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Fall - A New Season - A New Decorating Scheme What exactly is fall? Being my favorite season, I decided to look it up and see how Mr. Webster defines it. Flipping to fall I found autumn, ok turning to that here is what it says, autumn, the season that comes between summer and winter. Well, ...
Thanksgiving - Understanding The Holiday Thanksgiving to most folks means family and friends and Turkey, or maybe beer and football. Many do not know or even care about the significence of the Holiday. Way back in the 1600's a group of people who were members of the English Separatist Church ...
The Ghost of Julie Dodge A true story of friends that death could not separate. It was a warm and quiet October in Saint Petersburg, Florida during 1971. My family had moved there just a year before to escape the hassle, bustle and crime of New York City. Being an only child ...
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If you're like me, you have hundreds of photographs sitting in envelopes. Pictures from birthday parties, weddings, family gatherings, anniversaries, the Fourth of July, Thanksgiving and Christmas. You have already put the best snapshots into albums and these are leftovers. You don't want to throw them away, but you also don't know what to do with them.
Instead of letting your snapshots take up space and contribute to the clutter in your home, use them to make collages (at a cost of less than $10 each) that you can give as Christmas gifts to family and friends. Here's how:
- Assess your collection of pictures. Do you have several dozen of your spouse or significant other? Your parents? Your children? Grandparents? A friend? A beloved pet? Decide which person would like to receive these pictures and divide them into groups accordingly.
- Buy a picture frame with glass (either 5x7 or 8x10) for each collage you are going to make. Department stores sometimes have sales on picture frames, and you can often purchase a suitable frame for $5 or less.
- Cut a sheet of paper (use cardstock, 24# paper or light cardboard) to match the size of the opening on the picture frame.
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- Cut out the background of the pictures, leaving just the people (or pets). Cut out enough pictures to cover the sheet of paper.
- Arrange the cut-out pictures on the paper. Mix and match and experiment. Try placing the pictures at different angles.
- After you have an idea of how you would like to arrange the pictures, glue them to the paper. (Check the label to make sure that you can use the glue with photographs.) Cover the entire sheet of paper with pictures.
- When the glue is dry, insert the paper into the frame.
Collages are not only a good way to use your old snapshots, but the recipients also will cherish them for years to come as a special and thoughtful gift.
© 2003 LeAnn R. Ralph
LeAnn R. Ralph is a freelance writer in Wisconsin, is the editor of the Wisconsin Regional Writer (the quarterly publication of the Wisconsin Regional Writers' Assoc.) and is the author of the book: Christmas In Dairyland (True Stories From a Wisconsin Farm) (August 2003; trade paperback) http://ruralroute2.com
bigpines@ruralroute2.com
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Wildcats to perform in NBC's Macy's Thanksgiving Day ParadeWECT-TV6NEW HANOVER COUNTY, NC (WECT) – Two underclassmen at New Hanover High School will be participating in the 86th annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade on NBC. Sophomore Ellie Kerr and freshman Thomas Lee have been invited to participate in the Macy's ... |
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Trust Me: You Believe in Gun ControlClarksville Leaf ChronicleIf you ask the typical hyper-political gun owner (and I have ... at Thanksgiving dinner), why it's important to own a gun, they'll bark about the Constitution. Yes, the Second Amendment: "The Right of the People to Keep and Bear Arms Shall Not Be ...and more » |
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