Olden days
Olden days
My graduation photo from 1976.
1976. I was 19 years old and pregnant with Cara (didn’t know it yet!).
1976. I was 19 years old and pregnant with Cara (didn’t know it yet!).
Pam Cook #48
Re: Olden days
Wow at 19 you were already a nurse! I love this of you and so glad you’ve scrapped this.
FARLEY in Sacramento
Re: Olden days
Lovely page. Did you tuck those comments you shared with us on the page somewhere - about being 19 years old and already pregnant? Geez, I sound like the journaling police...
Re: Olden days
I haven't done any journaling on it yet. It was all I could do to scrapbook it last night. I'll eventually do it though.
Pam Cook #48
Re: Olden days
Pam this is a great layout, and I agree with the journaling police here. LOL. You'll always look at that photo and know how old you were and that you were about to get some surprise news, but that photo represents a truly life-altering time. I often have a hard time getting the journaling in, but I also know if I don't do it right away, I may never come back to it. Sometimes if I think the journaling will take away from the look of the page, I'll just write it on the back, and write down on the bottom corner "more to see on the back" in small print. I've also done this with stories that weren't meant to be read by anyone flipping through looking at photos, but for my kids in 20-30 years, when they're really absorbing the story of us, they might like to know what was on my mind at the time. I've also written a lot of negative emotions down on the back of layouts. Scrapbooking really is better than therapy.Keitha wrote:Lovely page. Did you tuck those comments you shared with us on the page somewhere - about being 19 years old and already pregnant? Geez, I sound like the journaling police...
Julie Fugina
#26 in the order of the PAO
#26 in the order of the PAO
Re: Olden days
Way better than therapy!jfugina wrote:Pam this is a great layout, and I agree with the journaling police here. LOL. You'll always look at that photo and know how old you were and that you were about to get some surprise news, but that photo represents a truly life-altering time. I often have a hard time getting the journaling in, but I also know if I don't do it right away, I may never come back to it. Sometimes if I think the journaling will take away from the look of the page, I'll just write it on the back, and write down on the bottom corner "more to see on the back" in small print. I've also done this with stories that weren't meant to be read by anyone flipping through looking at photos, but for my kids in 20-30 years, when they're really absorbing the story of us, they might like to know what was on my mind at the time. I've also written a lot of negative emotions down on the back of layouts. Scrapbooking really is better than therapy.Keitha wrote:Lovely page. Did you tuck those comments you shared with us on the page somewhere - about being 19 years old and already pregnant? Geez, I sound like the journaling police...
Pam Cook #48
Re: Olden days
Aww...how lovely. What a great memory.
19 years old, a nurse and pregnant...that gives one pause. Way to burst onto the adult scene as a force to be reckoned with! You did okay Pam!
19 years old, a nurse and pregnant...that gives one pause. Way to burst onto the adult scene as a force to be reckoned with! You did okay Pam!
Pat from NW OHIO
Midwest, USA
Midwest, USA
Re: Olden days
What a beautiful photo Pam. You certainly captured some poignant memories with your delightful layout.
Kathryn.
Kathryn.
Re: Olden days
pat-czap wrote:Aww...how lovely. What a great memory.
19 years old, a nurse and pregnant...that gives one pause. Way to burst onto the adult scene as a force to be reckoned with! You did okay Pam!
Well said Pat!
FARLEY in Sacramento
Re: Olden days
You don't want to know what I was doing at 19 years old...not much to further myself. I was without direction, and just stayed home or went to work at McDonald's where I had worked for a few years by then. I did go to Beauty School about this time and got my license, then I went to college for a degree in medical records. I was a late bloomer.paddlegal wrote:pat-czap wrote:Aww...how lovely. What a great memory.
19 years old, a nurse and pregnant...that gives one pause. Way to burst onto the adult scene as a force to be reckoned with! You did okay Pam!
Well said Pat!
Not having the push from home to go to college was a temporary blip on my path, but That's another story.
THAT is why I am impressed by Pam's journey, and those people who just knew what they wanted from life.
Pat from NW OHIO
Midwest, USA
Midwest, USA
Re: Olden days
Great picture. I'm glad you saved it. I don't have many pictures of me when I was young. I do have my wedding album. Married at 17.
Laurie
Laurie
Laurie Bennett #118 on POA
North Carolina
North Carolina
Re: Olden days
I love seeing these old photos being scrapped. And, yes, get that journaling somewhere on there or on the back with a note as Julie suggests. Otherwise, it's "just" a photo. Tell your story, too!
Re: Olden days
Great layout. I agree with the journaling. You know you were 19 and pregnant, but in 40 years when your great-grandchildren are looking at that picture they won't know that.
I am a huge journaler. If you look at my paper pages, you will sometimes notice a tab sticking out of the top of a picture - that's where I hide my monologue. I found that was a great way to tell the complete story of the pictures and still leave the pictures as front and center.
My digi pages sometimes have a blocked area for journaling (the beauty of digi is, it doesn't have to be large). If not that, then the title says something and I always include dates.
I kind of think of scrapbooking as therapy for me and history for my family.
And one other thing - do include your own handwriting sometimes. My grandmother (and mother) both had the most beautiful handwriting. I cherish the few things I have that were handwritten by them.
I am a huge journaler. If you look at my paper pages, you will sometimes notice a tab sticking out of the top of a picture - that's where I hide my monologue. I found that was a great way to tell the complete story of the pictures and still leave the pictures as front and center.
My digi pages sometimes have a blocked area for journaling (the beauty of digi is, it doesn't have to be large). If not that, then the title says something and I always include dates.
I kind of think of scrapbooking as therapy for me and history for my family.
And one other thing - do include your own handwriting sometimes. My grandmother (and mother) both had the most beautiful handwriting. I cherish the few things I have that were handwritten by them.