Welcome back to the Hudson River Valley tour from December 2021. Our next stop is called Locust Grove. I was unfamiliar with this house before visiting, but I found out that it was owned by Samuel Morse--yep, the man who invented Morse Code! This was an extensive tour that included the staff areas in the basement. There is a museum next to the visitor center that is included in your admission as well, which goes into some detail on the creation of Morse Code. This house does not allow photography during your tour, so I was limited to just a couple of postcards from the gift shop and the one photo of the Christmas decor that I found when we bought tickets online.
I made this layout for CM's March Virtual Crop (scroll to layout #4). I flipped the sketch horizontally because I wanted the block of photos to be the beginning of the story, including the brochure and postcards. I used gold paper as the background (I gutted it to preserve the paper). and trimmed the green for the middle. Instead of a third layer of paper, I used thin red Washi tape between the 2 (see — if you leave something out, it is more likely to get used).
I used mostly the Seasonal Sightings paper for this. I chose more of the tonal elements so it doesn't SCREAM Christmas, but it still has a holiday feel. I was playing with items still on my floating table (that's where I store items while I work on a page or album) when I saw the lacy corner. It is black on one side but white on the other, and I thought it added a nice touch to the layout. The ribbon element on the right has a large portion of the white poinsettia border. I used the trimmings to create the corner element on the left page. The lacy stickers along the bottom mimicked the lacy triangle, and that was about all that I needed.






