Thursday, 21 March 2013

Push-Up Bra blogging [1]: the McFly Approach [Part 1]

Hi hi, and welcome to the first instalment of Push-Up Bra Blogging or...  how to make the most of what you've already got.

If you missed the introduction to the series you can hop back and catch it here but basically the series will be a series of articles aimed at anyone wanting to give a quick, easier-than-you-might-think boost to what they put on show to the online world!

Warning: if you want to change how you feel about blogging, and finally incorporate it into your everyday life, then this series will keep you busy for the next couple of weeks:
  • There are [up to now at least] 6 individual approaches to try on for size ...
  • Plus several special guest posts [so it's not just me helping you find a perfect fit... there's a team of us assisting with the hooks and straps!]  
  • Each 'approach' is completely packed with tips, thought-provoking questions, ideas, real-life examples, explanations and inspiration all to show that this blogging lark really can become part of your regular routine ... as well as being beneficial to you!
  • I will be storing them all in a list here on the blog and on the Push-Up Bra Blogging Pinterest board for ease of access. [You DO NOT need a Pinterest account to view them there. You just need to click on and/or save this link].
  • If you really want to make the most of the vast amount of content ... you may need to buy a new notebook and pen and take copious notes. [I know, it's going to be hard. You're going to have to force yourself into selecting which fabulously-covered book to buy now that you have a really good excuse, but I'm sure you'll manage ... somehow.]
  • You may also need to set time aside to read and digest the articles in complete solitude, with your feet up, with a drink of choice to hand. But again ... I'm sure you'll muddle through. 
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OK then, if you're ready to move on, then I'm ready to introduce you to the one person who will have the biggest impact on the style, feel, and frequency of your blogging...

...because today ... it's all about you!


[Before we begin ... I know very little about McFly beyond that song ... but if you don't even know that then here it is. It's very sweet and may burrow its way into your ears for the day, but I can't be held responsible for that!]

It's unavoidable for me, writing a series about how to boost your blogging performance, without first addressing the person behind the performance: Hello you.

Like it or not, your blog starts and ends with you. Personally I think it's lucky to have you, but ...

I'm going to guess that, if you're not blogging as often as you would like, then it's partly because you're stuck thinking about it as 'blogging for the sake of the blog' ... and that you haven't [yet] felt the benefits that blogging can bring to you, the blogger.

So what exactly can blogging do for you?

Well ...

Blogging, like journal writing or meditation can help you get to know yourself better.

Sounds weird. I know. Especially when so many people talk about blogging as a means to get to know others.

But it really can be a useful tool to help you discover what's important to you, in your life, here and now.

Because you are what you blog.

And if you're not ... if you're blog doesn't really represent you ... then maybe that's why you're just not feeling the whole blogging thing in the first place!

Ideally, from all the endless possibilities out there, nothing makes it on to your blog without your say so.

It's you who's selected the content.  You who's presented it in those specific words or photographs and so ...after a while ... your blog will begin to reflect back to you just where your priorities are at the moment. 

This can be useful [and even surprising] to look back on and to even help you address any issues you might have with what you see in that reflection.
  • Maybe you'll notice how you keep saying the same things over and over in your posts - be they positive ... or not so ...
  • Maybe you've unexpectedly blogged three posts in a row on a similar topic ... without fully realising beforehand it was becoming an important subject to you.
  • Maybe you find yourself sharing something about yourself that you didn't think you'd want to talk about .... whatever it is ...
Each individual blog post may not make any great statement about who you are today ... but over time ... by increments ...
  • the more you blog ...
  • the more decisions you make about what to share [your art, your life, your opinions, hobbies, experiences etc]
  • or how to share it [photos, finished projects, lists, music, poetry etc etc]
it will add up to a fairly accurate picture of who you are right now! [And, personally, I find that fascinating!]

I know we can all put on a front / a show / a pretence to a certain extent ... but in the long run ... the real person generally bubbles to the surface. And, if you're a blogger ... that surface is your blog posts.

I'll write more on this in the next section but, over the 4 years I've been blogging I've certainly learned that using humour and encouraging other people has increasingly become a central part of why I blog what I blog.

Yes, there's plenty of creative eye-candy on display here too ... but it's not all there is. And I love how that reflects my offline life and also dovetails with my life philosophies too ... and all without initially being part of my blogging agenda.

Now, whether this is all about sharing your art, recipes or photos of your dog [it doesn't have to be overly profound ... just what reflects a genuine interest or focus] it really shouldn't come as a surprise that your blog can reveal your inner self and your inner priorities because that's the very reason people have been writing in personal diaries since paper was invented.

Just because this is online it doesn't really mean it's any less personal in origins.

Any time we choose to speak something out loud, write something down [blog], express ourselves in some public or shared way:
  •  we can't help but reveal something that began silently, in our heads, just between us and our brains!
  • And what we decide to allow out ... reveals something about us.
  • And sometimes it's ourselves we surprise most!
Now then ... now that we've begun to acknowledge that in blogging fairly frequently we can begin to learn more about who we we are and what we want to share we're well on our way to pinning down what's meant by one of those flighty phrases you see in so many blogging tutorials: the 'blogging voice'.

Finding your own unique blogging ‘voice’:

It turns out that 'the voice' isn't just a TV talent show featuring Tom Jones and big swivelly chairs ... it's actually the reason you will gain and, more importantly, retain blog readers.
 
The numbers of blog readers you have shouldn't matter as much as the engagement you have with them. [Which doesn't mean I'm above feeling the odd pang of jealousy when I've seen someone with more followers than me! But it's definitely becoming far, far less of a concern for me today.]
 
And, the engagement you have with those readers is partly based on:
  • whether or not they feel they know you 
  • whether or not you're consistently you
  • whether or not you feel genuine or maybe a little like you're blogging by numbers
But don't confuse your readers getting to know you with 'having to reveal all about your private life' - it's NOT the same thing. At all.
 
They don't need to know your bank details or the subject of the last fight you had with your partner [OK, it was that pile of model aeroplane parts on the dining table if you must know!].
 
They just need to feel that when they've enjoyed a post you've blogged ... there's a good chance there'll be something vaguely similar there, presented by someone recognisably a real, interesting person, the next time they swing by.
 
**Edited [several times!] to add**
 
Your 'voice' is just another way of saying your 'recognisable style' your 'you-ness'.
 
It's how your signature style / your character / individuality / originality come across the more times you hit 'publish'.
 
[I'm really not saying your blog space needs to be about you spilling all about your personal life].
 
  • It may come across in the images you choose or the type of creative project you share, rather than your words ... it's just the same thing.
  • Personality and style come across in your choice of content too ... and it all helps to tell whatever it is you're wanting to tell to your audience.  [This may be as simple as displaying to them that you make beautiful paintings, or knit fabulous hats ... whatever ...]
  • Seriously, you need not be revealing much about yourself -  it can be as simple as wanting to share how you really, really like the colour yellow right now [yes, I did have an entire series about just that last year!]
Anyway ...

As I set out above - blogging more frequently [how ever often that feels right for you] can help YOU identify YOUR blogging priorites.
  • Now ... be warned ... this can take time ...
  • but it definitely speeds up if you blog more often ...
  • it's like a trial and error process ... you work through all the ideas and keep going until something falls into place! 
And it's then that you start getting happy in your own blog space. On your own terms!
  • once you've hit your stride ...
  • once you've found what you truly enjoy blogging about ...
  • once you drop all the things you think you should blog about ...
  • once you start pleasing yourself and uncovering where the fun in sharing what makes you happy with others ... then ... guess what ... that's your blogging voice!
That's the person who  other readers will identify with ... that's the blog they'll know what to expect from ... the blog they'll subscribe to and follow ... because it feels comfortable. Reliable. Good company for their next tea break.
 
Once you find what makes your unique blogging voice ... you can start doing it on purpose!... a line I think I've borrowed from Dolly Parton  And this makes future blogging SO MUCH EASIER!!!!
 
In the last 4 years I've read a lot of tutorials, articles and stories on how to achieve blogging success.
 
A lot.
 
And I can honestly say that not one of them, in all that time, not a single one mentioned that blogging about the conversations you overhear is the way to blogging satisfaction. Not one. Fancy that.
 
And yet ...


... blogging snippets from the conversations I overhear is one of my all time favourite things to do here ... and, I'm willing to bet it's also one of the things that regular/long time readers here would mention if they had to describe my blog to a friend.

Do you see how by simply following what made me happy ... I landed on a blogging topic which others seem to like too? My blogging 'voice' .... gets heard.

There's no reason this can't work for you too.

Here's a confession:
  • I initially thought about starting a blog purely so Design Teams would look more favourably on my applications. So I'd have somewhere to promote their products.
  • Yet ... I've also read enough Karl Marx to feel uncomfortable simply doing something for 'the man' ... ;-) so I started thinking that if I was going to do it for them ... I was sooooooooo going to find a way of making it work for me at the same time! 
  • I decided from the start I would make a blog that was about more than paper crafting.
  • Not that there's anything wrong with following a single topic that if that's where your heart and 'voice' wants to go. Some of my favourite blogs do just that!!
  • But personally I wanted a more 'magazine' style blog. With bits of all sorts. Combining the things I love. In my own 'voice'.
Now, this was, and remains, a trial and error process. I've tried many different styles of post and worked hard to keep a recognisable 'Julie-ness' across the various disparate things I blog ... but once I landed on some things that seemed to work ... I began to do them on purpose.

Once something works / feels right / feels fun to do / gets a good response from readers / makes you proud / makes you smile ...

... start factoring them into your regular blogging repertoire!

I'll be writing much more about this area in an upcoming post but for now here's a few examples  ...
  • Overheards - which began as snippets scrawled down in my notebooks at work - became part of my blogging voice and remain a useful, short, feature I fall back on when I can't be bothered to blog something longer!
  • My Month in Numbers - which began as a one-off post about some noteworthy events in January 2010 - became part of my blogging voice once a month ever since.
Do you see where I'm going with this? That the motivation to blog more frequently comes easier when you're creating posts that you really like!!

 ... but I think perhaps we've both had enough for one day and so ...

That's 'The McFly Approach: Pt 1' and now ...
  • I'm going to leave you to digest the various ways in which blogging is indeed all about YOU ...
  • but that that shouldn't scare you off ... because in fact ...
  • in being yourself and blogging your own passions and preferences you will be making things easier for yourself in the long run! And your blog will develop as a result.
But, if today's talk of 'voice' and self-knowledge was all a bit too psychological for you ... then do not despair!!
Drop back here next time for 'The McFly Approach: Pt2' where I'll cover some slightly more practical aspects but which still remain ... all about you!

You're singing that now aren't you? ... 'it's all abooooouuuuuuut yooooooou'

See you tomorrow.

Julie
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**IF YOU'VE ENJOYED THIS POST & / OR SCRIBBLED DOWN ANYTHING YOU MIGHT FIND USEFUL IN YOUR NOTEBOOK, THEN PLEASE CONSIDER SHOWING YOUR APPRECIATION BY MAKING A SMALL DONATION TO THE 'SAVE THE CHILDREN' CHARITY via my Just Giving page where I'm hoping to turn this blog series into £500 of aid.

You can now keep in touch with me through your inbox by subscribing to updates and additional notes + chatter here.

Tuesday, 19 March 2013

Introducing: The Push-Up Bra Approach to Blogging


Hello you.

Do you have a blog?

Do you wish you had the time or inspiration to blog more often?

Do you keep promising yourself you'll blog more regularly?

Do you wish you could blog as confidently as some of the bloggers you admire?

Well ... allow me to introduce something which might just help you out ... The Push-Up Bra Approach to Blogging:


It's my brand new blog series aimed at giving a pushed-up and padded boost to those of you who like the idea of blogging ... but who, from time to time, feel a little, well ... flat.
 
Now, seeing as you've already seen it in its bra, I really ought to help you get better acquainted with the series by pre-empting some of your questions. Here goes:

Q: Is it free to access?
  • Yes. 100% cash free.
  • However ... if you read it and enjoy it then:
  • I'd be so grateful if you would consider making a donation to Save the Children via my Just Giving page. There'll be a link  over in my sidebar >>> right throughout the series.
  • And, the same goes for you if you've enjoyed any of my previous free blog series ... if you can, please consider a small donation to a worthwhile cause.
  • I've set the target at £500 which, while it sounds like a lot, I'm pretty sure we can reach if we all just throw in a small amount each. Thank you in advance .. now back to the series ...
Q: Where did the idea come from?
Almost 2 years ago now I delivered a free 8 part series called Tips for the Design Team-curious which,  as you might well have guessed from the name, consisted of tips for anyone wanting to try-out for a role on a creative design team.

If you read the series at the time [or if you manage to catch up with it now here - it's all still available] you may have detected that, while the series undoubtedly does what it says on the tin - offer tips to how you get on a design team - it wasn't my one and only purpose for putting it together.

Much of the content [including ideas on improving your photography skills, raising your confidence and experimenting creatively] was really meant to be taken on board to help you boost your work first ...

... and if getting on a design team came as an added bonus afterwards, then good for you! But it wasn't my only focus.

No, the main thing I was encouraging you to promote with that series ... was you.

So much so in fact that I concluded with the idea of you becoming your own design team, of putting all the creative energy you would spend working for someone else's blog ... into your own.

And it's precisely that idea which led me to createThe Push-Up Bra Approach to Blogging which is aimed at anyone who wants to both put more into and get more out of their own blog.
 
Q: Will it cover setting up or tinkering with the look of a blog?
  • No.
  • It's not an exhaustive How To series [which doesn't mean I haven't been occasionally exhausted writing it!]
  • It won't go into how to set up a blog or how to use coding or anything technical. [However, hundreds of tutorials covering all those things are only an internet search away if that's what you need.]
To continue with the bra-themed metaphor you should think of it this way ...
  • I'm not going to be teaching you how to make a bra ... just how to wear one to your best advantage!
The majority of the content will be about ... content.

I will share tips on what kinds of things you could blog about and how to pad it out without having to radically change your offline lifestyle.
  • In short ... it's about how to make the most of what you've already got!
Q: Will it only be useful for crafty-bloggers?
  • No, I think it will have a wider appeal ... however ...
  • as I blog a lot of crafting projects myself ... then some of my advice will inevitably be based around those experiences.
  • But, wherever possible I will be offering alternatives for those who don't make a lot of things ... if anything.
Q: Who are you to tell me how to blog?
Firstly, wow, why so hostile? Weren't you ever taught about what to do if you can't say anything nice?

And secondly ...
  • I'm a big believer that most advice is autobiographical ... and that's where this series finds its focus.
  • I'm not going to claim any wider, higher or more scientific basis for my tips other than ... they're mine. From my point of view.
  • While from time to time I’ll probably dabble in grand suggestions and highfalutin ideas ... in the main I’ll be talking about practical ways of working that have helped me blog regularly for the last 4+ years.
  • Ultimately I’ll be relying on knowing what works for me … which certainly may not work for you. And that's OK. For both of us!
Q: Why should I aspire to blog more often? Some people have a life y'know?
Seriously ... have you thought about getting those hostility levels checked? I'm getting worried about you. Maybe it's an allergy?

But ...
  • I really won't be evangelising about how you all MUST blog more often, but if that is what you want to do ...
  • ... then there'll certainly be enough material there to assist you do just that.
  • And 'more often' doesn't have to equal 'a lot' or 'every week day' or 'a serious blogging addiction'.
  • If you usually blog once a month and then after following the series you end up blogging twice a month ... then that still counts as more often!!
  • Much of the content will cover creating a pipeline, a work flow, a form of structure and organisation around your blogging life - which YOU decide how to put to use and how frequently.
Q: I couldn't care less about blogging and don't like the sound of any of this. Can we still be friends?
  • Aw, go on then. I won't hold a grudge. [And if you go put the kettle on that'll sweeten the deal].
  • It will stretch across the coming month or two.
  • But, I'll be blogging some of my usual content in between these posts - it won't take over completely.
And, honestly ...
  • If you don’t think that these posts are going to be useful to you or that it’s not something you’re interested in ... then you're probably right.
  • You know you better than I do.
  • I won't be trying to convert anyone who doesn't want to be converted.
It's all a 'pick n mix' thing: take what you need. Spit out the rest. [Like when you find the coffee-flavoured one in a pack of Revels. Or the liquorice Jelly Bean].

Q: Will there be nudity?
  • No!
  • In fact, other than the one in the logo there won't even be any bras.
  • No ... hang on ... just because there won't be any bras ... it does not mean there'll be any flesh on show. [And if you can't find those sort of images elsewhere then you're using the internet wrong.]
  • p.s: is that really all you wanted to ask?
Q: Will I need to crack open a brand new notebook in order to make notes and keep track of all my favourite tips?
  • Absolutely!
  • Do not hesitate to do so.
  • In fact ... why are you still here? Go! find a fabulous notebook NOW! [You've probably got one on that shelf over there haven't you?]
And finally ...

Q: When does the pushing-up commence?
  • Well, we've already begun haven't we? I'm continuing to write the posts and you're off looking for that notebook ...
  • But later this week I'll post the first of our alternative, practical approaches to getting more from your blog ... and watch-out ... because it's starting very close to home ....
See you there my lovely push-up-bra bloggers!

Julie :-)

Monday, 18 March 2013

Simply A Moment [March]: What? None? As in 'none'?

Hello.

I really don't feel like I've been blogging as much as normal which is ironic ... because I'm currently writing a new blog series all about ... blogging more often ...

Ahhh ... the blogging gods are clearly having kicks at my expense right now!

However, I am determined to keep up with the 'Simply A Moment' meme created by my wonderful blogging friend Alexa in which she encourages us to, once a month, record in detail, a moment which could otherwise have passed by without comment.

To learn more you can read Alexa's tips on how to record your own moments and view her most recent Simply A Moment post here. If you do join in there's a link box there for you to add your post.

And now here's mine ...

What? None? As in 'none'?

Date: Friday 15th March 2013
Time: around 9:50am
Location: at home, at my work desk, eating porridge + blueberries with a cup of tea

None?

None? As in 'nothing'? At all?

How can I have had no - zero - emails overnight?

I press the send/receive button once again because, let's face it, there must be some mistake. Surely?

But the word 'complete' appears and no new messages emerge. So that's that cleared up then. No mistake.
I must admit though, it does make a welcome change from the dozens of SPAM blog comments which have been arriving, unrelentingly, overnight for the last few months ... all labelled 'Anonymous' and laying in wait for me with their mix of bizarre non-sequiturs, mangled English, random links and obscene phrases.
 
[If nothing else the latter kind have taught me that even when I can't identify the language the message is written in ... there are certain words which are recognisable just the same.]
 
I begin to wonder if moving my SPAM filter settings up to 'High' is beginning to work then ... which reminds me ...
 
... I'd better go check the SPAM folder to make sure there aren't any decent messages
trapped in there rubbing shoulders with the indecent.
 
No. No one's in there. Or, no one who shouldn't be. Just a lot of Anonymous-es and so I hit the wonderfully titled 'Delete Forever' button on them all.
 
'Delete Forever': a splendidly vehement sentiment. Pressing it feels like a small act of vengeance.
 
The laptop has been making a constant humming sound since I turned it on today. A sound like it's constantly, incessantly, processing something.
 
Outside the wind blows against the window in much the same way.
 
Behind me the radio is distracting more than entertaining.
 
It's time I started working. But first ...
 
... a glance to see if anything new has landed in my inbox ...
 
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Thanks for taking a moment to share in mine, and don't forget to swing by Alexa's for links to more.
 
See you soon.
 
Julie :-)

Friday, 15 March 2013

Scrapbooking ... an unlikely double

Hi, hi.

I did something I don't normally do.

No, I didn't run through the park with gay abandon surrounded by enthusiastic dogs nor did I utter the phrase 'You know what? I don't think I need to buy any more boots this year'.

No. I did neither of these unnatural things. But what I did do ... is this:
I made a double-page scrapbook layout ... and for me, that's almost as unlikely as either of those other things I mentioned.

I've been scrapbooking for around 6 or 7 years now and filled numerous albums with page after page of 12x12 layouts but ... off the top of my head, I can count on one hand the number of double-page spreads there are amongst my scrappy back-catalogue.

So, what led to this deviation then?
The thing is, I had quite a few photos from a fancy Afternoon Tea-time my friends and I indulged in last year.

Too few to make a mini-book ... but, equally, too many to fit on a single page ... and so the Goldilocks option turned out to be a double-pager. Who knew?
The eagle eyed amongst you will already have spotted that I didn't use the same background paper across the spread proving that, unsurprisingly, I've never originally intend this to turn out as a double.

To give me my due ... I did use the two closest matching single sheets I had, then I kept the continuity going by using the same patterned layers [American Crafts' 'Ready Set Go'] and adding a few mirror-image areas to balance the design across the two.

But I'll admit that it all felt a bit strange, especially when adding only half of my "What Say We Make This A Tradition" title to one side ...
 ... while finishing it up on the other:
 Yet ... you know what they say ... the more things change, the more they stay the same ...

... and so I managed to find room for some choice snippets cut from an old dictionary and an old school textbook [on the page above] and then here ... no prizes for guessing who wrote the book from which I snipped this perfect phrase:

So tell me ...do you do doubles?

If so:
  •  do you make them for a specific reason eg: to fit in X amount of photos / to fit in large photos; to tell a longer story? etc etc
  • or do you make them out of habit? Just the same as my habit is single pages.
And if not:
  • Why not?
  • Do you find them too big? Too 'traditional'? Too unruly? Too much work?
I'm already wondering if there's a recognisable 'double-page' type of scrapbooker or scrapbooking style out there!

I'll be waiting to see how you all reveal yourselves ...

Julie :-)

Sunday, 10 March 2013

Overheard: Ssssshhhh [one for the mothers].

Hi you.

As it's Mother's Day [here in the UK] I thought a parenting themed overheard might just be the thing to share today.

And it's a recent one too [proving that, just because I don't share many overheards on here ... it doesn't mean I've stopped listening ...]

When: Saturday 16th February 2013
Where: WH Smiths [book shop]

Who: A mother with 3 small children [all under 7-ish] spent a good while browsing through the children's books. Then, when they'd made their selections they walked through through the shop, past me, towards the till, which is when I heard the oldest child asking her mmother ....

Child 1: Is this a library?

Mother: No.

 ... and then, and you could almost hear her brain working, she uttered this piece of perfectly expressed children's logic:

Child 1: So ... can we be noisy then?

I think she might grow up to be a lawyer.

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I'm the giggly one on the right.
And to my own mother, who's probably had to deal with me being noisy in a library at some point ... Happy Mother's Day!

Julie x