INTRODUCTION:
Traditional
VS Digital
Using
Microsoft Word 2007
Scanning
Too big for
the scanner?
What you need
No scissors, no glue, no
pen!
Necessary
Equipment
Internet
Connection
HOW TO
Scrapbooking with
Word 2007:
Starting a page
Adding Background Color
Adding a Page Border
Adding a Background Picture
Before you add your picture
Add a photo
Resizing or tilting your
photo
Cropping your photo
Sample of a
Scrapbook Page
Created in Word 2007
Traditional family photo albums were a place we put our photographs when they came back from the developer. We didn't cut our pictures into funny shapes or think about our photo book pages being acid free. Then came the Scrapbooking craze, and a new industry and hobby emerged. We started looking at our pictures differently, how they were handled and how the pictures were presented.

I’ve always taken a lot of pictures, beginning when I was a child.
My mother also took a lot of photographs, and they were carefully stored
away in boxes. The only time we ever seemed to actually see her
pictures, was immediately after they came back from the developer.
She always intended to get them into albums, yet that day never seemed
to come.
I vowed, that unlike my mother, I would faithfully place my
photographs into albums the minute they came back from the developer,
which would make them much more assessable for viewing. And so I
did, right up into my own children’s early childhood.
The albums or
scrapbooks that were popular back then were sticky backed
cardboard pages, with peel back magnetic like clear sheet protectors.
I was very smug about my diligence, until one day, I heard about a new
company called Creative Memories Scrapbooks, and a crafty concept for displaying
your photographs, called scrapbooking.
With the scrapbooking
craze came buzz words, like acid-free paper. Scrapbooking was more
than a craft, it was a mission in photo preservation, spreading the word
on the evils of those old time albums. We were told that attaching our
pictures to paper that was not acid-free would turn them yellow, cause
premature aging and fading.
I started looking though
my albums, and sure enough, my treasured photos were turning yellow and
fading. My mother, on the other hand, had photos much older than
mine, and in far better shape. The reason? Hers had never
made it to an album.
I began tearing apart my
albums and boxing up my pictures, hoping to rescue them before they were
damaged further. My ultimate goal was to re-album the pictures in
healthier acid-free books.
Scrapbooking was more
than just placing photos in an acid-free book, it encouraged the use of
stickers, interesting text and embellishments. It also encouraged
cropping photos or cutting them into creative shapes.