Wednesday, February 21, 2018

33: Inspiration from People and Places for the Digital Creative with Lynn Grieveson




Where do you get YOUR creative approach? For many, it comes from the people in our lives or the places we travel. My guest today draws from both of those for her inspired digital scrapbooking designs. I’m a big fan of hers and I love using her designs for digital pages. I know you’ll enjoy hearing her story and learning about her creative approach.
Lynn Grieveson is a scrapbook storyteller, a digital designer, and a memory keeper. She designs digital scrapbooking kits and unique photobooks for documenting and preserving precious memories and stories. Although she has lived in many places around the world, she currently makes her home in New Zealand, one of the most beautiful and inspiring places in the world. Don’t miss my conversation with Lynn!
What you’ll hear in this episode:
  • Lynn’s scrapbooking history and the inspiration for her designs
  • How Lynn taught herself digital scrapbooking and has never looked back!
  • How she creates her designs with kits, brushes, colors, and themes
  • The benefits of Adobe Photoshop
  • Lynn’s inspiration for scrapbooking, beginning with her older daughter many years ago
  • The transition to digital scrapbooking: how it happened when she was “playing around”
  • Lynn’s background in art history and photojournalism
  • The biggest challenges as a designer? “The time it takes to create”
  • How traveling and living in different places inspires Lynn
  • The value of photo books in telling our stories
  • England, New Zealand, Australia, and more!
  • How she met her husband and learned to juggle work and motherhood
  • The circumstances and major influences for creativity in Lynn’s life
  • What it means to “think like a photojournalist”
  • Lynn’s thoughts on creativity: “It’s important for everyone, because you are making something. Keep at it and it will become automatic and satisfying.”
Resources:
www.the-lilypad.com
www.lynngrieveson.com
www.getitscrapped.com
To enter the drawing for a free copy of The War Bride’s Scrapbook, by Carolyn Preston: visit the contact page on my website (www.acreativeapproachpodcastcom) or be or become a member of the ACA Facebook group. Leave a comment at either site with a valid email address before March 31, 2018. I’ll draw from those responses for a winner of the book!


Check out this episode!

Wednesday, February 7, 2018

32: Creating Your Own Category with the Scrapbook Novels Author, Caroline Preston




Have you ever thought of doing something creative that has never been done before? My guest today, author and archivist Caroline Preston, is the creator of a whole new genre of literature. Her books and stories are exciting and revealing, combining her passions of writing and storytelling in a new and creative way. Ironically, Caroline’s mother kept scrapbooks and made collages, which were a significant part of Caroline’s past. She went on to work as an archivist at a museum in Salem, Massachusetts, before embarking on her writing career.
Her latest book is the second of her “scrapbook novels.” Following the Scrapbook of Frankie Pratt, The War Bride’s Scrapbook, is “a World War II love story, narrated through a new bride’s dazzling array of vintage postcards, newspaper clippings, photographs, and more.” In this novel, “Caroline Preston has once again pulled from her own extraordinary collection of vintage memorabilia, transporting us back to the lively, tumultuous 1940’s and introducing us to an unforgettable, ambitious heroine who must learn to reconcile a wartime marriage with a newfound self-confidence.” I hope you enjoy this conversation with a truly inspirational creative, Caroline Preston.
What you’ll hear in this episode:
  • Caroline’s roundabout path to being an author
  • How scrapbooks tell the story of World War II
  • The uncertainty of people’s lives during the WWII era
  • How women accepted their rules but were early codebreakers in emergent feminism, which is a theme in the book
  • The advertising messages for women during the era
  • The main character in the book, and what she leaves behind
  • Understanding what people’s lives were in history and how they influenced those that came after them
  • Why people didn’t think their stories were even important
  • Piecing together clippings, headlines, manuals, and flyers to tell the story
  • Caroline’s new approach: scrapbook novels with real material and artifacts
  • What “transformative use” means regarding permissions
  • How the “scrapbook novel” idea came to Caroline
  • Caroline’s archival work in Salem, MA
  • How women’s lives are told in history through letters
  • Putting it all together to tell a story
  • With new technology, will our stories even be findable and retrievable in the future?
  • Making everyday lives seem tangible
  • How scrapbooks record momentous events and answer the When? And Why?
  • The detachment of today’s society from military life—unlike the WWII era
  • Caroline’s thoughts on creativity: “I thought I would just try to do this. I knew if it’s interesting to me, then it will be interesting to others also.”
Resources:                                               
www.carolinepreston.com
The Ordeal of Elizabeth Marsh by Linda Colley
Caroline’s books:
The War Bride’s Scrapbook
Scrapbook of Frankie Pratt
Gatsby’s Girl
Lucy Crocker 2.0
Jackie by Josie

Check out this episode!

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