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Friday, November 15, 2024

Trail's End

After visiting Petroglyph, I drove to Santa Fe to visit with a friend. Near a museum we stopped at was this large statue installation commemorating the end of the Santa Fe Trail. It was more of a commerce route than an immigration route. The statues were quite lifelike, especially in the light of the fading sun. 



This layout is based on a sketch from the September Worldwide Virtual Crop from Creative Memories. I pulled the Wide Open Spaces collection from my stash. The middle section is the paper resembling a saddle; I wanted the horses and cows' paper for the outside. The sprinkle stickers are some very old CM. The journal box was fussy-cut from the mat to fit the space better. The title box on the bottom left is from a sheet of New Mexico mats and works perfectly here.

The next layout is another you've seen before as it was the 3rd installment of my Guest Designer stint for Lasting Memories in October. You can review the story and layout here.



Next week we move back east!

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Little Pictures

My next trip was in October 2019. I flew to Albuquerque, NM for a Health Professions Network conference. The timing was perfect as the Saturday after the conference was the annual Balloon Fiesta, so I stayed to see that. I had a ticket for just the morning so planned to head to Petroglyph National Monument later that afternoon. I parked the car at the visitor center and found a couple of interesting items on my walk to the doors.



This page is one of the Club Scrap National Park kit pages that I made. Scroll to layout 11. I only needed this side of the layout as I was starting on the right side of a 2-page spread. You can see the extra photo and journaling box below with the Peekaboo Pocket lifted. I chose this page not only because the photos fit so perfectly, but because of that little set of squares on the horizontal border. I know they are icons representing amenities at parks, but they sort of reminded me of the petroglyphs!



This is an unusual size for a peekaboo pocket. One of the CM secret boxes included an 8x8 paper album and 4x8 pockets to use on those pages. I kept them for my regular scrapbook pages instead.


You've seen the rest of this visit in early October when I served as Guest Designer for Lasting Memories. Just so you can see how it all flows together in the album, I've included the other 2 double-page layouts below. You can see the original post for the Scenic Route layout here.



And here's the link for the post about the actual petroglyphs.




Sunday, November 10, 2024

Bonus Post--The Wright Stuff

I thought I would play along with Lasting Memories again this month. Here's a bonus post from a trip to the Wright Brothers National Memorial in North Carolina. This was a trip in July 2020. With Covid running rampant we kept to family outings. My sister and brother-in-law joined us at a beach house nearby and we took a day to do some sightseeing--well distanced as much as possible!



This layout is based on the Lasting Memories challenge #726. They posted a piece of artwork for our inspiration. I looked at the gorgeous colors—orange, blue, green, and yellow—and put them together using the CM Worldwide Virtual Crop sketch from September. Scroll to sketch #7. The papers are from the CM Summer Denim collection with the orange from the Feeling Bright collection. Feeling Bright was a secret box in June 2022. It coordinates so well with the Summer Denim, an advisor-only pack. I love being able to stretch my pages by combining collections! One piece on here is not from Creative Memories. The little die-cut of the memorial is fussy-cut from an 8 1/2x11 Eastern National paper. 

Friday, November 8, 2024

All Aboard!

I next stopped at the visitor center and had the place nearly to myself. Much different than the grand opening! It's a fairly small museum but with a lot of 3D components like the sheds or the boat, you see below. I had not realized that not only did she usher enslaved people north, but she also served as a spy and scout for the Union Army during the Civil War. 



The inspiration for this layout came from this pin that I saved. It uses the 4 squares as the base. The pin reminded me to use some "scruffy" paper for the heritage feel. When I cut my squares I wasn't quite as even as I had hoped, so to hide the flaws, I added the strips to the bottom of the pages (that is Washi tape). The black and white of the Washi tape mimic the coloring of the postcard and the unigrid and helps give balance to the page. Not much in the way of decoration--just one-word sticker.

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

What's in Store?

My journey continued into Maryland, my destination the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad NHP. I had been to the area when that site opened its visitor center (and you can see that post here). My first stop was at the Bucktown Village Store. This is the site where Harriet was hit by a small weight when she was a young child. That event caused a life-long problem with headaches but is also credited with giving her visions. I had not called ahead so I was happy to find the site open. In fact, the people who man the store were awaiting someone who HAD made a reservation. They never showed up so I benefitted by getting a private store tour. I enjoyed this visit much more as there were no crowds and I could ask questions to my heart's content. I gave them a good-sized donation for the privilege. If you are in the area, don't miss this stop!



For this layout I wanted to use the large General Store cut that I made on the Cricut. The yellow is layered on top and the windows and doors are outlined in black ink to provide some depth. I wanted yellow based on the color of the building but also blue because of the interior. I found a nice sheet of yellow textured paper and a weathered wood paper with a blue tint. By cutting them both at 6" and "welding" them with a strip of cardstock along the seam in the back, I was able to generate 2 pages for the background. The little heart embellishment is an old stencil that I inked. There are a few word blocks from the Paper Loft that completed the layout.

Friday, November 1, 2024

Bay Window

My next set of park visits occurred when I went on vacation with Jim's family in September 2019. We had returned to the Rehoboth Beach area and I took a day to drive west toward the Chesapeake Bay. I drove to the small town of Vienna, MD where the Nanticoke River Discovery Center had a stamp (of course) and a small display of Captain John Smith and his travels. I also visited the nearby waterfront to get a look at the water. It was late morning but a beautiful day to be outside. 

The trail follows the historic route taken by John Smith (yes, the one that married Pocohantas) and his crew in the summer of 1608. He is credited with mapping much of the East Coast and those detailed records, published in England, were the impetus for many to migrate to the New World. In essence, he might more rightfully be considered the man who Discovered America!



This sketch is based on the June 2024 Virtual Crop from Creative Memories (scroll to sketch #2). You can see that I doubled the sketch to reach 2 pages. The paper is from Creative Memories' Serene Water collection. The coordinating cardstock colors include orange. While that is a color I don't use much, it gives the perfect POP to the middle square. As you can see in the directions, there are 4 strips of 3" decorative paper underneath. This type of sketch is a great way to use scraps if you have them. 

Tuesday, October 29, 2024

Madness in the Desert Part 36--How to Visit a Park That Isn't There

This is our final entry in the Madness in the Desert album! You remember that last week we talked about Casa Grande Ruins National Monument. Near here is another National Park Unit called Hohokam Pima National Monument. Now that particular unit is not available to visit. The village had been excavated and explored, but the Native Tribe asked the area to be covered over. As the NPS says: "Though authorized to become a monument, it is not a designated site. There are no signs, facilities, roads, cancellation stamps, brochures, features, displays, or other markers in place. The grounds are on Native American land and not open for visits."

This is often a bone of contention for our NPTC club members. To provide a way to "count" this park, the club has 2 suggestions (technically a member can count a visit as they deem fit). The first suggestion is the Huhugam Heritage Center in Chandler, AZ. While Jim and I were nearby, it was, at that time, closed for renovations. The original, and still valid method we chose, was to visit Casa Grande. The museum here has a few displays about Pima life and culture, so we have both added Hohokam Pima to our list of completed units. Have you checked this park off on your list? Let me know in the comments below.



I scraplifted this idea from Scrapbook.com. I was getting close to the album's end so I had many scraps available. I layered several in orange and yellow tones on the page. The top border includes some fussy-cut items from a fairly old piece of CM paper. It's supposed to be a fall theme but I've always thought it worked well for Native American designs. I used some punches and other scraps to make the window and the sun designs.