Childhood Memories (or older stories)

littlekiwi

I charge by the hour for anything before noon
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Jan 21, 2012
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I am in a predicament where I don't have many photos if any of my childhood but I want to get my stories down somehow in a creative way. How would you approach it? I'd love to find some photos that would represent the stories but whether that is doable I'm not sure
 
I would write the story then search the internet for photos of places or things or people associated with your story. If you don’t find anything on the internet then you can search for scrap products to coordinate with your story. You can also make it creative by adding highlights, word art, etc within your writing. Hope this helps!
 
Agree with @umyesh. I did some layouts for a workshop elsewhere and didn't have photos for a couple of them but had stories. I ended up finding images from the internet that I could use. Elements depicting things in the stories and word arts are great additions to the stories.

Look at art journaling layouts as well. I've seen some good ones posted here that tell stories without photos.
 
I went and found some examples to document with my tips for childhood documenting. Maybe it'll inspire you?

1. No photos: I used the witch element to tell the story of my grandma and her broom present. It's a funny, silly story, so the cute witch fits.

No photos, lots of journaling: I used a few elements, but a lot of word art to go with the scrapping theme. But the page is really focused on the journaling. This would work for many stories. Hospital stay? A few hospital elements, and the story as the main focus.

No photos, the elements again highlight the story. This is about my love for Princess Belle. I could have used a photo from the Internet, but I like the journal cards because to me, it keeps the focus on the words and doesn't become another Disney page.


2. Stand in Photo: This story is about my childhood, and traveling around by car. I learned about math, and roads, and directions as a kid. The photo was a random one I took on a road trip. It works with the story even though it was taken decades later. Road signs haven't changed much.


Stand in Photo: My story starts in high school. I don't have a photo of watching Breakfast at Tiffany's or any other movies mentioned. But the happy pink photo works to talk about pink and the journal card was the start of this story.


Stand in Photos: A two room school I went to. These photos are from the historical society. They aren't exactly what was there in 1988, but it still helps tell the story, so I used them. Old newspapers, historical societies, and other internet resources might have something you can use.


Stand in Photo: Google maps I did have an old photo of the house. But, you could totally grab an image from google maps for both. I actually told 2 different stories on this page. The one on the left is about running around the property and cross country. It connects for me, because I see the driveway in the house picture and remember those runs. But, nothing on the page would connect it for anyone else - and that's okay! It's my memory, not theirs.


This is also a google image photo: (also, I love that I left that post it note of stories I still need to tell!)


3. Reuse a photo. There is nothing wrong with reusing a photo, especially if you only have a few, but want to tell the stories. I've reused a photo of two to tell a different story. If you don't care, then do it! I don't, because my focus is the story. I'm okay with having the same photo tell a different story. Especially since it'll be different design layout, product (probably), and maybe even a different crop! I've told a few stories about my sister who died at 6 months old with one of the few photos I have of her. I don't remember her really, because I was only 2, but when my mom shares stories, I like to document them. And it's repeat a photo or use an above trick. Otherwise, it'd be a cemetery photo, and I use those for other stories.

Sorry so long! Hopefully it gives you some ideas.
 
3. Reuse a photo. There is nothing wrong with reusing a photo, especially if you only have a few, but want to tell the stories. I've reused a photo of two to tell a different story. If you don't care, then do it! I don't, because my focus is the story. I'm okay with having the same photo tell a different story. Especially since it'll be different design layout, product (probably), and maybe even a different crop! I've told a few stories about my sister who died at 6 months old with one of the few photos I have of her. I don't remember her really, because I was only 2, but when my mom shares stories, I like to document them. And it's repeat a photo or use an above trick. Otherwise, it'd be a cemetery photo, and I use those for other stories.

I already do that a fair bit as is but thats a great suggestion none the less
 
Most of my childhood memory pages are photoless, and I use a story telling approach. Here are some of the ones in the Lilypad Gallery


Sometime I take a then and now approach comparing my childhood to my current days or my children's lives.


This one I didn't have a photo, but found one that I could use royalty free on the internet.
 
@bestcee great examples of layouts!

I was watching a documentary about a murder that I knew the victim. I took pictures of the TV screen. I also had a story to go along with it so I used those and the cover of a book about it to document it since I had no photos from the actual time period. Kristin had released a kit that was perfect for it!

 
Maybe look in to Paula Kesselring's store? She has all those collections of retro ephemera, cards and stuff.

I'm not generally wanting to go super retro as I'm a child of the 90's and 00's (technically late 80's)
 
I have a dozen or so photos of when I was a child too and it can be challenging, but in other ways it can be freeing, being able to be free in the storytelling without feeling constrained by just what can be seen in the photo.

I've done a variety of pages, some photoless, others using the few photos I do have (more than once to telling different stories), to finding general pictures that reflect the theme of my storytelling, to using web images that are specific to my story. There are a couple of facebook pages for my local area that now and again share photos of the town I am from from years gone by and that has helped too.

In fact a lot of my pages from the past year or so have focussed on storytelling where I haven't had my own photos and/or dealing with emotions and my personal journey rather than events as such.
 
I can't believe it, I actually found some photos from my younger (still adult years mind you) that I thought I'd lost...soo happy to discover them because I thought they were gone for good given my data issues over the years
 
I wanted to scrap about my Mom's "box camera." I don't think anyone ever thought to take a photo of her taking a photo of us girls. I did an Internet search looking for info on her camera, found a photo of a gal taking a photo with a "box camera" that reminded me of my mom. I used that photo, along with a photo of the box camera (I have it), and a couple of photos of me and my sisters taken by mom, then journaled my memories.
 
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