Showing posts with label digital scrapbooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label digital scrapbooking. Show all posts

Sentimental Boxes: Birth, Kids Art, Marriage, Motherhood

 
Over the summer I put together these sentimental boxes for our family to preserve special memories and milestones. I have been collecting things for many years and it was time to pare it all down so that the collections where easier to store and less overwhelming.

I originally started with a large plastic file box to collect art work our kids have made. You have probably seen these on social media where they are made for each kid. This was my original plan but then as we got a few years into school I realized this was too much stuff to save for each kid. 

Then I also had a box of sentimental baby items that needed to go through and get organized.

I really feel like some of this stuff is hard to work through when it is fresh. Now that our oldest is eight years old, I have a better idea of how much has been accumulated. So I decided each kid would get one smaller file box to hold all their special art work, school work, and memorabilia. Then they would each get a small birth box that would include baby items and a card they receive from me every birthday.

Here are their birth boxes:

I use a standard size photo box for each kid. This is just big enough to hold on to a few baby things and cards. But there is no room for anything else! It keeps these boxes really simple and special. I used my label maker for the names.

Each box includes:

+ extra ultrasound photos that didn't make it into their baby book

+ hospital blanket and hat

+ a few special outfits

+ state rattle (our kids have been born in three different states so this was special for me)

+ a couple of cards from baby showers or when they were born

+ a yearly birthday card from me

+ a few favorite photos from when they were a baby

It all packs away neatly and then I place their birthday card on top every year. For their birthday cards I write a sweet sentiment but also include special things they did that year and things they like. It serves as a bit of a memory keeper for what they were like at that age.

My oldest daughter's box also included her flower headband she wore on her first birthday and some covid masks she wore. I hope these little items will help tell the history of their time.

The same for my oldest son - he has his covid mask and a bow tie he wore on his first birthday.

Here are the three oldest kids' boxes that I completed. It was hard to pick and choose what would make it into these boxes. But now that they are done, they feel so special and just the right amount of stuff. I try to remember that just because it was sentimental to me doesn't mean it will be sentimental to them. We have so many photos to remember special outfits and memories. Hopefully these boxes will be just enough.

My two oldest were toddler/preschool age during the pandemic so we had a lot of artwork we made together. I quickly realized we could not save it all and had to be ruthless with what we kept. Getting it down to a smaller file box really helped me see how much I could save. I am finding with my school age children, I am having to go through the previous years again to cut back to make room for the current year's stuff. But it is helpful to have a place to put it all away now and in a year, to reassess. It is less fresh and easier to purge after some time has past.

Expandable File Pocket Folder (can also be found at Target)

Here is how the school work/art box is organized:

Each section holds one file folder. Each file folder is labeled by school year. The first section also is reserved for special photos and documents. 

This includes:

+ special photos and documents: sentimental birth certificate from the hospital, yearly school pictures, and a few special photos I have made with the kids (things like putting their face on an elf picture for Christmas!)

+ toddler: from their first artwork until they start preschool (for us that is about age 1-4)

+ preschool: our kids do one year of pre-k

+ kindergarten through twelfth grade

Here are our three file folders compared to the original one large file box that I had planned for each kid. It felt good to cut back our collection substantially.

While I was working on all these boxes, it was helpful to have a holding place before I decided what I was going to do. We went with this one file box for a couple of years, holding everyone's sentimental paperwork. I was even putting my own special artwork or cards that I received in here.

Next were sentimental boxes for me and Brent. This was harder to do because this was our lifetime of special memories as well as all the pictures and cards our kids have made us up until now. But like with all these boxes, deciding how much space I was willing to give up in our home to store these things was the first step. From there I could decide what was worthy of keeping. If it didn't fit, I needed to reassess.

Foldable Storage Bins With Lids

I also wanted the boxes to feel beautiful and special. It helps hold me accountable to their size and encourages me to treat them carefully. These are not getting stuffed in the back of a closet or in our shed. They are special and should be treated that way. If they are just extra storage, I start loosing track of their purpose.

Specifically for my husband, I wanted to organize his a little better. He had special items from school and his career. So I used plastic file envelopes to keep them separate and easy to get to. A little gift bag holds stickers and pins he has received for different aerospace programs he has worked on.

Another folder holds some growing up type things - school items, old photos, and little keepsakes from his grandfather's time as a test pilot.

And then I put all his cards in another folder. These are mostly from family and close friends. I am a little more ruthless about the things I keep so I wanted to honor his decision to hold on to things. Having them organized in separate folders made the box of items feel less overwhelming for me.

While my sentimental box already holds plenty of things from my kids, I wanted a smaller box of really sweet, beautiful treasures from them. If I want to sit and have a moment, this motherhood box is the place. 

I used the box my Powersheets comes in so it is a smaller size box - the size of a large journal. It fits on a shelf in our bedroom stacked under books. 

My motherhood box includes:

+ one special picture of me with each of my kids

+ my most treasured pictures, crafts, and cards they have made me (or I made with them)

+ a quote on motherhood I treasure

+ a small notebook journal that includes special memories of my kids I want to look back and remember

During the pandemic, I kept this journal of everyday things we did together and included photos. I now keep a less elaborate version of this. I find it so helpful for my mental health to practice gratitude for these days I spend caring for children. It keeps me focused and grateful. Plus I am sure I will love looking back at some of these memories in the years to come.

My final box is a marriage box. I used the same small sized box from my Powersheets. Fifteen years since we married and I had to not hold on to so many cards! I went through and picked the most special and thoughtful cards we received along with some special mementos.

Cards and letters we have written to each other are all stored in our sentimental boxes.

Our marriage box includes:

+ a few special cards we received at showers and our wedding

+ keepsakes from our wedding - garter and handkerchief

+ mementos from anniversaries - buttons from Disneyland, postcards from places we went to and I wrote a few memories on

+ a couple of favorite photos from our engagement session and wedding


And that is a wrap! It took me all summer to work on these so that is a lot for one post! But I am so proud and happy of these special boxes I put together. It really helped me put value on our sentimental things by keeping what was most important and not treasuring everything. I keep trying to tell myself - what will we really want to look back and go through many years from now? I am learning that I am allowed to be nostalgic but also strive to be more minimalistic. I am getting to a happy medium and it feels good!



School Years Memory Book: Growing Up

When my oldest outgrew his baby book (that went up to his first day of school - which was pre-k for us), I may have teared up a bit as we closed a chapter. But as a lover of nostalgia, I wanted something else to continue this documentation. Nothing too complicated, just a way to look back each year. 

I found the most loveliest book - Growing Up: A Modern Memory Book for the School Years by Korie Herold (the cover is linen! it looks beautiful on the shelf). And we are three years in now. 

I fill out a simple questionnaire with him at the beginning of the school year and there is room for a school photo, something he made, and a few end of the year reflections. There are two blank pages for photos that I fill up with special events just about him and we are done for the year. I hope this will be a special way to look back at his school years. 

But really this is for me and holding on to every little piece of childhood that I can! ;)

I got one for my daughter as well and we just started filling hers out this year.

I also love to use my label maker for the dates and names.

And here are the books on our mantel. So lovely! Pretty enough to leave out.

Find the book here: Growing Up: A Modern Memory Book for the School Years



Our Christmas Memories Scrapbook

A friend of mine shared with me how she had a Christmas memory book where she wrote down a few memories to look back on from each year. I loved the idea and had to come up with my own version. 

I found Our Christmas Story: A Modern Memory Book by Korie Herold. She has a few other memory keepsake books that I also have. I loved the timeless design and linen covers. They are beautiful and look great on the shelf. 

Brent and I have put out a Christmas card every year since we were married so I thought it would be fun to start the memory book from the very beginning. I got a little ahead of myself and started labeling each year starting from when we got married only to find out that I quickly ran out of room in the book. Thankfully I was able to fix it and decided to give each year only two pages. I used my label maker to cover up the years I wrote down and certain prompts I didn't want to use to customize it. That way I could use only half of the allotted pages for each year to make room for the many years we had and those to come.

And thanks to blogging and taking lots of photos, I am able to look back and fill in the past fourteen years relatively well! It is so fun to look back at all of our family Christmas photos from years passed in one place.

For each year, I include our Christmas photo as well as a polaroid of a favorite memory from the season. I use my instax printer to print digital photos onto a polaroid.

I focus mostly on things we did, favorite memories of our kids, a little about decorations, and a "mama's favorites" section that is random things that I want to remember or loved.

Over the past few years, as my two oldest have gotten older, it has been a goal of mine to have more intentional traditions. I know I still have many years to establish family favorite traditions and meals. But in order to cultivate our family culture, I have learned to take notes and figure out what works and what we love every year. Both so that we can focus in on our favorites but also to simplify my life a little. I only want to pour my energy into the most important things during the holidays so that there is room for me to enjoy them as well.

I like that this Christmas memory book highlights these things. And hopefully will be a special place that my children can come back to as they get older to remember and reflect on their most treasured memories of the season.

I did go through and mark pages for each year of the past. Over time I am working on filling them in. But for now the year and photos are already in place. And that way I can at least keep up with each current year.

This has been a fun little project to work on over the past few years that I know I will continue to love to look back on for years to come. Here are a few more photos from our Christmas memory scrapbook.