LINKS
Here's a
selection of the links to help you create your Book of
Me Scrapbook.
Start
with your own signed copy of the book:
Buy
The Book of Me here!
-
OneScrappySite.com:
run by Book of Me author, Angie Pedersen
-
Let’s Start Scrapbooking
at One Scrappy Site!
-
Back to Basics
with Scrapbooking.com
-
Locate a Creative Memories consultant near you
for an in-home class
-
Locate a Close to My Heart consultant near you
for an in-home class
-
Creating Keepsakes.com
can help you find a scrapbooking store near you that may offer beginner’s classes
-
Pea
Soup: Quotes
-
Boomer
Baby Memory Bank, for people born in the 40s, 50s, & 60s
-
Fads
of the Super70s
-
Are
you a child of the 80s? Find
out here
-
Holidays.net:
histories, descriptions, & activity ideas for every holiday you can think of!
-
Homecooking at About.com –
including a chart of measurement conversions for “heirloom” measurements like a peck, a dash, and a “slow”
oven.
-
Create a Celebration Journal
for all the reasons you celebrate in a year, from Writers' Digest.com
-
The Big Ten Conference
homepage: (Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Northwestern, Ohio State, Penn State, Purdue, Wisconsin)
-
Big 12 Sports
Page: (Baylor, Colorado, Iowa St., Kansas, Kansas St., Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oklahoma St., Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech)
-
TheOnion.com:
“Quality” journalism available on many college campuses
-
Search the NY Times
for information on headlines related to your major
-
The Motley Fool
on paying for college
-
College recipes!
“Fast, fun & cheap!”
-
How to say “I love you”
in 114 different languages
-
Romantic e-postcards
with fill-in-the-blank love letters (print it out & use it on a
layout!)
-
Love
fonts at Ouvrez! Police
-
More
Love fonts at Ouvrez! Police!
-
The
meaning of different flowers
The
Book of Me by Dr. Gail Folaron: "More than 25 pages that allow
children to keep memories of families, birth parents, vacations, awards, and
more. Some pages allow the child to graphically present information about
what troubles them, what makes them feel good, and more. Different colors
are used for the multiple family sections to provide a place to keep
memories both together (in the book) and separate, as the child changes
foster families. This book has helped children and case workers in the
foster care field since 1983."
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