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Showing posts with label Fort Laramie National Historic Site. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fort Laramie National Historic Site. Show all posts

Friday, January 13, 2023

The Great Western Journey Part 4--Which Came First?

The title for this week's post is a little tongue-in-cheek (well, aren't they all) because the last few photos I had for the Fort were of the bar, the jail, and the Native American display in the visitor center. I'm assuming the use of the bar came before the use of the jail but it could have been otherwise. I'm surprised that the pool table is a period piece. The bar was certainly impressive. 



This layout is based on a Power Hour from Meggan and Tessa. I used the Wide Open Places pack and 2 pieces of paper that were scraps from other layouts. I didn't think far enough ahead and so the one strip has horses running up and down the page instead of across but I couldn't match up the pieces any other way. The True Grit sticker is left from the Dakota CTMH pack. These foiled stickers are very temperamental and fragile. If you don't handle them correctly they will rip--so placement is key as you get only one chance.

Information on the Native Americans was sparse--just one display inside the visitor center. I'm hoping they are augmenting these displays. There was quite a bit of trade with them over the years. And a lot of treaties were signed here.



This layout is based on the October Bonus challenge for the CM virtual crop in October 2022. Instead of a tower of cake (or as some people tried--a Christmas tree), I chose to make a teepee reminiscent of the one in the photos. The background is quite simple--a piece of dark green cardstock and a strip of the brown print from the Wide Open Places pack. I took a separate piece of cardstock and layered my strips of paper on it. Then I cut it with a slight angle from the top to the bottom on each side to get the tent shape. I think the varied stripes are what provide the Native American flair to the decoration. A couple of cactus stickers and a couple of die-cut elements provided the flow through the page.

Friday, January 6, 2023

The Great Western Journey Part 3--All in the Family

 Remember the big white building from last week's pages? This is the inside. There are several floors to visit. You cannot go into the rooms, you can see things from the doorway (and hopefully the glass doesn't create glare as you try to photograph through it). The main areas feature the officer quarters. Junior officers may share a room or set of rooms with space for desks and dining as well as sleeping. The belongings reflect a wide variety from "western" with hides and animal heads to more decorative touches including curtains. On the right page is the kitchen. Likely there would have been a cook to make most of the meals.



This layout is based on one of Meggan and Tessa's Power Hours. The right-hand pages had some long photos after I cobbled the sets together. This layout lets me take advantage of the space across the middle for those photos. I also added a 6x12 Peekaboo pocket to the top on the right for one more long photo. Underneath is also a large journaling box to tell the story. I used the technique of cutting ovals on the top of the peekaboo pocket to maintain consistency with the page when it is opened. These papers are part of the old Earthy power pack that I'm still trying to use up. They do lend themselves to the old-time living quite well though.

More senior officers would travel with their families and so you see high chairs, cradles, and toys among the furnishings. Likely there would have been a small schoolhouse in the area for the older children.



This layout is based on one of my Scrap Your Stash monthly classes. I cut the paper backwards but it works in either direction. I used some of the Paper Loft heritage papers for this layout including that journal card with the "Family" in matching fabric prints. The doll and pram stickers are old CM products. The school books and blocks are from a sheet of stickers I bought a long time ago at a Current outlet in the Poconos. I'm rather surprised they still stick.

Friday, December 30, 2022

Great Western Journey Part 2--Home on the Range

The calvary barracks included the bunks, tack, and prep kitchen. They could house over a hundred soldiers at once in several different units. And look, they even have names on each set of equipment! That's doing your research!



This layout is part of a Western Kit I got from Club Scrap. Truthfully-it's 2 layouts. I mixed the pages together because I thought they fit the photos better. The left page above is the right page from layouts 7&8. The right page is the left page from layouts 1&2. So remember--it's your scrapbook. You can arrange the pages as you like!

On the grounds are numerous buildings where the fort personnel were housed. Some of the barracks are tumbling down. Even the wooden structures are reproductions as it was more likely that people came and took the wood for other houses in the area or just for firewood. But the big building on the left page below held a number of recreated rooms for officers. And of course, there is a home for wildlife.



This is a layout I made based on the October Power Hour by Meggan and Tessa. I used a combination of Mellow Meadows (the background), earthy (the strips), and a homey-type paper with a green and wood-grain look to it (I can't remember which kit). The top borders are some VERY old Close to My Heart stickers from their Dakota pack. I still have a few sheets of stickers though the papers are gone (which is a shame--I really liked that pack). The bottom strips are from a sheet I picked up that had the words of the song on it--each line with a different 1" border. I thought these 2 would be great for this layout though I am still determining how I'll finish using the words. 

Friday, December 23, 2022

Great Western Journey Part 1--Fort Laramie

Our first park stop on the trip was Fort Laramie. We had quite an adventure GETTING there (just remember to follow the directions on the park website and NOT the GPS or you too will enjoy the rutted dirt road path to the park. And possibly get stopped by cattle moving across the road.) Fort Laramie is an important historic site as it was both a trading post and a military installation. 



This layout is based on this sketch from Creative Memories October 2022 Virtual Crop. I organize my papers by theme so I pulled my "Western" folder out and found the Wide Open Places from Creative Memories this summer. The wood-grained background sets off the myriad of entry plaques and signs. The middle is the Field Fence border punch that coordinates so well. All of those items are currently available on my CM store site (see right column). The sketch calls for a halved circle to augment the photos. I chose instead to cut a journal box in half that had a diamond-shaped opening. That left some space to mount my very old CM stickers.

Fort Laramie was also one of the stops on the Pony express. Those signs matched the beginning photos of our first building (even before we got to the visitor center) which was a calvary barracks. We could see through the windows for some of the rooms and could stop at the doorways for the larger barracks rooms.



This is another Virtual Crop sketch from October. I continued using the Wide Open Places papers. I "gutted" the 2 background papers and just turned the inside square over to provide 2 contrasting colors. I love the horse paper as the accent strips! The kit contained the western themed journal box and stickers to finish off the layout.

Friday, July 24, 2020

50-states Album Part 32--Wyoming

This is the last page in my 50-states album. As I visit additional states or find photos of the trip, I will post more pages. I've been to 39 states and have shown you about 32 layouts. Next week we'll go back to my chronological albums and trip albums.

Wyoming was a state we passed through on the Great Western Loop in the summer of 2017. We flew into Denver, rented a car, and drove to South Dakota. We had GREAT fun going to Fort Laramie (tip--do not follow your GPS unless you like driving on dirt roads!) We also got to visit Devil's Tower (go ahead with the Close Encounters theme in your head now). Wyoming is a wild place and you really should visit. We enjoyed our time there and have lots of memories to look back on and laugh.


















This layout is based on this sketch. Clearly, I used only 1/2 of the page. I owned a sticker of barbed wire, wood-grained paper and the appropriate card stock so I could really do this one justice. The cowboy/cowgirl and horse were cut on the Cricut. I had actually used them once before in a different album but I thought them a perfect fit to a story about Jim and I traveling out west. The state shape of Wyoming is not that interesting so I jazzed up the state name by finding a font that looked like a rope. You can look at DaFont.com if you want to find some really different free fonts for cutting or writing. This time I used a pen in the Cricut--not something I do a lot of but it made the rope look real to me. I had to trim each letter by hand but I think that made it work on the page better.