Category: project life

  • project life 2014 : weeks 47 – 48 (& a blog update)

    Popping in to share a Project Life spread with you today. But before that, let me give you a little blog update…

    The season of life where I am able to post daily is over for the foreseeable future. Work is busy, Liam is mobile, and other personal projects need to take precedence when I do get spare time. So my aim is to post here 2-3 times per week, but it won’t be scheduled.

    You can expect similar content as always: thoughts on motherhood & life updates, tips for working moms, goal setting, memory keeping projects, creative pursuits, natural health topics, things I love, and thoughts on books & reading. Basically anything I’m up to or interested in. :)

    So now onto Project Life, one thing I’m going to keep up with for sure and continue to share.

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    This spread was from November 17 to 30 and included Thanksgiving. I decided right away to do an insert for the holiday so I wouldn’t be jamming in the photos.

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    On the left side I have Liam’s 10-month update, a few cute snapshots, and journaling about one of our Saturdays.

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    Then on the right is a photo from David’s grandfather’s second 90th birthday family dinner, a selfie of me & Liam, Meredith at the dentist, and her posing outside. The journaling is more on dealing with Liam’s constant sickness (although thankfully he has remained well for the last week!).

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    I like this cute card and the sentiment “happy thoughts” was what I wanted to have regarding the situation. :)

    Now onto the Thanksgiving insert:

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    For a title I just stamped onto cardstock and adhered it to a photo of our tabletop. Simple journaling about the day underneath, then a picture of the whole extended family.

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    The back is just more cute photos of the kids. Little details:

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    Here I stamped on a label and put it directly on the page protector.

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    And I added a tab like I do with all my inserts.

    That’s that! I was wondering, what are your memory-keeping plans for 2015? Anyone thinking of starting for the first time?

  • project life 2014 : weeks 45 – 46 (+ my plans for 2015 & other creative updates)

    I hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving! Ours was very full but so much fun and the kids did great.

    Today I am home with the kiddos and the plan is to get our Christmas decorations up. It might be a 3-day process with a crawling, teething baby and a preschooler who wants to “help” around, but I’m determined to have fun. We have holiday movies lined up and nutrition is kind of out the window for the day. I might venture out to the craft store at some point, but only if I get up the nerve. :)

    I just wanted to share my most recent project life spread with you, and talk a little bit about my plans for next year!

    project life weeks 45-56 : kapachino

    These weeks are from November 3 – 16. This was right after week in the life, and I was kind of worn out with photographing so I had very limited photos to work with. It was kind of fun to get some extra journaling and filler cards in though.

    project life weeks 45-56 : kapachino

    This photo of Meredith with her cousin Cameron is one of my favorites. They look soooo adorable. I hope they stay such good friends as they grow up (ditto for all of the cousins).

    project life weeks 45-56 : kapachino

    I’m really falling for wood veneers like this little heart, below. They are very popular in the scrapbooking world and I see why. I’m not very big into embellishments, but these are my style.

    project life weeks 45-56 : kapachino

    project life weeks 45-56 : kapachino

    I used some of the seafoam core kit, which I haven’t used in a long time. I forgot how much I like some of it.

    project life weeks 45-56 : kapachino

    We went to a kids’ birthday party and Meredith was so scared of this giant slide at first. But after observing awhile and then trying out some smaller slides with the help of some bigger kids, she finally conquered the big slide and was going down backwards by the end. That little story is so typical of her and I loved this sequence of photos.

    project life weeks 45-56 : kapachino

    A picture of her nursing her baby doll. :) Another wood veneer that I love.

    project life weeks 45-56 : kapachino

    And just a little update on Liam’s health. During this entire time he was either sick or recovering from being sick and we saw a couple of doctors. I repeated that “hello” stamp several times during the whole spread and I liked that technique.

    project life weeks 45-56 : kapachino

    So I am still caught up on this project and I love this whole album a lot. It’s that time of year when it’s a good idea to start evaluating how I want to approach it next year. This may be boring, but I actually don’t think I’m going to change anything. Here are my reasons:

    • I’ve stayed caught up this whole year, so obviously my current approach is working.
    • When I look through the album, I really like the simple, consistent, neutral spreads. The stories shine through and our life is documented.
    • I have other projects that I can get more creative with if I feel the urge – like week in the life and my holiday minibook, for starters.
    • The 12×12 size is excellent for getting two weeks’ worth in, and it tells a good story.
    • Life is too crazy right now for me to change anything up, and overall I feel very satisfied with it!

    As for my other mini album projects – they are on my mind a lot but not much work is getting done since Liam’s been sick and the holidays are here. I have my title page done for week in the life, and I’m currently trying to decide exactly how I’m going to approach December daily (or a holiday minibook). I think I’ll have to take a personal day at some point (when I earn back enough PTO) to work on this stuff as it’s not baby/toddler-friendly!

    Other than that, I just finished the advent calendar! I’m very excited about it. I’ll share more soon. Most of my Christmas shopping is done, and wrapping is on the agenda this weekend as well as ordering our holiday cards.

    Happy long weekend! How are you going to spend it?

  • project life 2014 : weeks 43 – 44

    project life weeks 43-44 : kapachino

    Weeks 43 – 44 is from October 20 to November 2. I think this is one of my simplest spreads yet. I didn’t have much time to physically put it together so I did a little more digital work ahead of time (using Paislee Press templates and planning with the Project Life app). The only embellishments are a few stamps.

    project life weeks 43-44 : kapachino

    I just adore this picture of the kids smiling at each other.

    project life weeks 43-44 : kapachino

    The first week was a fairly normal week. Other than my standard “week in review” the only journaling I did was an update on Liam’s health.

    project life weeks 43-44 : kapachino

    The second week was week in the life. I decided to just include two of my favorite photos from that week (the one of the whole family and one from Halloween) as well as the QR code which links to Liam crawling for the first time. The three other photos are from the first week, and the handwritten journaling was about the crazy overbooked weekend we had.

    project life weeks 43-44 : kapachino

    project life weeks 43-44 : kapachino

    Then instead of a day-by-day “week in review” I changed the title of the card to “week in the life” and wrote an overview of that project. I mentioned that there will be a separate album for that week, for future reference.

    project life weeks 43-44 : kapachino

    project life weeks 43-44 : kapachino

    I do love the simplicity of this spread! I intend to keep my Project Life layouts this way, and then I will do more playing and embellishing with minibooks and other projects.

    I can’t wait to start working on my week in the life album. My supplies are taunting me every time I look at them, but I just haven’t had time to start, other than editing my photos! Hopefully soon though!

  • project life 2014 : weeks 41 – 42

    Here is my Project Life spread from October 6 -19. It has a hint of fall to it (even though we are still nearing 90 degrees daily, but let’s not go there).

    project life, weeks 41-42 : kapachino

    I wanted to mark the season somehow, so I put a photo of our fall mantel right at the top center. The rest of the left-hand side is mostly updates on Liam. On the longer journaling card I wrote kind of an overview of the two weeks.

    project life, weeks 41-42 : kapachino

    project life, weeks 41-42 : kapachino

    project life, weeks 41-42 : kapachino

    On the right-hand side are a few pictures from our trip to the pumpkin patch, and a few everyday photos.

    project life, weeks 41-42 : kapachino

    I have fun making my own filler cards when needed, but I usually end up doing something super simple like this, below. I think that’s how I want my Project Life spreads to stay, and then I’ll play around more with paper and embellishments on the minibooks I do.

    (As far as minibooks, I want to keep doing one for each holiday season, as well as any eventual vacations we take. I’m also going to do one for week in the life, and probably special events like Liam’s first birthday.)

    project life, weeks 41-42 : kapachino

    The photo of Liam sleeping while sucking his thumb is one of my all-time faves.

    project life, weeks 41-42 : kapachino

    project life, weeks 41-42 : kapachino

    And that’s it! Sometimes this is my only hands-on creative outlet for weeks on end, and I love that I have it.

  • the project life app : a detailed review

    project life app review

    Y’all know how much I love Project Life if you’ve been reading for any length of time. Well, if you haven’t heard – there is now a Project Life app! It’s $2.99 for iPhone and iPad. At first I wasn’t sure that I would really use it. After all, I like to have a physical album. But in the end I couldn’t resist purchasing it, and today I want to give you the lowdown on what it’s actually like and ideas for using it.

    Let’s go screen by screen to see what it does!

    project life app review: screen 1

    When you first open the app, you have the choice to watch an intro video or not. Later, the video doesn’t open but you can find it in the info section. The above left screen shot is the standard opening screen, and from there you have four options, which are very clear.

    Above right, you’ll see what it looks like when you open the library. It saves your in progress pages and collages, completed pages, and completed collages (we’ll get to those in a minute). Something is saved as in progress when you X out of the screen and there is at least one blank spot there. It is saved as completed if all the spots are filled, regardless if you still wanted to make changes or not. Tapping “more options” allows you to sort things by different dates.

    Also in the library you can view all the kits available to you with their contents, and view/purchase new kits. With a future update, you will also be able to order prints from here.

    On to the heart of the app, making a page.

    project life app review make a page

    Making a page

    So when you open up the “make a page” template, you have the option to customize a few things. You can choose the kit you’re working with (or color palette, shown above right). The app comes free with Kraft, Midnight, Strawberry, and School-Themed kits. So if you don’t like any of those, be aware that you’ll have to purchase what you want (cards and kits are either $0.99 or $1.99 depending on how much is included). Thankfully I use Midnight almost exclusively these days!

    You can also customize the background of your page layout to a different color, whether you want rounded or square corners, and the layout of the page itself. It comes free with most standard layouts, and then there are three extra layout packs you can buy for $0.99 each. (Popular page layouts that aren’t included free are: Design F, Design H, and Design E.)

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    Journal and filler cards

    So then you tap on the space that you want to edit. You can choose to fill it with a photo or a journal card. When you tap the journal card icon, it takes you to your kits and you can pick any card you want, from any edition. You can use a combination of kits on the same page as well. Here, I chose a title card from the Midnight edition, and on the right you can see it zoomed out.

    project life app review journaling and fonts

    On any journal card that has space to write, you can tap on it and open the keyboard to write. In the above right screenshot, you can see the options you have for editing the text. You can change the font color, the font itself (there are eight options there), the size, line spacing, how much space is above the journaling (vertical offset), and the justification.

    A couple things I want to mention: you can only add text on specific areas of the journal cards that allow it. It’s not free text anywhere, and you can’t move it around super creatively. Also, some of the journal cards that have white space are categorized as “filler cards” and so you can’t write on them. And some of the journal cards have title spaces that aren’t editable, and without adding text there, it looks kind of funny. Examples:

    project life app review filler cards

    Above left is a “filler” card that doesn’t allow text editing, but obviously it needs it. Above right you are unable to add text to the white box at the top. I’m hopeful that they’ll fix these issues in future updates.

    project life app review adding photos

    Adding photos

    If you choose to add a photo, it opens up your albums on your phone. You can do some basic editing of the photo right there as well: brightness, contrast, saturation, and rotating. You can’t add text to your photos, so if you want that you’ll have to do it beforehand using another program or app.

    Another cool option is to add an item from Dropbox. To do this you have to have a Dropbox account and have the app installed on your phone. If you want to use your own custom cards, this is how you’d do that. I used it to insert the week in review cards I use on each spread.

    Once you have your photos and cards in place, you can move them around by dragging and dropping. They just switch places. It’s very easy.

    Uses for the Project Life app

    1. Comprehensive memory-keeping. One obvious use for the app is to make a page on it, export it as either an 8×8 or 12×12, and then either save your pages up to make into a bound photobook, or print them and slide them into page protectors. You could easily do all your scrapbooking with this app and have gorgeous books to show for it.

    2. Planning your physical pages. So far, this is how I’m using it and it’s saving me a ton of time. I can start planning my pages ahead of time in the few minutes here and there I have to spare (even with my kids around) and then when it’s time to make the physical page it takes half the time.

    project life app planning

    On the left: my planned page. On the right: my actual page. 

    3. Inserts. If you do physical Project Life albums and want to stick with that (I do, for now) you still might want to consider printing out pages from the app for inserts. It just might be easier to get more photos in or to get the layout you want, especially if you don’t have a variety of page protectors.

    4. Special events or traveling. If you have a big event you want to document in addition to your regular spreads, you might think about using this to make a mini photobook instead. It would also be perfect for traveling because you can work on it as you go.

    So what do I think?

    I think it’s a really neat app that does a whole lot for a low price. I love having it to plan and I look forward to using it for inserts and other occasions. One of my friends is considering switching over to using it exclusively.

    It’s not a substitute for Photoshop if you like stuff truly customized, but with the Dropbox feature and using other apps to edit photos you can get your spreads pretty close to exactly what you want.

    So have you seen or tried the Project Life app? Could you see yourself using something like this for memory keeping?