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Memories Deserve More Than A ShoeboxTM
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Scrapbooker's Paradise®
Memories Deserve More Than A Shoebox
TM
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The History of Scrapbooking
by Maureen Taylor
Did you know that you have something in common with Thomas
Jefferson, Mark Twain, and President Rutherford B. Hayes? That's right.
Scrapbooks. Perhaps you have your grandmother's or grandfather's albums. They
may not resemble the books you create today in look and feel, but you might be
surprised at the similarities. Before copy machines, earlier generations cut
articles from newspapers and saved labels, greeting cards and illustrations for
their books. They called them common-place books, friendship albums, and
scrapbooks.
How old is the scrapbooking tradition? Although no one is really sure,
scrapbooks probably have their origin in the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries. The word "scrapbook" first appeared in the late eighteenth century.
It is derived from the brightly colored paper called scrap that filled the
albums of that time. Scrap such as product labels and greeting cards could be
collected or even purchased from specialty shops carrying albums and scrap for
the scrapbook mania of the late nineteenth century. If you want to see actual
copies of these early scrapbooks, many library archives have collections of
them. Compare your scrapbooks to their earlier counterparts to learn more about
your grandmother's album, or to discover new ways to approach your own albums.
Common-Place Books
Educated men and women pasted quotes and phrases in things they called
common-place books. Thomas Jefferson gathered newspaper articles of his
presidency for his books in his leather-bound volumes of plain paper. Most of
these books included clippings, drawings and even diary entries. By the first
half of the nineteenth century, these albums also had beautiful embossed covers,
engraved clasps, and locks. Hattie Harlow of Boston, a seamstress, organized her
notes, clippings, and illustrations by topic in separate handmade volumes with
wallpaper and cardboard covers. One of her common-place books even includes
knitting samples with directions. Even wealthy scrapbook keepers of the late
19th and early 20th centuries often pasted their clippings and memorabilia
directly over the text of old books or catalogs.
Granger Books
Building on the popularity of common-place books, William Granger introduced in
1769 a printed book with extra blank pages so that the owner could personalize
it with autographs, letters, or illustrations relating to the subject of the
publication. Early scrapbookers also began adding pages to existing books to
mimic the style. There were even manuals that described how to "extra
illustrate" a book.
Friendship Albums
Laura L. Sherwin of Fairhaven, Vermont, wrote, "This lock of hair I will place
in your little book for the remembrance of your friend," in Hellen Marion Adams'
friendship album. In each place that her family lived, Hellen collected hair
weavings and messages in a type of autograph album that originated in Germany in
the seventeenth century. Young women in the Victorian period often created
memory books or visitors albums filled with signatures, scrap, cards, hair,
handwriting, poetry, and even photographs of their family and friends.
Scrapbooks
Just as your scrapbooks have a theme, men, women, and children of earlier
generations also created albums for a variety of purposes. The peak decade for
scrapbooks in the nineteenth century was from 1880, when a popular manual became
available, to about 1890. Producers of scrap created a demand for their product
by offering sheets of scraps in new styles directed at women and children.
Magazines featured numerous articles on the value of scrapbooks as a family
activity and educational tool. Housewives kept the labels and trade cards from
new consumer products and included them in their albums, while male and female
college students documented their years at school.
Mark Twain's self-pasting scrapbook had gummed pages that one would moisten
before adhering various scraps. [He] was such an avid scrapbooker that he
reserved Sundays for his hobby. He held patents for his invention of
self-pasting scrapbooks that could be dampened with water. By 1901, at least 57
different types of Mark Twain albums were available. Albums could also be
purchased from the Montgomery Ward catalog, but many individuals created their
own albums using different types of cloth for the covers.
Some scrapbooks were collections of brilliantly colored scraps of paper items in
the form of advertising cards or greeting cards arranged by subject or type of
material. Other scrapbooks revealed the lives of their compilers through the
type of items pasted onto the pages and their arrangement. Other scrapbook
hobbyists used their albums as a form of artistic expression. One scrapbooker
dressed the paper cut-out figures on her pages in actual fabric swatches.
Today, it's a rare scrapbook that doesn't include photographs. Although earlier
generations of scrapbookers began using images in their albums in the
mid-nineteenth century, it wasn't until the Kodak camera became available in the
1880s that photographs started to appear in most albums along with scrap.
Generally, a photograph album is not considered a type of scrapbook because it
focuses exclusively on images. As the number of hobbyists declined in the
mid-twentieth century, scrapbooks remained unchanged for several decades as a
combination of photographs, printed materials, and family memorabilia pasted
into paper albums.
As family history experienced a resurgence of interest in the 1970s due to Alex
Haley's "Roots", scrapbooks once again became a popular hobby using magnetic
photo albums with self- adhesive pages and plastic cover sheets. At an
international genealogy conference in Salt Lake City in 1980, several
individuals exhibited their family scrapbooks. This created a demand for new
products, magazines. and preservation information about scrapbooking and thus
sparked a multi-million-dollar industry.
Most recently, software allows you to create page layouts and albums on your
computer. You can also post your pages on the Internet to share with family and
friends. And what is a family Web page, but an electronic version of a
scrapbook?
Do you still have family or friends that think creative scrapbooking is just a
fad? Show them this article. Then sit down to scrapbook with pride, knowing that
you play a part in one of the newest developments of a centuries-old hobby.
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