Categories

Advertising
Affilate Programs
Arts & Entertainment
Business
Communications
Computer-technology
Computers
Construction
Culture-and-society
Disease & Illness
Education
Electronics
Employment
Entertainment
Entrepreneurism
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Fitness
Food & Beverage
Gambling
Health
Health & Fitness
History
Hobbies
Home
Home & Family
House And Home
Insurance
Internet
Internet Business
Internet-Business
Internet-marketing
Kids & Teens
Legal
Loans & Mortgages
Magic
Marketing
Medical
Men-issues
Miscellaneous
Motivation & Self-Help
Network Marketing
News & Society
Parenting
Personal-development
Pets
Politics
Press Releases
Product Reviews
Public Relations
Publishing
Real Estate
Recreation & Sports
Recycling
Reference & Education
Reference-&-Education
Reference
Relationships
Religion-and-spirituality
Reviews
Science
Self Improvement
Shopping
Shopping & Product Reviews
Social Issues
Society
Speaking
Sport
Sports & Recreation
Technology
Travel & Leisure
Uncategorized
Vehicles
Womens Issues
Writing And Speaking

Your Basket


Article Basket

You can put articles in your basket and download them in your favorite file format for offline reading



Hits (140) | Add to Basket | Send a friend | Download As | Printer Friendly

A Brief History Of The Art Of Scrapbooking

by Gabriel Adams on 2007-09-22

What is a Scrapbook?

For those of you who have been living under a rock for the last few centuries and don’t know what a scrapbook is, this is it: Basically, it’s just a book full of stuff. What stuff? Anything you can think of. To most people, it’s a hobby of making collages full of writings, pictures, drawings or even ticket stubs, airplane tickets and museum passes. Don’t be too quick to dismiss the idea of scrapbooking as childish or unimportant.

Scrapbooking, on the surface, is a simple creative outlet. But, on a deeper level, it’s a way of recording our histories or notable events in our lives. Scrapbooks are a great way to express yourself or show others who you are and where you’ve been. Today scrapbooking is a multi-billion-dollar industry. There are scrapbooking clubs, blogs, etc. and it doesn’t appear to be going anywhere in the near future.

When did Scrapbooking Start?

A “scrap” used to be how you refer to a picture that is unmounted. People kept entire books full of unmounted pictures and those were, literally, the first scrapbooks. Scrapbooking is not a phenomenon that came about recently. Though not in their current form, the idea of scrapbooking has been around for centuries. The first scrapbooks were in use as far back as 1598.

Scrapbooks gained prominence during the Renaissance. These precursors of the modern day scrapbook were called ‘commonplace books’. Hamlet writes in one saying: “Smile and smile and be a villain.” John Locke, the philosopher, highlighted them in his manual titled: "The New Method of Making Common-place Books." In 1769 came the Granger books, books used by William Granger. Granger used this form to publish a history of England with extra illustration of the text in the appendix. Granger books were also called extra-illustrated books.

A major interest in scrapbooking came about in 1826, with the publication of “Manuscript Gleanings and Literary Scrapbook” by John Poole. The term ‘scrapbook’ was, however, coined a few years prior and had until then existed under various names. During the late 1800s, Mark Twain also popularized the usage of scrapbooks by patenting a series of them in 1872.

Photography and Scrapbooking

The invention of photography took the concept of the scrapbook to another level and changed the way it was done completely. Now, it became possible to also capture scenes of the events being described in the text as well.

In the 20th century, the popularity of the scrapbook declined. This was because, during the time of the first Word War, recession caused businesses, even the business of recording happy times, to close down. Another reason was that around 1940, the mass production of photo albums started and people ignored the scrapbook as the preferred method of recording events in their lives. The resurgence in scrapbooking started with Alex Haley’s “Roots”.

Ever since, there has been renewed interest in scrapbooking and, today, it has acquired a newer shade with the introduction of digital technology.


About The Author: Get scrapbooking vellum at www.gluearts.com/vellum.html