I’ve had kind of a mental block around H’s baby book since before she was born. Baby books are not a thing in England, so it was a new concept to Adam and he looked to me for direction. But I don’t know, something about the cookie cutter nature of the questions, the limited space in all the books for writing and photos. We’ve been given several gorgeous baby books to keep a record of H’s firsts, and we’ve even started writing in some of them. But somehow the process just felt…incomplete.
I should point out that at 33 years old, my mother has only just stopped telling me “that’s going in the baby book!” when I do something noteworthy. And that’s only because, as a gift when H was born, she gave me my baby book to keep. It sits in a proud spot on H’s bookshelves, and I can’t tell you how much I LOVED looking at that book growing up (okay fine, I still do). I really want H to know her STORY, not just the facts. I loved hearing those stories as a kid. Don’t all kids? The feelings, the moments, the whole experience that she won’t remember. There are so many things I wish I could ask my grandparents today, so many details I would love to know about my family. So documenting life has become a really big deal to me in my adulthood (hence this blog). And I want to give that to H as my gift to her, a record of her impact on all of us.
And that’s where Project Life comes in. I’ve been very well aware of it for a few years now through my crafty friends. But I’ve always resisted the idea of myself as a scrapbooker. It called up images of sitting in a church basement with a glue gun, decorative paper, and piles of bedazzled, ornate die-cuts just collaging all my life’s memories to death. Not for me. But this is just easy, and it looks cool, and it lets me tell H her story. I was trying to explain why I wanted THIS to be her baby book to Adam the engineer, and as I explained he just said, “So…it’s a system. Cool.” He adores systems, and that’s exactly what this is. A streamlined way for me to get to the point, the meat, the good stuff. I just started this weekend, and I’m hooked. I plan on continuing this book until H’s first birthday and giving this to her as a present, but I will be continuing Project Life for our family beyond that.
I bought the Cherry Edition. I was trying to decide between this and Clementine, and essentially what won me over was the fact that the Cherry Edition was currently available. So I got the binder, the core kit, and some of the plastics. I’ve just kept it simple so far, I haven’t done anything exciting with layouts yet. I’ve made my way through my second trimester, and once I’ve finished with pregnancy I think I’ll document each week of her life so far.
The big envelopes are also really handy.
I hope I have enough room to get through her first year. This may end up as a 2-volume set.
i’m so excited! this looks awesome so far – and i love that you’re including your pregnancy too. i didn’t have a baby book, but i similarly devoured the photo albums of me as a baby and then my siblings, too, and i can only imagine being able to give a baby book like this to a future baby when he or she is old enough to love it as much as i loved those photos!
i’ve always loved paper but scrapbooking always seemed so… hokey. the aisles upon aisles of soccer ball die cuts just… UGH. and project life is totally addictive, too. 🙂
Really, really nice Jackie. H will treasure this book and all of the events, adventures and joy you share with her on its pages.
Love and hugs,
Mom