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>Home>Craft Ideas>Scrapbooking>Scrapbooking on a Budget
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1.Be on the lookout for scrapbooking supplies everywhere you go.
I once made the cutest shabby chic card with the corrugated cardboard liner from a light bulb box.Another example: you can buy 100 brass brads for less than a dollar at the local discount store and then customize them to match your layout with acrylic paint and/or sandpaper.
Or look in the clearance bin for ribbon, fiber, and fabric remnants - or bouquets of silk flowers, which you can take apart and attach to your cards and layouts with brads, eyelets, bottle caps, or buttons.
You'll find all kinds of treasures at office supply, hardware, and dollar stores, as well as flea markets and garage sales.
2. Keep your supplies organized.
When your papers and embellishments are logically arranged and easy to find, you'll always know what you have, which means you'll buy fewer duplicates.And you don't need expensive racks for storing your paper. The large 14" Ziploc bags are perfect for storing 12x12 paper. You can even hang the labeled Ziploc bags from skirt hangers to maximize your space.
A few inexpensive baskets or plastic containers can hold your adhesives, pens and trimmers. And a common tacklebox is great for small embellishments.
Or use resealable Ziploc bags to organize brads, eyelets and other small embellishments by type or color and store them in a shoebox.
3. Join a scrapbooking direct sales company
Here's a little known secret. You can join a scrapbooking direct sales company, simply to get the discount on your own supplies. Of course, you'll need to make sure the monthly minimums are low enough that you'll be able to meet them with your purchases alone.Here is one such company with monthly minimums of just $25 wholesale per month. Click here for details.
4. Use your scanner to create a unique patterned paper, perfect for your layout
Scan items of clothing, for example, that match the clothing in your photographs. Print the paper and use as part of your background or as a tag or other embellishment.
5. Find Free Fonts and Layouts
Do a search for "free fonts" and "free scrapbooking." You'll find thousands of free templates, fonts, and other free resources for scrapbookers.
6. Look for coupons and discounts
Check your local paper for 50% off coupons at large discount crafting stores. Save these coupons for your larger purchases.Subscribe to Joann.com's email This store frequently offers special discount codes to newsletter subscribers.
But keep in mind, when you are shopping the sale aisle, a good deal is not a good deal if you never use the product. Buy only those things that you love - and know you'll use.
7. Buy quality tools
When shopping for tools, keep quality and versatility in mind.
Investing in quality tools will ultimately save you money, because you won't need to replace them very often. You'll also want to look for trimmers and cutters that allow you to replace only the blade - and not the entire cutting system. The
Coluzzle,
by Provocraft, is one of the
most versatile cutting systems available.
It takes a little practice, but once you get the hang of it, you can cut a huge variety of shapes and alphabets, as well as envelopes and tags - all with very inexpensive templates.
8. Save and organize your scraps
It's amazing when a small scrap is perfectly suited for a card of scrapbook. And you can always use the backside of white-core card stock or patterned paper when you need white.Or give your scraps to your children. My kids are constantly making friendship cards out of my scraps. They each have a basket on the family scraptable, and at the end of a project, I divvy up all my scraps in the three little baskets.
They love the new art supplies, and I love to share my love of scrapbooking - and my time spent scrapbooking - with them.
9. Network with other scrapbookers for more low-cost ideas
Arrange a supplies swap with your scrapbooking friends. And read through the scrapbooking magazines for more money-saving ideas. In the last few issues of Scrapbooks, Etc. and Memory Makers, for example, I've read (and then used) the following ideas:(1) Take photos of interesting signs and cut out the letters for fun, eclectic alphabets. And (2) make your own stamps from your favorite font or images with a computer printout and some foam board.
Subscribe to these magazines at significant discounts.
Or see if you can check out current issues from your local library.
Scrapbooking magazines often feature sweepstakes, drawings, and layout contests, in which you can win free supplies, as well.
Copyright 2005 by Susie Cortright
About the Author:
Susie Cortright is the founder of MomScape.com
devoted to helping visitors record and preserve their cherished memories.
Recommended Reading
These books are excellent resources for scrapbookers. They contain lots of new and original designs and ideas.
Outstanding Scrapbook Pages: 250 Of the Best Pages and Techniques from the World's #1 Scrapbooking Magazine
Special-Effects Scrapbooking: Creative Techniques for Scrapbookers at All Levels (Crafts Highlights)
Creative Memories : The 10 Timeless Principles Behind the Company that Pioneered the Scrapbooking Industry

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