Various patterns/filler images from my Pinterest board

seen from Russia

seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Russia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Denmark
seen from Netherlands

seen from Malaysia
seen from France

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from France

seen from Malaysia

seen from Finland
seen from Maldives
seen from Maldives
Various patterns/filler images from my Pinterest board
Simon Petrikov themed📜 Scrapbook Pages
♡ valentines scrapbook page | source
The Disappearing Scrapbook: What happens to the memories captured on obsolete platforms?
Last year, I had the great pleasure of reporting a feature for my (Amherst College) alumni magazine about archives in the digital age. It came out in the winter print issue, and it's up online now!
How should Amherst students and alums of the digital age leave a record of their lives? As the College archivists help faculty and staff shift their practices around record-keeping, can they do the same with students—or does the proprietary, corporate and, most of all, ephemeral nature of digital life today render that task nearly impossible?
The initial seed for this piece was a comment from one of the college's archivists to my editor that he could tell you what a student had for lunch in the 1890s, but not in 2004. *I* ate lunch there in 2004—and I knew exactly what he meant. The ephemerality of our digital lives—whether due to obsolete platforms from the 90s and 2000s, or the deliberate design of social media 2010-the present—means we all have somewhat patchy portraits of the past few decades. I wound up traveling to my alma mater to talk to the archivists about how they approach this challenge, and it was *such* a great conversation; they even made me reconsider the fundamental question of what archives are actually for.
This piece is a bit college-specific, but I do think it will resonate more broadly if you're interested in these subjects!
Been going to the hospital a lot in not-great circumstances, but never let it be said you can't junk journal on the go (yes, it's been days of fast food and convenience store snacks)
So far the journaling supplies I've used the most when traveling have been:
scissors,
a flat blade/box cutter for removing labels (I have a small swiss army knife with both a knife and mini scissors),
a small roll of tape,
a date stamp (get one of those self-inking stamps for convenience),
glue stick,
2-3 pens in different colors,
stickers/magazine cutouts just for random decoration (my system for these is a bit complicated)
You seriously don't need to get fancy with the journaling equipment. I mostly just keep my travel journal kit to a minimum and compensate by saving tons of ephemera/paper souvenirs on the road.
New double spread in my films scrapbook! Not jam packed with detail but I think it works!
(I also made an intro page but it looks like ASS so we're going to move on from that)