FantasticDisFamily
<font color=navy>Sent <font color=red>on a <font c
- Joined
- Jul 26, 2002
- Messages
- 3,061
I was driving to work this morning and started thinking about some of my existing "albums" that I should scrap. (I have ~40 minutes each way so I have WAY too much time to think
)
Although not really at the top of my list of scrapping priorities I keep coming back to my informal wedding pictures. My mom put together two albums of pictures starting with me receiving my engagement ring, documenting all of the festivities from gown shopping to showers, etc and ending up with the "pranks" our attendants pulled on our house while we were gone. When we had developed the pictures of our honeymoon we added those to the end of the second book. She even went so far as to write little captions on pieces of paper and place those throughout.
This was 20 years ago and no one really knew much about archival acid free, etc. And this was an unusual activity for mom too. I really treasure these and because of that am concerned about leaving them in these old, inexpensive, glue strip type albums. I know the captions are just fine point marker on regular "typing" paper. But I also don't want to lose the layouts and captions mom did. Her health is poor and when I was talking to my dad over the weekend he was mentioning that her arthritis has become so bad she can't even fill out a check when she has her hair done anymore so having her rewrite the captions on card stock isn't an option.
Any thoughts? Ideas?
TIA
Deb

Although not really at the top of my list of scrapping priorities I keep coming back to my informal wedding pictures. My mom put together two albums of pictures starting with me receiving my engagement ring, documenting all of the festivities from gown shopping to showers, etc and ending up with the "pranks" our attendants pulled on our house while we were gone. When we had developed the pictures of our honeymoon we added those to the end of the second book. She even went so far as to write little captions on pieces of paper and place those throughout.
This was 20 years ago and no one really knew much about archival acid free, etc. And this was an unusual activity for mom too. I really treasure these and because of that am concerned about leaving them in these old, inexpensive, glue strip type albums. I know the captions are just fine point marker on regular "typing" paper. But I also don't want to lose the layouts and captions mom did. Her health is poor and when I was talking to my dad over the weekend he was mentioning that her arthritis has become so bad she can't even fill out a check when she has her hair done anymore so having her rewrite the captions on card stock isn't an option.
Any thoughts? Ideas?
TIA
Deb