I lifted this from another web site BB I visit! THought it was cute
A Scrapbookers Rights
A Scrapbooker is entrusted with documenting and safely preserving family
photos in an album to be treasured by future generations. Creating a
Scrapbook is an honorable and important task. As a Scrapbooker, you are
entitled (but not limited) to the following rights:
You have the right to take as long as you want to complete one album page.
This may be five minutes or two weeks.
You have the right to purchase a certain scrapbook item for no other reason
than because
a) you like it
b) you think it's cute
c) you'll never find it again
d) you know you'll use it someday.
You have the right to a workspace of your own. This may be the basement,
your college student's old bedroom, or the kitchen table. It's yours.
You have the right to scrapbook when inspiration strikes--whether the
dishes are done or not.
You have the right to request peaceful, kid-free, stress-less scrap
time--guilt-free.
You have the right to create pages that reflect and celebrate the spirit of
the one person who is usually NOT in the photograph: You.
You have the right to put whatever you want on your album page. This
includes, but is not limited to: patterned papers, die-cuts, stickers and
Punch-Outs. You may place as many or as few photos per page as you deem
appropriate.
You have the right to do nothing more than snack and socialize at a 6-hour
cropping party.
You have the right to value your personal scrapbooking style to be as
important as your photographs. You are creating a treasure-and part of that
treasure is you.
You have the right to create your own legacy, one page at a time.
Author, Unknown
A Scrapbookers Rights
A Scrapbooker is entrusted with documenting and safely preserving family
photos in an album to be treasured by future generations. Creating a
Scrapbook is an honorable and important task. As a Scrapbooker, you are
entitled (but not limited) to the following rights:
You have the right to take as long as you want to complete one album page.
This may be five minutes or two weeks.
You have the right to purchase a certain scrapbook item for no other reason
than because
a) you like it
b) you think it's cute
c) you'll never find it again
d) you know you'll use it someday.
You have the right to a workspace of your own. This may be the basement,
your college student's old bedroom, or the kitchen table. It's yours.
You have the right to scrapbook when inspiration strikes--whether the
dishes are done or not.
You have the right to request peaceful, kid-free, stress-less scrap
time--guilt-free.
You have the right to create pages that reflect and celebrate the spirit of
the one person who is usually NOT in the photograph: You.
You have the right to put whatever you want on your album page. This
includes, but is not limited to: patterned papers, die-cuts, stickers and
Punch-Outs. You may place as many or as few photos per page as you deem
appropriate.
You have the right to do nothing more than snack and socialize at a 6-hour
cropping party.
You have the right to value your personal scrapbooking style to be as
important as your photographs. You are creating a treasure-and part of that
treasure is you.
You have the right to create your own legacy, one page at a time.
Author, Unknown