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| Stack of ephemera, coffee, and scissors...Ready to start! |
For those of you that haven't heard of Remains of the Day, it's an online class you can purchase that outlines a different process for journal pages. You can look it up here: http://dispatchfromla.typepad.com/dispatch_from_la/rotdoci.html
I skipped over Part 1 of this class because I need to see what the book is going to evolve into before I try and create it's cover. I don't want to limit myself before I even get started. It's sad to say but we all judge a book by it's cover which is a very important element to any journal. When you pull out your journal, you want it to be special and inspiring. I have to see what the insides are before I can create the right exterior. I am also not a fan of fabric covers, so I am mulling over the alternative design in my head. I am imagining an old school buckle closure for sure.
So I am starting with Part 2 Pure Experimentation- Shabby Pages. This step requires a large stack of ephemera or old paper and a chunk of time. Let your imagination run wild with this step and don't limit yourself to conventional paper. Anything you can stitch together can be used for your signatures. You could use old sewing patterns, blue prints, envelopes, x-rays, etc....
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| ROD Instructions |
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| Hitch the hound enjoying himself while I work |
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| The hummingbirds were zipping all over |
Even after I go through and take out all the images I still hang on to the books, etc. because on another day you might be inspired by a different color or texture and see you passed right by it in one of those books.
Everyone has a different process for creating. Some people have a plan already mapped out in their mind and outline the process before they begin. Others have a rough idea and work through their ideas during a series of steps, which is how this class has been organized. What this class did in a series of 5 or 6 steps I did in 2. It all depends on how you process your ideas.
I didn't sit down with an idea in mind for this journal. I wanted to have a blank slate for this first one and see how it evolved with the paper I had on hand.
When you close your mind to preconceived ideas or stereotypes, you are able to make something completely new or unexpected.
Now that I have all of these bits and pieces together, it's time to start sewing them together creating pages for my signatures.





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