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    Countdown Craftiness

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    ‘Tis the season to take a step back from the computer.

    That’s right. Put down the spreads. Take one step back. Now another. Now a deep breath.

    You can keep editing until every word loses meaning, or you can take Alicia Luttrell’s advice.

    The yearbook adviser and librarian from Maryville Junior High in Maryville, TN, knows we all get antsy before the big holiday break.

    “There’s a time when we all have to buckle down and work on yearbooks,” she said, “but there’s a time to have fun and get creative.”

    Last year, Luttrell put her creativity to work.

    “I had an old tabletop tree and decided to give it a new home in the yearbook room. I also had four small Herff Jones ornaments to display and wanted to create more to take home.”

    Luttrell’s staff was thrilled, she said, to see art supplies.

    “My students were excited when they walked in and saw glue, tinsel, clear ornaments, yearbook pages and paint brushes on the table. I love to get them working on something different. To get them away from the everyday activities of looking at spreads. Things get a little messy, and that’s okay with me.”

    They made mini paper chains and decoupage ornaments from old yearbook spreads as well as “swirly” and tinsel ornaments to add color and sparkle to the tree.

    She suggests, “When ornaments are ready, tie a piece of jute or other string on the cap loop and include a cute tag with students’ names. This is a way to remember students who created these ornaments.”

    Take on the Christmas ornaments or make an activity of your own. It might just spark the creativity you’ve been hoping to find in the void of the computer screen.

    Read more blog stories like Getting to Know Your Team and The Future Starts Here.

    Additional Resources

    Creating a Ladder for Traditional Coverage

    Just as you would never attempt to build a house without blueprints, you should never begin a yearbook without a ladder. “Ladder” is the yearbook term for a page-by-page diagram showing the yearbook’s contents.

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    Examples of Type that Works

    Choosing the right type for your yearbook can amplify great design. View these examples of type that works.

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    Light Bulb Moment

    Adviser and staff change the way their yearbook takes shape after they start working with Herff Jones.

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