Pamela Peery

Pamela Peery
POP

Monday, December 1, 2014

What to Write in My Baby Book?



What to Write in My Baby Book?


Wow, I can’t believe I have made it through the first month of motherhood and I can’t believe how fast Photo Book Baby is growing – his cheeks have filled out and his legs are nice and chubby! I have been working on a couple projects simultaneously, a custom baby book and a pregnancy journal. As you know, I’m not an “off the shelf” type person. If I have the time (or even when I don’t) I love to do DIY projects. I just couldn't find a baby book that I liked and then there’s all those weird blanks that sometimes you don’t know how to fill or what to put. My only solution was to go custom.

I haven’t started physically laying out the book yet – I’m currently in my “collection” phase, amassing all the stuff – both physical items and digital files for those books. I have decided to write a series so you can follow along with me and make your own baby book or pregnancy journal. It’s never too late moms and dads – even if your “baby” is college bound! (What a nice gift that would be to send your kid off to college with a memory book!) Let’s start!

Gather all your items in one place.

It’s all about organization and we all know how hard it is to start a project when your files and (and thoughts) are all scattered about. Here’s some items you may want to gather for your book:

Physical Items:
Hospital name bands for baby and mom
Congratulatory cards
Baby shower cards
Baby shower game cards
Birth announcement
Ultrasound photos
Baby shower invitation
Scraps of baby shower wrapping paper and ribbon
Name card from baby’s hospital bassinet
Stamped footprints/ornamental birth certificate from hospital
Nursery paint chip cards
Lock of hair
Photo of you and/or your husband at the same age as your child (I’m assuming this is most likely not digital.)
Pregnancy test stick (I did not keep mine, but I took a photo of it.)
Umbilical cord stump (yes, this is admittedly a bit out there – but my husband’s mom saved my husband’s in his baby book, so when our baby’s fell off, I guess I felt compelled to keep it too. It looks really weird though…LOL!)
Newspaper from the baby’s birthday
Cultural specific items – for example, my mother bought a Chinese calendar which contains Chinese fortune/horoscope for each day. The Chinese calendar is based on lunar/solar cycles, (which makes it super confusing to me), so the western calendar date is different than the Chinese date, not to mention the year is 4709 and not 2011! Other cultural calendars include Indian, Islamic, Jewish… A lot of these calendars can be found online.

Put all these things in a basket or area on your shelf until you are ready to work on your project. At some point you can scan these items (300 dpi jpeg recommended) for use in your photo book.

Digital Items:
Photos of everything: baby shower, baby bump photos, nursery preparations, and of course baby!
Baby’s Horoscope on his birthday
Personal notes/journal on baby – milestones, etc. (more details on this later)
Congratulatory emails
Facebook status posts (you can do a screenshot of your friends’ comments)
Cost of Living/Current Statistics – i.e. cost of loaf of bread, gallon of milk, gallon of gas, world population, President of the U.S.
Anecdotes from “this day in history” – i.e. notable births, historical events, news headlines

As for the last two items, you can find information by Googling your baby’s birth date, using keywords such as “world news from (insert date)”, “this day in history (insert date)”, “notable births (insert date)”. A lot of this type of information can be found on Wikipedia.

During my online searching I also found this free, digital Scrapbooking tool from Tommee Tippee (a Babies R Us product line) called The Day Baby Was Born. It guides you through steps to make a digital scrapbook that you can share online via Facebook or print out by following the prompts. “This day in history” type information is instantly gathered for you from sources like Wikipedia and Wolfram Alpha and you can choose which items you want to include. It’s a very easy way to collect the info you may want to include in your own custom baby book, or you can use it as a standalone book in itself. It’s pretty fixed though in terms of how it’s laid out, but eh it’s free…

Just as it’s important to gather all those physical items in one place, I store these digital items in a folder on my desktop where I can just drag and drop anything and everything related to my baby book. You can create sub-folders into categories such as “pregnancy”, “baby bump photos” etc. per your preference.

Until my next post, keep on collecting folks!

Tell me – what kinds of items are you collecting for your baby book?