
The History of Scrapbooking
The History of Scrapbooking — And Why It Still Matters More Than Ever
If you’ve ever picked up a photo and instantly felt the moment rush back…
you already understand the heart of scrapbooking.
Scrapbooking isn’t about paper and stickers.
It’s about remembering on purpose.
It’s about slowing down long enough to say: this mattered.
And it always has.
Scrapbooking Didn’t Start With Craft Stores
Long before albums, punches, or patterned paper existed, people were already preserving their lives.
As early as the 15th century, people in England kept commonplace books—handwritten collections of poems, letters, recipes, and meaningful thoughts. These books weren’t fancy, but they were deeply personal. They captured everyday life, values, and memories in a tangible way.
By the 1800s, scrapbooks evolved alongside photography. Families pasted photos, newspaper clippings, handwritten notes, and keepsakes into albums. Even Thomas Jefferson kept scrapbooks documenting the world around him.
From the very beginning, scrapbooking wasn’t about perfection.
It was about preserving what mattered.
The Shift: From Shoeboxes to Stories
Fast forward to the late 20th century.
Cameras became more accessible. Photos multiplied.
And suddenly, memories were everywhere—but stories were getting lost.
Photos lived in envelopes, drawers, and shoeboxes. Important moments were captured… but rarely revisited.
That’s when modern scrapbooking began to take shape.
Women like Marielen Christensen showed what was possible when memories were intentionally preserved. Her beautifully documented family albums inspired thousands to do the same—and sparked a movement that said everyday life was worth remembering.
Scrapbooking became a way to turn photos into context, meaning, and legacy.
The Creative Memories Turning Point
In 1987, everything changed.
Creative Memories didn’t invent scrapbooking—but they transformed it.
For the first time, memory keeping became:
intentional
accessible
protected
and beautifully organized
Creative Memories introduced albums that lay flat, pages that protected photos, tools designed for real life, and—most importantly—a system.
And if you know me, you know how much I love a good system.
This wasn’t just about making pretty pages.
It was about helping people actually finish albums and preserve stories without overwhelm.
Scrapbooking Became Community

Creative Memories also changed how people scrapbooked.
Instead of crafting alone, women gathered:
at kitchen tables
in living rooms
at workshops, crops, and retreats
Scrapbooking became shared experience.
Friendships formed. Stories were told out loud. Laughter filled rooms while albums filled with memories.
At its height, Creative Memories supported tens of thousands of Advisors worldwide and helped millions of albums come to life. It shaped the modern scrapbooking industry as we know it.
That legacy still matters.
The Ups, the Comeback, and the Heart That Never Left
Like many long-standing brands, Creative Memories faced challenges in the late 2000s. But the heart of the community never disappeared.
In 2014, the brand was revived—because memory keeping still mattered. Because people still wanted something tangible. Because stories still deserved a home beyond a screen.
And today, Creative Memories continues to evolve while honoring what has always been true:
👉 Your memories deserve better than being forgotten.
Why Scrapbooking Matters More Now Than Ever
We live in a digital world.
Photos are everywhere—but they’re scattered across phones, clouds, and social feeds. They scroll by once… and disappear.
Scrapbooking slows that down.
It says:
this story matters
this season deserves to be remembered
this life is worth documenting
Scrapbooks don’t require passwords.
They don’t disappear when technology changes.
They get pulled off shelves, passed around tables, and shared across generations.
They become heirlooms.
Scrapbooking Is Legacy Work
This is the part I care about most.
Scrapbooking isn’t about being crafty enough.
It’s about being intentional enough.
It’s about future generations hearing your voice through handwritten journaling.
It’s about kids seeing their stories mattered.
It’s about honoring ordinary days that turn out to be extraordinary.
That’s why scrapbooking has lasted centuries.
That’s why it survived trends and technology.
That’s why it still matters.
Because memories need a home.
And scrapbooks give them one.
If you’ve ever said:
“I need to get my photos organized someday”
“I don’t want these memories to disappear”
“I wish I had albums from my childhood”
You’re already part of this story.
And it’s never too late to start preserving it—one page at a time. 💛
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