a 7 day trial period. You can learn so much in 7 days.

BUT WAIT, THERE’S MORE!

Someone’s going to win a 6 month membership at Clickin Moms! I know! WUT!??!

This is the deal: to win the 6 months, you have to be a new member. So if you’ve joined recently, or you’ve always been meaning to join – now is a great time to do it! (and yes, if you do the free trial, you are eligible as a “new member.”)  Once you’ve joined, or have used the free trial coupon —  go like the Clickin Moms Facebook page, and then let me know that you did it in the comments here at Geek Mom. We’ll choose someone from our comments in a random drawing as our winner!

I’m so excited about this, and I can’t wait to see you guys over there. Have fun, get inspired, and happy clicking!

 

_________________________________________________________________

Kristen is a television writer and a voiceover actress.   She's currently writing The Nerdist for BBC America as well as her usual gig over at Ninja Warrior on G4. Yes, there is a writer for that show. Who do you think types "Brutal Obstacles" and "Achieve Total Victory" over and over? She's also playing a gossipy bird in the upcoming animated feature film Zambezia, and a bunch of characters in the upcoming MMO Guild Wars 2.  Her toddler, Vivienne Ripley pointed at a picture of Princess Leia (Empire version) and said, "Mommy," so as far as she's concerned, she WINS at MOMMING, if not LIFE. She loves Tokyo, all incarnations of the Legend of Zelda (except Windwaker), the Oz books written by L. Frank Baum, and hates talking about herself in the third person. There's more over at www.kristenrutherford.com, and she's  usually running her yap on twitter as @kristensays.

 

Books and Stickers and Posters, Oh My

Category : Craft Room, Photography, The Web

 

printstagr.am

 

printstagr.am

 

Awesome and affordable. Two great words when it comes to an app that lets you get the most out of iPhone photos.

Using a free Instagram app, you can store a gallery of photos at Instagrid, share photos via tags, and connect with other Instagram users.

You can also make iPhone photos physical through Printstagram. Turn your pics into stickers, posters, thumb-sized books, and more. What’s not to love?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Laura Grace Weldon is the author of Free Range Learning: How Homeschooling Changes Everything.  She lives on a small farm with her family and blogs optimistically.

Status Cats

Category : Backyard, Photography, Uncategorized

Image via Flickr user girlie_mac

 

Just when the dreary winter weather has got you down, in swoops the HTTP Status Cats! Check out these funny photos by Flickr user girlie_mac.

Jennifer D. is a married mother of two, one still in diapers.  She is a Speech Language Pathologist who is taking time off to raise her kiddos.  She became a geek that fateful day in the 70's when she first saw Star Wars and loves all things sci fi.

Survivable Holidays: On the 8th Year of Christmas the Post Family Gave to Me…

Category : Fabric Crafts, Family Room, Holiday Crafts, Paper Crafts, Photography

Christmas gifts past and future. Freezer paper stencil elephant, crocheted bear, Find It game, and spaghetti sauce. Photo: Cathe Post

Since my husband and I were married in 2003, we started making things for people at Christmas along with purchasing that perfect gift. When we became a one-income household, we cut back to just making gifts. This worked out well because everyone received the same gift and we spent the same amount of time and money on all of the gifts. Here is a list in case you are looking for last minute ideas.

For the adults:

  • Soap: You can purchase kits, molds, and dies at your local craft store. We are fortunate enough to have access to lavender and made lavender soap with a sprig in the middle for decorative purposes.
  • Bread: We have made bread but it goes stale quickly. So, one year we put together baskets with the dry ingredients for making beer bread, a good bottle of beer, and a handwritten recipe card.
  • Project bag: Most of the women in my family are into some sort of fiber art. We made project bags one year for the women, and gave beer with the dry goods for making beer bread to the guys. For those who don’t knit/crochet, I crocheted hot pads.
  • Lavender Sachets: Sachets are SUPER easy to make. If you grow your own lavender, these are practically free, and all you need to know is a straight stitch, or even use fabric glue if you don’t sew. For the guys in your life who wouldn’t be likely to appreciate sachets, why not make a neck wrap with rice, buckwheat, or lavender?
  • Pickles: Who doesn’t like pickles? It’s an easy canning activity along with jams, jellies, and sauces.
  • Brag Books and Calendars: We made brag books for the grandparents the first years of the kids lives. But, the company stopped offering a half sheet size book. This year we chose to order calendars from Costco for all of the grandparents. We also purchased School Days picture frames  one year so that when we give a wallet and 5×7 at Christmas, the pictures have a frame.
  • Bonbons and Bark: Bonbons are complicated, messy and had to be refrigerated. They were our first gift, and we won’t do them again. We have also made hard candy, peppermint bark, and cookies for Christmas.
  • Coupons: I made up certificates for free photography sittings and gave them to the family members who have kids. All I had to do was print them, roll them up and put a bow on them. If you offer a service that is useful, this is a great gift.

For the kids…

  • Name Frames: I looked up what each child’s name meant and made a framed collage based on the name meaning.
  • Drawstring Backpacks: We did these as the main gift and put other little stuff in them. A good pattern for these is easy to find.
  • Soap: Again, you can find kits at your local craft store. We put toys in the soap for the kids to look forward to getting when the soap was gone.
  • Amigurumi: Last year I crocheted this bear or something similar for all of the kids. I knew what I was doing early in the year, so I was able to pace myself to finish all of the projects (since I had 10 of them to make and I am a slow crocheter).
  • Find It Game: You can sew one or save clear pop bottles and fill them with rice and found objects. Just be sure to make a list or take a picture of what you put in the game. These are great for car trips or quiet time.

SPOILER WARNING for those family members and friends who read this: This year we are making spaghetti sauce and homemade pasta for the adults and freezer paper stenciled T-Shirts for the kids. You can check out most of the shirts on my Pinterest board. Next year we are already making plans for the adult gift, but that will be for another post (Hint: Wil Wheaton might have some advice for us).

 

Cathe Post

Cathé Post is an avid gamer raising v2.0 & v2.1 with her husband. You will likely find Cathe playing, Dungeons and Dragons, Magic the Gathering, Pokémon, Legos, crocheting, or playing Minecraft.

Using Photo Booth For Something Useful (Gasp!)

Category : Holiday Crafts, Photography

For those of you with a Mac and children in the house, you must have thousands of photos of them and their friends looking very silly using Photo Booth. For those without a Mac, Photo Booth is a photo taking program that is easy to use and has LOTS of special effects. Are these the photos to send to grandma? Your Christmas card? School yearbook? No. Here’s an easy present you can make for yourself, your kids’ friends, or even family members with a good sense of humor.

1A.Import the first 25 Photo Booth photos that make you laugh into iPhoto.
1B.Tell your child to import the best photos from Photo Booth into iPhoto and delete the rest. (This may take awhile. My son had 1345 photos to look through. Mostly of him.) Then in iPhoto, narrow it down to twenty-five of the best of the best.
2. Using iPhoto, Powerpoint or however you print images, make them into a sheet.
3. Print twice for twenty-five pairs of weird photos.
4. Cut them into squares (helps to buy a $10 paper cutting tool.)
5. Enjoy your Memory game with ridiculous photos! Give a set away!
6. Accept compliments on your original and funny present.

 

Rebecca Angel Avatar 2

Rebecca Angel is a homeschooling mom, creative arts teacher, and singer/songwriter of geeky themes.

Get Your Geek On with Ken Murphy’s “History of the Sky”

Category : Education, Experiments and Science, Outdoor Activities, Photography, Technology

YouTube Preview ImageThis video is best viewed in full screen at 1080p resolution.  Watch for the clock in the lower right of the movie.

In mid-November artist Ken Murphy released a near-final-draft of a year-long photography project he’s been working on in conjunction with The Exploratorium museum in San Francisco.

As explained in Ken Murphy’s blog, in “History of the Sky”, each square is one day’s worth of video of the north sky from the roof of the Exploratorium museum in downtown San Francisco.  There are 360 squares in the video (Ken claims 360 days instead of 365 made for a neater grid for the video).  Each square is synchronized to play the same clock times.

Let me tell you, I could not stop watching this video!  There is so much to learn and see from it!  Two things came to my attention.  First of all, you can tell that the top and bottoms of the screen are the longest days of the year.  I think the upper left hand corner is July 29th, but I could be wrong.  Note how the middle of the screen stays dark at the beginning longer, and then becomes dark first towards the end.  Secondly, note all the fogginess at the top and bottom, which it indicative of the fog that’s typical in the San Francisco area in the summer.

Visit Ken Murphy’s project page to learn the details of the “History of the Sky” project.

 

Patricia Vollmer is a geeky meteorologist mother of two emerging geek sons, ages 6 & 9.  She spent 10 years on active duty in the U.S. Air Force and has been an AF Reservist since 2005.  Hobbies include crocheting, running, cooking, and exploring the world with her boys.  Ask her why the sky is blue at your own risk. She blogs about her Air Force family life at Ground Control to Major Mom.  The opinions expressed here are not necessarily those of the United States Air Force.    

On How I Went to a Convention, met Sarah Sidle and Spent my Next Paycheck

Category : Babies, Craft Room, Holiday Crafts, Mom Time, Paper Crafts, Photography, Technology, Toddlers

All Images: Sarah Pinault

A few weeks ago I had the chance to sit in a hall for 12 hours with like minded people, obsessing over detail and form, preoccupied with graphics and images. I tested new equipment that I now need to spend far too much money on, oh and I met Sarah Sidle. Here is my secret geek obsession, I am obsessed with Scrapbooking. I was at a “convention” known as a Crop, and Sarah Sidle just happened to be the name of a woman who won a door prize, it tickled me, probably only me!

For anyone involved in any kind of craft you know how obsessive it can get. People fight over supplies, pay top dollar for packages, scour stores for particular items – for me it’s alphabet stickers – and trade with other like minded people for just the right item. Like any hobbyist, we have our quirks, I will happily drive to three different stores because each sells the one particular brand of something that I like. JoAnn’s tends to have the good paper, Michaels has the best stickers, AC Moore has the glue dots I like. This is your mother’s comic book convention, trust me on this.

My friend Casey and I arrived half an hour late to the game, at 8.30 in the morning, it was our first time at a Crop and we were full of enthusiasm for the potential twelve hours of craft time. We both have two year old boys, so therefore have a plethora of cute pictures and not nearly enough time to organize them. Upon arrival we were blown away. The local high school cafeteria was now full of tables, 129 women and one man getting set up at individual workstations to scrap away the day. The walls were lined with benches full of Cricuts, more on that later, and the Keurig machine was going strong. The hallways were lined with vendors offering discount Crop pricing and out of stock items (including Star Wars Episode two stickers), there was even a swap table where you could leave unwanted items and take on someone else’s. There was a raffle with about a hundred  prizes, we each won one. There was an ugly page competition, where you could highlight and laugh at each other’s early, uninspired efforts. We didn’t win, our bad wasn’t bad enough. There was even a bag of goodies on the table for each of us. Chex Mix, Butterfingers and Crop specific Tote Bags. After wandering around in awe for a little while, we went back to our table to unpack and get started.

I’m a busy woman, so usually a handful of pages is all I manage in a month. I had twenty five done by the time we began cleaning up at 7.30 pm. A page in my main scrapbook, is twelve inches by twelve inches and can contain one or many photographs, I aim for at least four to a page to maximise the capacity of each album. Four photos at twenty pages an album only makes eighty pictures an album. I took about six hundred a month in the first year of Toby’s life, so it isn’t logical to stick to four a page. So far I have two, forty page albums of the first six months of his life, so I have managed to maximize my space. I know it’s still insane but I try not to judge myself too harshly.

It was an inspiring and exhausting day. I took notes from the artistry going on all around me, the different ways that one hundred and thirty like minded, but unique women, could take the same materials and create such vastly different things. It also brought me out of my shell in quite a few ways. I’m no artist, I like symmetry and order which is why I don’t tend to experiment with my scrapbooking, at the Crop however I tried out several new things, one of which included the Cricut.

Cricut by Provocraft has been around for years, and I had never wanted one. It seemed frivolous to me, much like the laptop my husband would like for his games, even though he manages perfectly well on the one he has. Then on my second day of contractions with my first son I watched an infomercial, the morphine induced coma I was coming out of at the time had nothing to do with the viewing choice, GoodFellas was next. The Cricut is an electronic die cut machine. Using changeable cartridges and keypads, you type in what you want, insert paper, and the machine then custom cuts designs and lettering for you. It was certainly an amazing machine, but I’m a lazy scrapbooker, I enjoy stickers, so the idea of having all this cardstock in need of glue just didn’t appeal to me. I even re-purposed some of my husband’s old floppy disc labels for journaling. The thing is, just as a wireless mouse can enhance your laptop experience, there are machines that can enhance your Cricut experience. That’s where the Xyron came into play. There are many machines available, I just happened to use a Xyron that day. You cut whatever you need on the Cricut, or by hand if you are that way inclined, then you crank the pieces through your Xyron and have instant sticker. To say I was amazed would be a gross understatement.

I have a toddler, a baby on the way and a full time job outside the home. I also like to read a book, write for GeekMom and crochet on occasion. Anything that saves both time and hassle, is something I’m interested in. To make my Scrapbooking easier, to finally get caught up on Toby’s baby years would be wonderful. By combining these two innovative machines, I would no longer have to wade through my two hundred sheets of alphabet stickers looking for a set that has the right lettering for the phrase I need. Now I just type, cut, and crank it out. It’s the next generation of artistic label making and I am hooked. So hooked in fact, that I have been scouring the internet since then for any signs of upcoming Cricut sales on Black Friday. FYI, I shall be at Michael’s at 4.55 on November 25th, cash in hand.

People wore scrapbooking T-shirts and comfy pants, had trash cans that clipped onto tables and were already talking about what they planned on doing at their next crop. Every single person at the crop, has an obsession with this craft to one degree or another. But whether you are new, and have a small tote full of supplies, or an old hand with a basket load, you are welcome here. Young and old, male or female, newb or master. I had quite forgotten how welcoming conventions, of any kind, could be.

 

Sarah Pinault is married to her husband but not her job, has a baby that insists on being a toddler, and keeps one foot in the British time zone despite having lived in Maine for 8 years now. She blogs about the meaning of life over at mainemummy.blogspot.com and has been a self-professed geek for well over 20 years.