I am very excited to introduce the core product at Log Your Memory – the Scrapbooker’s All-In-One Memory Logbook. This book is my answer to a problem common among busy scrapbookers … too many memories & not enough time to scrap them.

Picture this scenario: Your daughter says the cutest thing. You manage to write it on a scrap of paper and tuck it in your purse. Later in the day, you catch your hubby doing that thing he always does and think to yourself, “I oughta scrap that.”
The next afternoon, you take some great shots of your son and his game-winning play, proud as punch when you overhear the other parents comment on what a great sport he is. You manage to scribble a couple notes on the calendar fridge about it when you get home. You list the great birthday gifts you received on the desk calendar in your office.
Later in the week, you see a layout idea in your favorite magazine that triggers an idea for that album you’ve been meaning to start. You grab a notebook to sketch it out, but then get sidetracked and start your grocery list on the next page.
By the time the weekend comes, it’s time for laundry and cleaning and … you haven’t had a moment to yourself, even less time to scrapbook. That scrap of paper in your purse? Crumpled & buried with all of the other stuff you pack around all day long. And all of those great ideas and wonderful memories – some that you managed to write down, others that didn’t quite make it that far – are threatening to slip away before you have time to find them all again, let alone do anything with them.
Here is how the Memory Logbook can help.
This book is intended to take the place of all of those scraps of paper and multiple calendars and half-filled notebooks. It will provide you with one consistent place to write down your family’s schedule, jot down those special moments you want to remember, sketch out those layout ideas, even write out your shopping list if you’d like.
But it goes beyond that. Through a series of weekly challenge questions and a variety of questionnaires and worksheets, the Memory Logbook will get you thinking about the parts of your life you might be overlooking in your regular scrapbooking, particularly if you’re struggling just to keep up with your life.
Your daily routines. Your strange habits. The ways you are like your siblings or parents. The things your kids do that remind you of your own childhood. The stuff that makes up your “real” life … and the memories that will most likely prove to be quite revealing when you look back a few years down the road. Spend a few minutes at the end of each day jotting down a few notes in your Logbook and when you do finally find some time to scrapbook, you’ll know exactly where to start.

The Memory Logbook includes …
• Monthly calendars for at-a-glance planning & documentation.
• Daily calendars where you can jot down your schedule or make notes about things that happened that day.
• Space at the bottom of the daily calendar pages to document your memories, jot down ideas, create a gratitude list or whatever suits your purpose.
• Your own personal “Story List”… a checklist where you can list all of those pages and stories you know you want to share but haven’t had a chance to complete yet. Write them down so you don’t forget and when you have some time to scrap, you’ll know right where to start.
• A page every week where you can sketch your ideas for scrapbook layouts you’d like to do.

• Weekly challenge questions to get your creative juices flowing and help you tell the “real” story of your life.
• Examples of “real life” scrapbook layouts that go along with several of the weekly challenge topics for added inspiration.
• A questionnaire repeated every month to help you track how life changes over the course of the year.
• An annual questionnaire and price sheet to help set the stage for where you are in your life right now and the world you live in. Take a few minutes to fill this one in and it will provide a fun look back at “the good old days” many years from now.
• Monthly worksheets for documenting family holidays, plus extra pages at the back of the book for birthdays and other celebrations that you may or may not get around to scrapping but you still want to remember.
• A handy list of 2011 holidays on the last page, plus a place to jot down birthdays and other important family dates.

The 2010 edition of the Scrapbooker’s All-In-One Memory Logbook is available in three formats – coil-bound (also known as spiral-bound), perfect-bound (like your typical softcover book), or as an eBook that you download and can then print yourself or take to your local print shop. (If the print-it-yourself version interests you, be on the lookout next week for tips on how to customize the book with a few simple additions.)
As an added benefit, owners of the Memory Logbook are eligible to join the Log Your Memory Book Club and enjoy special privileges on this site. Click HERE for details.
Click HERE to read an excerpt from the Scrapbooker’s All-In-One Memory Logbook introductory pages.
The Print-It-Yourself downloadable version of the Memory Logbook is available for purchase directly from the Log Your Memory Web site HERE.
You can also purchase the print versions of the Memory Logbook, as well as the downloadable eBook, through our Lulu.com Bookstore by clicking on the following buttons:

- Coil-Bound (Paperback)

- Perfect-Bound (Paperback)

- Print-It-Yourself Download (eBook)

