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Review of Scrapbook Answers |
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Written by Diane Pottle
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Page 1 of 2
 Buy at Amazon Have you ever wondered about Scrapbook Answers —the mysterious shrink-wrapped magazine packaged with a CD? I did. I didn’t want to pay the cover price (currently $7.99) and not know what I was getting. When my mother-in-law bought a copy, I finally had a chance to check it out. So if you’ve been curious, read on.
Scrapbook Answers is not a magazine for everyone, but I love it. There aren’t as many layout ideas as in Creating Keepsakes or Memory Makers , but the interesting content they do have keeps me reading from cover to cover.
One section that I find particularly interesting is New & Reviewed . This section of the magazine rates products. How awesome that before you go out and spend your scrapbooking money on some product--you can check out how it faired against the competition. The August/September 2006 issue compared white pens—I wish it had arrived three weeks earlier since I had bought a pen that garnered 3 out of 4 stars ( I would have gotten the 4 star pen and spent forty cents more). Some of the ratings are head to head ratings while others rate one particular product. This section rates books, expensive equipment, albums, rub-ons—the gamut. Some new products are merely highlighted—paper and stickers—since those items are highly subjective.
Scrapbook Answers has a lot of how-to information, from hand lettering with a dip pen to explaining different camera features to help you take better photos. The how-to information varies from hands-on art (several different ways to use watercolors) to computer (how to fill in titles using Adobe Photoshop Elements ).
The magazine has a Makeovers column where readers send in layouts, that for whatever reason, displeased them. These layouts are then redone by the Scrapbook Answers designers. I love reading the What We Did part after each makeover—it really nails home how designers look at photo elements and other details to produce the effects they get on their layouts.
A few articles miss the mark for me—one on how stickers and rub-ons are designed and produced comes to mind. That aside, articles that I do like more than make up for some of the weaker areas for me. I’m really not interested that it takes 15 people and 6 to 25 weeks to create a new rub-on. I want to know if they are high quality. Click "Next>>" link below for page 2.
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