At long last I’m sharing some photos and reflections on my Week in the Life Projects. I say projects (plural) because I never shared any pictures of the first time I did this project. So…no time like the present, right?

The first time around I used divided page protectors from Scrapworks. (I think these are no longer available for sale, but if someone knows otherwise please share in the comments.) This is the opening page which shows one photo of each of us, along with our ages and the dates of the project.

Opening page

This time around I used divided page protectors and journaling cards from Becky Higgins Project Life. Here’s how that one looks:

Opener 2

Here’s how a full day looked the first time around. Left side…

Full-day1

and right side. I can’t believe I got by with just 12 pockets per day…this was all the space I gave myself for journaling, photos and memorabilia. So, on some days (like Wednesday, for example) there wasn’t much journaling or memorabilia. But perhaps the photos say it all — we went to school, we worked, we ate, we did laundry and we cleaned. 🙂

Full day 2

Here’s how a day looked this time around. Left side…

Full day 3

Right side…

Full day 4

Page two…left side…

Full day 5

and the right side.

Full day 6

Right side underneath the page protector…

Full day 7

Observations + Reflections

First and foremost, I have to say I just love this project. It really reignited my love of scrapbooking, and especially my love of creating finite scrapbook projects.

The approach the first time around was much simpler because I had just one size photo to print and just 12 pockets to fill. But I did far less documenting, and had to really edit down my photos and journaling. This time around I thought I would do just one, two-page spread per day and have 16 pockets to fill. But after all the documenting that was done and after all the memorabilia that was captured, I realized I needed more space. So, I ended up with 32 pockets to fill each day. The number wasn’t the hard part, it was the two different sizes that complicated things because not only did I have to choose photos, I had to decide what size to get for each photo, crop and size them, etc.

This led to a bit of a chicken and the egg situation. Do I carve out spots for journaling first? Or do I figure out where photos will go and then work in the journaling? I opted to start with journaling, so the first step in the assembly process was to transfer the journaling onto the Project Life journaling cards.The first day took forever as I tried to do a quick scan of which photos I had chosen as my favorites…and then select journaling cards that best matched the colors in the photos. That idea quickly went by the wayside when I realized I would never (ever) finish the project using that approach—especially because I hadn’t really selected the photos yet. So trying to match the photos and the journaling cards was just making things too complicated, so I just grabbed any card that looked nice to me, and transfered my journaling to the journaling cards. Then, I counted up how many photos I needed to fill the remaining pockets.

I ended up creating a “to print” folder for each day of the week. And I’m soooo glad I did. This helped me keep track of how many photos of each size I needed for each day, and was very handy when all the photos came back from the printer sorted in a completely random order. (Hello? Why did they do that?)

This project, like all scrapbooking projects for me, is an interesting tug of war between my real reason for scrapbooking and the desire to have it turn out as close to perfect as my scrapbooking abilities allow. Yes, it was an ongoing battle between the recovering perfectionist in myself and the loving Mom who just wants to do a scrapbookig project to document what things were like in a regular week in the year 2010.

I had to keep reminding myself that even though the photos aren’t perfect, and even though my handwriting isn’t perfect, and even though some of the photos aren’t cut to exactly the right size (which looks a bit messy), and even though things don’t coordinate perfectly—no one will care. (Not even me!) No one that encounters this project in real life (in my home) will be judging my scrapbooking or photography skills when they look at this project. All they will see is the memories. They’ll read the journaling and they’ll see how the people looked and how the cars looked and how our home looked and they’ll say “Wow, that’s so cool. Things were so different then.”

How do I know this? Becasue this is exactly what I do with the photos from my own childhood. There aren’t many photos and I cherish every single one of them. I’m not worried if the photos are a little too dark, a little bit out of focus or a little too anything that I would notice and critique in my own photos. What I see in old photos are memories and little snippets of the way life used to be. Someday, that’s what my Week in the Life photos will be to me and my kids. It’s the memories—that’s all that matters.