Scrapbooking is a good way to make a creative memory book or have an outlet for stress.
College students need that sort of outlet. Why not look into a way to both collect your college memories and have a stress reliever that you can add to daily?
There are many different ways to start your own scrapbook for either memory’s sake or simply as a stress reliever. If you want to make one for the college experience, here are some tips for creating a fairly inexpensive book with all of your college memories.
You can take photos, polaroids, syllabi, assignments, old tests and basically anything the college gives you. As long as you have a blank book and some glue or tape, you’re in business to make your own scrapbook.
It does not have to be expensive. If you are on a budget, you can get supplies from the dollar store or the clearance aisle at Walmart.
If you want to make a scrapbook without the mess of having a physical one, Toni Collins, a craft-loving student, says, “You can always digitize your projects and take a ton of pictures. The school usually has a free subscription to Canva, so you can use that to make an entirely online scrapbook.”
She adds, “Then when you’re done with it, you can upload it onto a thumb drive and print it out anytime you want. It makes for a great gift for holidays and a good thing to have for memory’s sake.”
Canva allows you to organize your pictures into a document and arrange them however you want, without the hassle of money, glue or tape. You do not have to have an artsy bone in your body to scrapbook—just some paper and a dream.
For college students, we are always looking for ways to capture the moment, but it is hard when we feel swamped by work and upcoming tests. We could use those assignments, old tests and pamphlets to make something that will last forever. If you choose to use them in a scrapbook, you will always be able to look back on how hard college was—and how many memories you captured.
Life has some hard moments, but when we choose to make the most of it, it makes for some fond memories to cherish.
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Write more, thats all I have to say. Literally, it seems as though you relied on the video to make your point. You obviously know what youre talking about, why throw away your intelligence on just posting videos to your weblog when you could be giving us something enlightening to read?