Save your children’s artwork
photo by laffy4k
I have a confession. It’s my homekeeping weak spot. I can’t throw away my kids’ art projects. I save more than the typical handprint art. I cherish the stick-figure drawings the most. I have them organized in near perfect evolution. The drawings started out as crooked circle heads with dots for eyes, and, through the years, hands, ears, smiles with teeth, clothing and an entire world according to my children evolved. They capture moments that I don’t want to forget, such as when the sky was purple and fish could fly.
I’ve managed to organize them in a three-drawer plastic cart with wheels. The problem is, at the rate I’m saving them, I’ll need an entire room to store my treasures. My favorite tip is taking digital pictures of the artwork. I can have the photos laminated and spiral-bound at a local copy center or have my absolute favorites made into keepsake hardbound books. For moms like me, I hope this helps.
SCAN AND SCRAPBOOK: We scanned all of the kids’ stuff and saved it on a CD. I have a special box for each year of their lives, and I keep special pieces of artwork, report cards, maybe an outfit, etc. I am in the process of scrapbooking all that I’m able to. The rest will remain in their boxes unless I shadowbox them, which I do often. — Neeley, e-mail
FRAME IT: I have a box for each school year into which we put papers, tests, drawings, etc. I don’t save all of it, but just what I think he’ll enjoy seeing again when he’s older. I framed one of his paintings from kindergarten and hung it on our wall. The other day, someone came over and noticed it, and asked me who the artist was. Boy, did he like that! — MVS0122, Iowa
SAVE AND RE-EVALUATE: Every day, I put my daughter’s schoolwork in a tote in my closet. At the end of the year, we go through it and decide what to keep. — Julie, Florida
ROTATE DISPLAY: The coolest thing I have ever seen was in a playroom in a house we looked at. It had two rounded eyelet hooks stuck in the wall with a metal cable strung between them. The mom hung the artwork on it with little metal clips. It was so cute! — Nichole, Iowa
GIFT IT: You can use some of them to make cute place mats as gifts for grandparents. Use plastic clear contact paper or laminate and cut to size. — Barb, Pennsylvania
PRINT IT: I took digital pics and had calendars and jigsaw puzzles made as gifts. There are places like Cafe Press (www.cafepress.com) that will do mugs, mouse pads, ornaments, aprons, throw pillows, note cards, tote bags, etc. — Candace, Illinois
GET CRAFTY: I’ve heard of people scanning them and reducing them in size, then tossing the originals. They make cute magnets out of them. I save my daughter’s papers and certificates in an expanding file. I save my favorites and let her choose some favorites, and we toss the rest. — Karen, e-mail
SHOWCASE IT: I always wanted a photo-screen room divider and finally got one as a gift. I put some of their art in it. It looks better than using all photos. — Jenna, via forums


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I really appreciate this entry – my mom downsized so up to the attic I went to retrieve all my stuff that was jammed up there over the 18+ years at home. Mom was a bit of a pack rat, saved most of my art from early childhood through high school. When I arrived at my own home, I couldn’t wait to go through all of it – what a memory popper! Projects I remember making right in front of my eyes, very cool. I did eventually start whittling down the art I wanted to keep (to show my son some day, and get another big laugh) into a single box (now in my own attic). Great tips on how and where to store and display!
Thanks,
Chili
I agree that the neatest thing about saving your kids’ artwork is looking back at how it changes over the year. To that end, I came up with an idea of having the child color the same picture every year, and keep the results in a binder.
Check out my page for more details and a sample picture template to color: http://www.chicaandjo.com/2008/02/06/a-new-way-to-save-and-enjoy-your-childs-artwork/
Another idea would be to copy the artwork onto fabric and make it into a quilt top.
Although, I do like the idea suggested about downloading it all onto a CD. That way it could be kept forever. The only problem would be when CD’s are no longer used.
Skip, It’s so sweet that she saved your work. It’s even more wonderful that you can share them with your son, too. My kids sometimes get so excited to show me what they’ve created that I could never toss them away.
Lola, I love the quilt idea and have seen it done. Quilting is one of those talents I have yet to learn. I have a beautiful sewing machine my husband gave me and it’s just waiting for when I’m ready.
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