Scrapbooking: Everything You Need to Know to Get Started
Scrapbooking: Everything You Need to Know to Get Started
Scrapbooking is part memory-keeping, part paper crafting, and part “tiny joy project” you can hold in your hands. Even in a digital world, there’s something special about building a page with photos, little keepsakes, and a few thoughtful words — a story you can flip through anytime.
If you’re new to scrapbooking (or you tried once and got overwhelmed), this guide walks you through the basics: what it is, what to buy first, easy page ideas, and beginner-friendly techniques you can actually finish.
Table of Content
📜 A Quick History of Scrapbooking ✨ Why Scrapbooking Is Still Worth It 📖 What Exactly Is a Scrapbook? 🧰 Scrapbooking Supplies (What You Need First) 📚 Types of Scrapbooks (Pick Your Style) 📝 How to Make a Scrapbook (Simple Start Plan) 💡 Beginner Scrapbook Ideas 🎨 Easy Scrapbooking Techniques (That Look “Pro”) 🚫 Common Beginner Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them) ❓ Scrapbooking FAQs 📚 Related WondersArtist Guides 🎁 Free Clipart Sampler 💎 All Access Membership📜 A Quick History of Scrapbooking
Scrapbooking has been around in one form or another for centuries. Before photo albums were common, people kept “commonplace books” filled with letters, recipes, poems, ticket stubs, and meaningful scraps — basically the original memory-keeping journals.
As photography became accessible, scrapbooks evolved into photo-focused keepsake albums. Modern scrapbooking later exploded with patterned paper, stickers, themed embellishments, and (eventually) digital printables — making it easier to tell a story with both visuals and words.
✨ Why Scrapbooking Is Still Worth It
- Preserves memories in a way social media can’t (pages don’t disappear in an algorithm).
- Builds a story — not just “a photo,” but the who/what/why behind it.
- Boosts creativity without needing to be “artistic.” Layout formulas help.
- Feels calming (it’s very “hands busy, mind quiet”).
- Makes a meaningful gift when you create a mini album for someone you love.
📖 What Exactly Is a Scrapbook?
A scrapbook is a collection of pages (usually bound like an album) that combines:
- Photos
- Journaling (stories, dates, names, quotes)
- Ephemera (tickets, notes, tags, maps, receipts, labels)
- Decor (paper pieces, stickers, die-cuts, washi tape, stamps)
Each page tells a little story. It can be as simple as “one photo + a title + a few lines,” or as layered as you want.
🧰 Scrapbooking Supplies (What You Need First)
You do not need a craft store haul to begin. Start with a small “core kit,” then add tools as you discover your style.
Starter essentials
- Cardstock (smooth + sturdy; great for backgrounds and photo mats)
- Patterned paper (6x6 is beginner-friendly; 12x12 is classic scrapbook size)
- Adhesive (tape runner or strong double-sided tape + a little liquid glue)
- Scissors or paper trimmer (a trimmer makes everything faster)
- Journaling pen (archival / fade-resistant is ideal)
- Basic embellishments (stickers, labels, or a small ephemera pack)
Nice-to-have upgrades
- Washi tape (easy borders + quick color)
- Stamps + ink (titles, dates, sentiments)
- Dies / die-cut machine (fast cutouts, titles, frames)
- Stencils (quick backgrounds without “drawing”)
- Foam tape (a little dimension goes a long way)
📚 Types of Scrapbooks (Pick Your Style)
- Traditional 12x12 layouts – classic full-page storytelling.
- 8.5x11 albums – easier to store and print photos for.
- Pocket / Project-style albums – photos + journaling cards in sleeves.
- Traveler’s notebook memory keeping – smaller, casual, very doable weekly.
- Mini albums – perfect for a single trip, event, or gift.
- Digital / hybrid – print layouts or mix printables with hands-on layers.
Beginner tip: If you want the easiest “win,” start with a mini album or traveler’s notebook style. Less space = less pressure.
📝 How to Make a Scrapbook (Simple Start Plan)
Here’s a stress-free way to make your first page without overthinking:
- Pick 3–5 photos from one event (don’t mix five different occasions).
- Choose a simple color palette (2 main colors + 1 neutral).
- Start with a clean background (solid cardstock or one patterned paper).
- Mat your photos with a thin border (it instantly looks polished).
- Add a title (stickers, stamped letters, or a printed word).
- Write 2–5 lines of journaling (date + one detail + one feeling is enough).
- Finish with 3 small embellishments (rule of “three” keeps it balanced).
💡 Beginner Scrapbook Ideas
Family pages
- One person per page (their quirks, favorites, little quotes).
- Milestones: birthdays, anniversaries, first day of school.
- Holiday pages (simple repeating elements = easy theme).
Nature & outdoor pages
- Focus on textures: woodgrain paper, leaf die-cuts, soft green palettes.
- Add journaling like a “field note” (where, when, weather, what you noticed).
Travel / adventure pages
- Use maps, tickets, receipts, and tiny labels as your “ephemera layer.”
- Build a simple grid layout so the story feels organized.
Friendship / school memories
- Add doodles, inside jokes, and short captions.
- Use letter stickers for big names + dates.
🎨 Easy Scrapbooking Techniques (That Look “Pro”)
1) Photo matting (fastest upgrade)
Cut a slightly larger rectangle behind each photo. Even a 1/8" border makes the whole page look intentional.
2) Layering “clusters”
Make 1–3 small clusters of paper bits + a label + a tiny embellishment. Clusters add detail without cluttering the entire page.
3) Titles that pop
- Use thick letter stickers or chipboard titles.
- Or print a title on cardstock and foam-tape it up.
4) Create your own embellishments
No matching ephemera? Cut flowers, leaves, or shapes out of patterned paper scraps. You’ll get a “coordinated set” instantly.
5) Washi tape as design structure
- Use it as borders, photo corners, or “divider lines.”
- Layer a label on top for instant journaling space.
6) Stencil backgrounds (no drawing required)
Stencil + ink blending gives you a beautiful background in minutes — especially when you keep it tone-on-tone.
🚫 Common Beginner Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them)
- Trying to use every supply at once: Start with 1 technique per page.
- Too many patterns fighting: Use 1 busy paper + 1 calm paper + solids.
- No journaling at all: Even one sentence makes the page meaningful later.
- Weak adhesive for heavy pieces: Use stronger tape or liquid glue for bulky layers.
- Forgetting “rest space”: White space is what makes embellishments look nicer.
❓ Scrapbooking FAQs
How do I start scrapbooking if I’m overwhelmed?
Pick one event, 3 photos, one patterned paper, one solid cardstock, and a title. Keep the goal: finish one page, not “make it perfect.”
What paper is best for scrapbooking?
Look for acid-free and lignin-free cardstock and patterned paper so your pages last longer and won’t yellow as quickly.
Do I need a die-cut machine?
No. It’s a convenience tool, not a requirement. You can create beautiful pages with paper scraps, stickers, and a good trimmer.
📚 Related WondersArtist Guides
- Washi Tape Crafts: Ideas, Uses, and Where to Buy
- 5 Cool Washi Tape Designs You Need Right Now
- Die Cutting 101: Ultimate Guide
- All You Need to Know About Stencils
- What Is Card Making? Everything You Need to Know
🎁 Free Clipart Sampler
If you’d like high-resolution printable art you can use for scrapbook pages, journaling cards, and titles, a free sampler is available.
Sign up below and the sampler will arrive gently in your inbox 💌
💎 All Access Membership
All Access Membership gives you a whole library of artwork for scrapbooking, cardmaking, and journaling.
- ✨ Unlimited access to clipart, digital papers, journaling pages, and cardmaking kits
- 🧺 New releases included while the membership is active
- ⚡ Instant downloads with clear, craft-friendly licensing
- 🔁 Perpetual rights for everything downloaded during your active time
🌷 Final Thoughts
You don’t need a giant supply stash to scrapbook beautifully. Start small, tell one story per page, and repeat a simple layout formula until it feels natural. The pages that matter most aren’t the fanciest — they’re the ones you actually finish.