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Preserving Memories
By Patti Swoboda
Creative ways to save and share your family history.
Fit to Be Tied
The ideal album for displaying ancestral memorabilia is both safe and sophisticatedwith colors and motifs that match the mood of your ancestral memorabilia. These ribbon-bound albums' classic look complements old pictures and keepsakes perfectly:
Rag & Bone Bindery uses satin ribbon to hand-sew its albums (far left), books and journals, binding soft white acid-free pages between decorative covers. Filler strips in all of its albums prevent "yawning" once pages are filled with keepsakes and photos. Look for them at stationery stores, craft galleries and gift shops. (888) 338-8128, www.ragandbone.com
Slip a favorite photo into the front window pocket of a Kolo album, and that picture instantly becomes the star of your album cover. Accent ribbons and cloth covers are reminiscent of old-style scrapbooks, and you can choose from different colors, styles and sizes, from the 5x7-inch Vineyard Mini Photo Album ($6) to the larger 12x13-inch Newport Luxury Photo Album ($44, shown at left). (860) 547-0367, www.kolo-usa.com
Hints of Heritage
Need help preserving the elegance and romance
of those special-occasion and heritage photos?
The Sandy Clough Heritage Collection from Colorbok embraces the grace and soft style of the good old days. The nostalgic stickers, die cuts, frames and albums are perfect for embellishing life's sentimental journeys on a scrapbook page. Prices range from 50 cents to $24. (800) 366-4660, www.colorbok.com
Impressive Accents
Dry embossing is a quick and easy way to add elegance to your heritage album. All you need is a light source, a template, paper and a stylusa pen-sized tool that has a ball point on both ends, one smaller than the other. Use tape to anchor the template on top of the light source. (The light will help you see the template design through the paper.) Press the design into your paper by tracing the pattern with the stylus. When finished, turn the paper over to see the raised, embossed design. Try dry embossing as a subtle enhancement for mats and journaling, as in the pages above.
Trees for All
Traditional pedigree charts don't fit every clan, so Life Preserves designed special trees to reflect blended families' extra branches. These 81 2x11-inch fill-in-the-blank forms simplify the job of documenting all your loved ones, with selections such as Adoptive and Birth Family Tree, Single Adoptive and Birth Family Tree, Single Parent Family Tree and Step-Family Tree, as well as a traditional pedigree format. Each chart retails for 99 cents. (423) 477-5700, www.lifepreserves.com
Daily Doses of History
Add a blast from the past to your heritage pages with historical facts from online time capsules. It's fun to discover who was president when Grandma was born, or what the top songs were the year Dad graduated from high school. These free historical databases make your fact-finding mission easy:
The Time Capsule www.the-time-capsule. com displays important historical events that happened in past years on the very day you visit this site. You also may go back one day or sneak a peek at tomorrow.
You can find "What Happened On This Date" at www.angelfire.com/ma2/massmarriages/ history.html. Enter the month, day and your e-mail address, and a report will be immediately sent to your inbox. You'll receive an in-depth list of newsworthy events, births and deaths that have taken place in years past.
dMarie's time capsule www.dmarie.com/timecap lets you search specific dates as far back as 1800. You supply a year, month and day; it lists Academy Award winners, famous birthdays, popular toys and booksall kinds of trivia to pepper your heritage albums with fun facts.
Patti Swoboda is a freelance writer for the craft
industry, the author of Shape Your Memories (Krause
Publications, $10.95) and the creator of Page Flippers,
an award-winning scrapbook product.
For more great genealogy tools and tips, see the August 2002 issue of Family Tree Magazine.
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