My first Christmas Journal was made in 2006, so this is my sixth year and it's a project I still enjoy. I'm much more relaxed about it than I used to be, and by the end of the season I always have a record of our holidays. Some days I write the journaling based on a prompt. This year I'm receiving Shimelle's prompts (as always) as well as prompts by Tracey Clark through Paper Coterie. Some days I'm too busy to even read the prompts so I come back to them later, and some days I have my own stories to record. In the midst of getting Chrismas cards finished (I made 50 of them this year), writing the letters to out-of-town friends, cooking for our holiday Open House tomorrow night, and the usual meetings and appointments, I squeezed in time to make the first three pages. They're all going in a Doodlebug StoryBook 3-ring 8X8 album that has two kinds of page protectors--regular and a photo page where I can just slip in extra 4X6 photos.
I don't always include Shimelle's Manifesto, but I liked this year's and decided it would make a good first page. It took me forever to come up with this simple page design!
The next page actually happened in November, but it was our first Christmas activity, and our only one with Sarah and Adam this year, so it had to be included.
The journaling reads: The Friday after Thanksgiving is Ashland's annual Christmas parade. Someone had told us everyone in Ashland turns out for it, and that seemed to be true. The weather was perfect, and it was lots of fun to watch Mr. and Mrs. Claus pull the switch from the balcony to turn on all the Christmas lights. It's easy to see that this will likely become a new tradition for Sarah and Adam and their family.
Journaling:
Today’s weather report on Channel 13 reminded us that last year we’d already had several inches of snow by now, and by the 7th of December we’d had 24 inches of snow. I remember that last winter seemed like it lasted forever. No wonder.
This year was the mildest November on record since the 1800s, and I’m not sorry. I’m enjoying walking outside without freezing, and without slipping and sliding in heavy boots. I’m glad to be finishing up my shopping without worrying about whether the roads are passable. I love pushing the grocery card on dry pavement. I’ll be happy to see a coat of snow on the ground on Christmas Day, but I can easily wait until then!
I'll be back later today with my blog post for the Scrap-Mart Christmas blog hop.