{Clutter-Free Challenge} Day 23
Time Needed: 45 minutes - 2 hours
Physical Rating: Light Duty
Emotional Rating: MINIMAL!!!
Please trust me when I say this one will be easy- no hard decisions to make at all!
As a mother of three truly artsy kiddos, I used to struggle with what to do with everything they made. No parent ever feels good about throwing out their child's artwork, but who has the room to store everything they've ever made? By the time my oldest was 6 we had boxes and files and drawers full of her stuff. It was borderline obscene how much artwork we had. Then one day I decided to face my demons head on. Get rid of it all?!! No way! I wasn't that brave, but I did spend about an hour snapping photos of all the art. I saved a few really awesome pieces and put the rest in the trash GUILT-FREE!
What did I do with the photos? Did you see my hard drive stats?! Lol. Seriously though, I created an artwork folder on my desktop and categorized it by artist and further broke it down by what age the art was made.
Here's one of my favorites, made by Aislin when she was 3 1/2.
(You might want to click on it to see all the details.)
- The Cake - see the cake on the lower right-hand side with the single candle on it? See how the top is round and the layers of frosting mimic the curve?! WOW!
- Caleb- Seriously how sweet is that drawing?
- The Eggsack - I'm sure if a psychologist got their hands on this they'd point out that because I am small and located conveniently under an eggsack that there are some issues there, but I find it absolutely hilarious. Somewhat disturbing though, is the knife-looking object just to the left of Aislin along with a headstone looking object next to Caleb and flowers everywhere...? Ummmm... on second thought, let's call that psychologist!
- The Title - When I asked Aislin who the drawing was for she said "It's for everyone. Just write: 'To Everyone: I made wonderful pictures. Love, Aislin' ok, mom?"
Here's another good one:
Let's just call this one a butterfly... Hahahahahaah.
Here's a font that she doodled on the back of an envelope when she was 6.
Here's one from Caleb's first day at pre-school:
"Me Caleb" and his drawing is of "A Monster" A little bit of a warning to his teachers?!
"What do you see?"
Caleb, my future psychoanalyst! (I see a Storm Trooper helmet, by the way... what do you think that means?)
So now what? All the art just sits on your computer forever?
NOPE. C'mon, you know me better than that!
Use a photo service to create art gallery books! You can create a yearly book with all of your children's art in it, or create separate books for each child each year, or save all your artwork photos and make a book for each kiddo on a certain milestone- maybe their 16th birthday? (A great time to embarrass them with it and secretly impress them!)
Here are some options for creating photobooks:
Picaboo - I'm seriously obsessed with Picaboo. Ever since my sister Jena recommended it, I've been hooked. Every year we make photo memory books for our parents for Christmas and we keep one for ourselves as well.
What I like:
- Super easy to use - Just download their free software and start creating projects. I like that once you upload photos into the program they are always available.
- Extremely Customizable - Choose the type of book you want, layout style of the pages, backgrounds, etc. Everything is available right from their dashboard. Awesome backgrounds to choose from, fonts, photo editing right within the program... seriously amazing.
- High Quality - Looks like a book you would buy in a bookstore. You can choose to have a custom photo cover, or a canvas frame cover, or even real leather if you're feeling fancy!
- Great Price - Although the prices seem the same as other sites, I have NEVER paid full price for my books. They are always offering a "Buy one, get one" deal or 30% off, or free shipping.
I can't rave about them enough! If for some reason you want to look around, there are many others to choose from:
Inkubook is a company devoted to preserving memories with photobooks. The photobooks start at $9.95 for a 20-page soft cover book. They also do wall calendars!
Snapfish - I get mixed reviews from friends on Snapfish... some rave and some RANT! I have never used them so I cannot speak from experience, but they are another resource here.
Shutterfly - Their prices are a bit higher than Snapfish and Picaboo, but I've heard only good things about them and they always seem to have good deals :) I have only used them for prints ONCE and they were great!
Lulu - What's different here is that you can publish and sell your work! Maybe your child is trying to raise money for a charity like my little friend Ella from "Ella's Ipads" or maybe you have great recipes and you'd like to create and sell your own Recipe Book, or maybe you are a photographer and you'd like to create and sell a coffee table book... Lulu is definitely the way to go :)
Whichever company you go with, the end result will be priceless! How much would you love to have a photobook of all the silly art you made and poems you wrote and love notes your parents found? Your kiddos will thank you for it. I'd love to hear about it. I'd also LOVE to see some hilarious artwork made by your kiddos/grandbabies/ nieces and nephews!!! Aren't you glad I didn't pressure you to toughen up and throw it all out?! I would never. Not on this one anyway!