Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Autumn Photos For Scrapbooking - individual takes old favorites

Autumn is full of photo opportunities. With bright colors, lots of exciting events such as early school days and the last - minute summer resorts, there are a million and a photo, you can take. But things can be so busy that you forget the camera, or move the camera, but take the same old boring pictures that you take each year. It is not possible to scrap photos, scrapbooking and can be of the same type of images every year to get bored. SoUnder the top!

Before your memories fall like the leaves on the trees nice to go to ensure that the photos you need to create album pages can dream! Here are some fun pictures you can take now, to create fun scrapbook pages:

1. Back to school. Instead of scaled images of the other boys on the bus or standing on the porch in their new clothes, a picture of them standing next to an object,It will help to monitor their growth. A lantern, the door or the front door of the school are all great options. Do not forget a photo of your child is sitting in his desk and wrote on the blackboard and reads a book in class. You can sneak in before or after school to get these shots when you need it.

2. Autumn bounty. Enjoy the beautiful foliage, adding your child to collect a bouquet of autumn leaves in a variety of colors. Take a picture of himKeeping the leaves to his face, and another picture of little hands, the leaves. You can also make a funny photo of him lying in a pile of leaves and throw them into the air. Joy is good! (Note: if you live in leavs No more hot rolls, sheets, you can buy dollars at the craft store for some pictures scary one. Not bad for an investment!)

3. Pumpkin Patch. What patch would fall without a trip to the pumpkin? Stage, aPicture your child tries to choose between two pumpkins (tell her to think, "What should I choose?" Big Machine "beautiful" to get the photo). Other fun shots from behind a photo of your little farmer is on a split-rail fence, holds a pumpkin in each hand, or peering through the leaves of the corn field.

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