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  • Write You - How to Organize, Display & Treasure Your Kid's Art Work

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    or art work you don’t want to keep. Use it as:
    • Gift wrap
    • Inserts for greeting cards
    • Drawer/shelf liners
    • Decorate containers to use as organizers for arts & crafts supplies
    • Creative disposal placements for a meal. Or, if it’s really good, mount it to construction paper, laminate it, and use the art as place mats for a longer time.

  • Get funky with clipboards.<
    Losing Berries Is the Same as Losing Sales; Do We Really Have To Lose Them?
    My wife was disappointed when she returned from the side yard. Her face hung low and I knew she was pretty down. You see, I know the look. It is the same look that salespeople have when they miss a sales opportunity or lose a sale.My wife, returned from the side yard with her empty bowl. She was expecting to collect some juicy, vine ripened, black berries. Unfortunately
    Every mom shares the same dilemma. What to do with all the wonderful art your child creates! Without strategies for display, organizing and editing, these delightful treasures will just pile up and become a burden of clutter. Here's my top 10 neat ideas on how to keep their art from becoming clutter.

    1. Set policies on how much you are going to keep. For example, you might decide you want to keep only the top 10 – 20 pieces per year.

    2. Edit regularly. Keep only the very best or most meaningful. Each day or week, pick your favorite. At the end of the month, pick the best of the month. That's the one that gets put in a scrapbook or in a special memorabilia box. Involve your child in selecting his or her favorite. This helps your child learn that not everything is worth keeping, which is a very valuable organizing skill to learn early on.
    3. Go digital! Take digital photos of art you really love and recycle the rest! This preserves the art much longer. Paper eventually fades and tatters.
    4. Create an album or scrapbook for each school year and include photos of the best art along with other projects.
    5. Label the work. Mark the back of artwork you decide to save with the child name, date and the reason you kept it.
    6. Create a revolving gallery. Create a space on a wall or other area that becomes a revolving art gallery. Use magnetic boards, cork boards etc. Provide one spot for each child and hang their photo or a name marker above their spot. Each time to you change the art decide if the old piece is worth saving.
    7. Repurpose and recycle. Find creative uses for art work you don’t want to keep. Use it as:
      • Gift wrap
      • Inserts for greeting cards
      • Drawer/shelf liners
      • Decorate containers to use as organizers for arts & crafts supplies
      • Creative disposal placements for a meal. Or, if it’s really good, mount it to construction paper, laminate it, and use the art as place mats for a longer time.

    8. Get funky with clipboards. Samsung X830 White - Musically Yours!
      The all new Samsung X830 White is a typical music phone with interesting and unique looks and features. This iPod look alike with a swivel design sports a massive 1 GB of integrated memory that is enough to store your entire music collection (up to 250 songs). Samsung X830 White is an amalgamation of a mobile phone and an mp3 player with a horizontal interface that disp
  • 0 – 20 pieces per year.

  • Edit regularly. Keep only the very best or most meaningful. Each day or week, pick your favorite. At the end of the month, pick the best of the month. That's the one that gets put in a scrapbook or in a special memorabilia box. Involve your child in selecting his or her favorite. This helps your child learn that not everything is worth keeping, which is a very valuable organizing skill to learn early on.
  • Go digital! Take digital photos of art you really love and recycle the rest! This preserves the art much longer. Paper eventually fades and tatters.
  • Create an album or scrapbook for each school year and include photos of the best art along with other projects.
  • Label the work. Mark the back of artwork you decide to save with the child name, date and the reason you kept it.
  • Create a revolving gallery. Create a space on a wall or other area that becomes a revolving art gallery. Use magnetic boards, cork boards etc. Provide one spot for each child and hang their photo or a name marker above their spot. Each time to you change the art decide if the old piece is worth saving.
  • Repurpose and recycle. Find creative uses for art work you don’t want to keep. Use it as:
    • Gift wrap
    • Inserts for greeting cards
    • Drawer/shelf liners
    • Decorate containers to use as organizers for arts & crafts supplies
    • Creative disposal placements for a meal. Or, if it’s really good, mount it to construction paper, laminate it, and use the art as place mats for a longer time.

  • Get funky with clipboards.<
    2007 Business Plans; Is The Internet Teaching Bad Business Skills?
    Many people want to start a business of their own and often they look to the Internet to find a way. Unfortunately in doing this they misunderstand what business is really all about. Recently in consulting with a gentleman about starting a business and suggesting that he needed to develop a business plan; no sooner than I mentioned this and he was off picking a business name a
    n early on.
  • Go digital! Take digital photos of art you really love and recycle the rest! This preserves the art much longer. Paper eventually fades and tatters.
  • Create an album or scrapbook for each school year and include photos of the best art along with other projects.
  • Label the work. Mark the back of artwork you decide to save with the child name, date and the reason you kept it.
  • Create a revolving gallery. Create a space on a wall or other area that becomes a revolving art gallery. Use magnetic boards, cork boards etc. Provide one spot for each child and hang their photo or a name marker above their spot. Each time to you change the art decide if the old piece is worth saving.
  • Repurpose and recycle. Find creative uses for art work you don’t want to keep. Use it as:
    • Gift wrap
    • Inserts for greeting cards
    • Drawer/shelf liners
    • Decorate containers to use as organizers for arts & crafts supplies
    • Creative disposal placements for a meal. Or, if it’s really good, mount it to construction paper, laminate it, and use the art as place mats for a longer time.

  • Get funky with clipboards.<
    Refurbished Inverters
    Refurbished inverters are for those who cannot afford to buy a new one. These inverters are available in abundance. They can be purchased online also. While purchasing a refurbished inverter there are certain things which have to be kept in mind. Firstly, it should meet your needs. Second, check the condition of the battery. The batteries should be in very good condition, as
    e, date and the reason you kept it.
  • Create a revolving gallery. Create a space on a wall or other area that becomes a revolving art gallery. Use magnetic boards, cork boards etc. Provide one spot for each child and hang their photo or a name marker above their spot. Each time to you change the art decide if the old piece is worth saving.
  • Repurpose and recycle. Find creative uses for art work you don’t want to keep. Use it as:
    • Gift wrap
    • Inserts for greeting cards
    • Drawer/shelf liners
    • Decorate containers to use as organizers for arts & crafts supplies
    • Creative disposal placements for a meal. Or, if it’s really good, mount it to construction paper, laminate it, and use the art as place mats for a longer time.

  • Get funky with clipboards.<
    How to Save Money and Get Discount Long Term Care Insurance in Missouri
    One of the last things anyone wants to think about or plan for is long term health care. No one wants to think that they will someday end up in a nursing home or need help bathing and dressing and feeding themselves. But as we are all living longer and longer the chances of our needing such care at some point in our lives grows greater and greater.In fact, according t
    or art work you don’t want to keep. Use it as:
    • Gift wrap
    • Inserts for greeting cards
    • Drawer/shelf liners
    • Decorate containers to use as organizers for arts & crafts supplies
    • Creative disposal placements for a meal. Or, if it’s really good, mount it to construction paper, laminate it, and use the art as place mats for a longer time.

  • Get funky with clipboards. As an inexpensive and fun alternative to frames, use colorful clipboards mounted on the wall to create an art gallery for your child’s room. Let them decide what they want to hang and when they want to change it. Clipboards allow them to easily change out art frequently.
  • Draw the line. Hang a clothesline across a wall in an area where you want to display art and hang it with clothespins. This makes it easy to change the art whenever you or your child wants to!
  • Make gifts.Create unique gifts for relatives with good pieces. You can make little books, puzzles, calendars, and more. Encourage your child to help think of ways to transform art into fun gifts.
  • © 2006 Ariane Benefit, Neat Living

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