Digital Scrapbooking Blogs

The Best Digital Scrapbooking Blogs

This lens is a catalog of digital scrapbooking blogs with the juiciest designs and richest content. Performing standard searches for blogs about digital scrapbooking yielded not very satisfying results for me. I decided to spend some time digging deeper into the Web and then list my finds here. I like to see eye-catching images so I can get an instant feel for the designer and that's something else I didn't find using standard search methods.

Just Me and Them

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The Daily Digi

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Raspberry Road Designs

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Digital Scrapbooking at Heart2Heart Designs

Great tutorials

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Shabby Miss Jenn

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Teri's Thing-O-My-Jigs

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Stacey's Scraps

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Digital Free Scrapbooking Search

Creative Busy Hands

This is a cool concept for a blog. The owner has developed a search engine that pulls all the free digital scrapbooking items available for each day and displays them on the blog.

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Iris Cottage

A page I made

Iris Cottage

I made this scrapbook page using Photoshop and some elements I bought from Eyeinspire The background is the one of the "Worn Overlays 2" .PNG files that I filled in with green. I put a transparent layer over that and filled in with a contrasting greenish/brown color, then erased some with a crackle eraser to give it a worn look. I covered that with a .PNG file from the "Embosslets 4" collection, changed the opacity to about 50% and modified it with a blue gradient fill. Then I put a .PNG file from the "Over the Edge 1" collection to add some texture to the edges (also at about a 50% opacity).

The iris photo is one of my own that I added the watercolor filter to in PS; the cottage drawing is from a Dover publication which I added the pink background to and "distressed" with the textured eraser; the butterfly is from Dover.

What Is Digital Scrapbooking?

From Wikipedia:

The advent of scanners, desktop publishing, page layout programs, and advanced printing options make it relatively easy to create professional-looking layouts in digital form. The internet allows scrapbookers to self-publish their work. Scrapbooks that exist completely in digital image form are referred to as "digital scrapbooks" or "computer scrapbooks."[18]

In recent years many artists who create Digital Scrapbooking online trade, sell, or share their works to other Digital Scrapbook fans and refer to their art craft as DigiScrappin' a shortened endearing term for Digital Scrapbooking. You will see DigiScrappin by (Artist Name) or I've been DigiScrappin for (amount )years on many personal sites as well as blogs.

While some people prefer the physicality of the actual artifacts they paste onto the pages of books, the digital scrapbooking hobby has grown in popularity in recent years.[19] Some of the advantages include a greater diversity of materials, less environmental impact, cost savings, the ability to share finished pages more readily on the internet, and the use of image editing software to experiment with manipulating page elements in multiple ways without making permanent adjustments.[20] A traditional scrapbook layout may employ a background paper with a torn edge. While a physical page can only be torn once and never restored, a digital paper can be torn and untorn with ease, allowing the scrapbooker to try out different looks without wasting supplies. When you create a digital layout, you do it in much the same way that you would a traditional layout, in that you layer papers and elements on top of one another. Some web-based digital scrapbooks include a variety of wallpapers and backgrounds to help the users create a rich visual experience. Each paper, photo, or embellishment exists on its own layer in your document, and you can reposition them at your discretion.[21]

Furthermore, digital scrapbooking is not limited to digital storage and display. Many digital scrappers print their finished layouts to be stored in scrapbook albums. Others have books professionally printed in hard bound books to be saved as keepsakes. Professional printing- and binding-services offer free software to create scrapbooks with professional layouts and individual layout capabilities. Because of the integrated design and order workflow, real hardcover bound books can be produced more cost effectively.

Early digital scrapbooks were created from digital photos uploaded to an external site. Over time, this moved to a model of downloading software onto your personal computer that will organize photos and help create the digital scrapbook on your machine. With the growth of Web 2.0 functionality, digital scrapbooking is going back online, to avoid the hassles of having to download and install PC software. The availability of cheap online storage (e.g., on Amazon's S3 service), and the desire to leverage pre-uploaded online albums (e.g., on Yahoo's Flickr) make it more convenient for users to directly compose their digital scrapbooks online. Print on demand fulfillment enables such digital scrapbooks to effectively supplant traditional scrapbooks.

Digital scrapbooking has advanced to the point where digital scrapbook layouts may be made entirely online using Web-based software. Users upload their photos, create a digital scrapbook layout using a Web page and digital scrapbook graphics. The layout can then be downloaded as a low-resolution JPEG file for sharing on the Web or as a high-resolution JPEG file for printing.

Image courtesy of scrapbit on Flickr.

Books for More Ideas

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Digital Scrapbooking Videos

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Photoshop Elements 9

A popular software for digital scrapbooking

Adobe Photoshop Elements 9 (Win/Mac) [OLD VERSION]

Amazon Price: $57.95 (as of 05/31/2012)Buy Now

I use the full version of Photoshop but I have owned Elements and I can see how it would have been easier to start with. Things like shadows and embossing are more automated. You can get a shadow with a click of a button. There are ways to manually do things, too, although with not quite as many options as full Photoshop. The price is definitely more reasonable than the full version, however. If I was going to start all over again with having to learn from scratch I'd start with Elements.

Photos for Inspiration

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Inspired?

Leave me a comment...

  • coni43 Aug 4, 2011 @ 3:34 pm | delete
    Lovely site! Lots of info. I've just started my Squidoo site. You have done a great job here!
  • Lyndsey at Cyneman Vyne Design Dec 10, 2010 @ 6:50 pm | delete
    Hi! I have a new site www.digiscrapscv.com (opened October 2010) and a new blog as well www.cynemanvyne.blogspot.com please check them out. And keep in mind how new we are! lol Thanks
  • SpellOutloud Sep 28, 2009 @ 11:35 pm | delete
    I'm an avid digital scrapbooker and I always love to find others who enjoy this hobby like I do. Nice lens.
  • CastleRoy Aug 2, 2009 @ 10:02 am | delete
    wonderful lens 5 stars i love scrapbooking lenrollin to my scrapbook lens great work
  • MagicBeanDip Jun 16, 2009 @ 4:29 pm | delete
    Fun stuff! 5*
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