How to Organize Your
Scrapbook Supplies By: Susan
Whitehead
Once you start getting any amount of
supplies together for scrapbooking, you will realize that you
have to have some way to keep everything organized. Things can
quickly get out of hand and more time will be spent just trying
to find what you need than actually putting scrap book page
layouts together! Since scrapping time is precious and often
hard to come by, I have come up with 5 inexpensive tips to keep
everything in order!
1. Invest in a good paper storage
system. I have been using an accordion file system for all my
papers. I have them separated by colors and by type, so all the
red cardstock is in one file and all the red patterned paper is
in another file. This helps reduce the amount of time I spend
looking through paper! I also have a smaller accordion file for
all the scraps I have and organize them by colors, too!
2. Eyelets and brads can be some of the
most troublesome scrap book supplies to keep in order. They
often come in little plastic bags that can’t be reused, so
unless you like them spilling all over everything, you have to
get some containers to organize them. Most craft stores sell
small boxes with dividers inside that make keeping colors and
shapes apart very simple. I also like some of the plastic screw
top containers. Or, if you are on a really tight budget, you
can take small baby food jars, spray paint the lids and use
them to keep everything nice and neat!
3. Ribbons, fibers and yarns can be such
a pain in the neck to keep from becoming one big tangled mess!
Ribbon spools can be thread onto small dowels or even pant
hangers. These methods are nice because you can see each ribbon
and cut from the spools easily. I know many people like to put
short pieces of fibers and ribbons in large canning jars. Not
only is this a good way to keep colors together, but it makes
for a nice display. One way I have used to store yarn on the
skein is by unwinding a small piece and putting the skein in a
zipper plastic bag with the unwound piece hanging out. This
makes finding the end to cut from much easier than trying to
fish it out every time.
4. Stamps can be a challenge, especially
if they aren’t the new acrylic stamps that can easily fit in
binders and other small spaces. Again, using storage boxes for
wood mounted rubber stamps and organizing by themes is a good
way to keep them organized. To make the process of finding a
specific stamp easier, just stamp each image on a piece of
paper and adhere it to the outside of the box.
5. If stickers have got you stuck, I
have the best suggestion I’ve found: the Crop in Style Paper
Sticker Binder. Not only does the binder keep all the stickers
in a zipped up unit, but it has divided pages and dividers to
keep different sizes and themes apart. Once I started using it,
it not only helped keep everything neat, but it makes it so
much easier to actually use the stickers I have! It saves you
money by not buying more of the same kinds of stickers!
I hope that these five tips can help you get a good handle on
all your supplies. All these tips are inexpensive tricks, but I
have also really enjoyed having large totes and bags to take
with me to crops. These products often have organizational
pieces integrated into themselves like bags, pen and scissor
organizers, etc.
Want a secret?? If you search some of the tool departments of
your local discount stores, you might just find a rolling
hardware tool box that will work beautifully for your scrap
book supplies. I found a great one for under $25 several years
ago and have loved it! It doesn’t have all the bells and
whistles that the ones specifically made for scrap booking do,
but it serves its purpose and I had some money left over to
invest in more scrap book supplies!
Just find a system that works well for you. You might go
through a couple systems before you find one that really works
for you, but don’t give up! The time you will save by keeping
all of your scrap book supplies in order will be worth all the
effort!
Article by:
Susan Whitehead has been scrapbooking
since the birth of her first child in 1998. Her love for the
craft has grown exponentially since then and has resulted in
her becoming a scrapbook instructor with her own online
scrapbook business. Her website is www.BarefootMemories.net and her blog is
www.scrapbookbarefoot.blogspot.com
Article source: www.ladypens.com
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