I had no idea how involved the project would become, or how much fun it would be to learn about my own family history, from the late 1800's to present.
In class, Bryan had us set up a book using a Blurb template. I chose a 9 x 12 size, and planned chapter layouts, formatting styles for headings, text, and captions. If you've used Adobe programs, InDesign is relatively intuitive, but there's nothing like having weekly instruction, followed by assignments to put what you've learned into practice. Bryan made it all seemed so easy!
One of my favorite pages was a montage of my mom modeling for Century Club. The pictures here span from 1976-2011... 35 years. She hasn't changed much, has she?
Mom modeling over the years |
My niece helping Grandmom sort family slides a few years back. |
I didn't! What a surprise to hear the details of stories I thought I knew. I wrote them down, and started a hodgepodge text document.
A page in progress... with lorem ipsum and lots of ????'s |
Family photos from the 1920's |
Pictures from 1940 |
Happily, she was thrilled. From that time on, Mom and I collaborated on the text and captions. She searched her records for dates and details, and corrected my "gazillions" of mistakes. I collected some of her scrapbooks and photographed pages from others.
I began to turn to resources from other members of my family. My cousin, Jack Eiser, had continued the genealogy work his sister Joyce began, and I was able to access Rowe and Grant family trees on ancestry.com, complete with census records, birth certificates and more. (Thanks, Jack)
I'd collected family reminisces over the years, and I pulled anecdotes from those. When Mom didn't remember details from her childhood, she called her sister and brother and gathered their memories. Not surprisingly, they often saw things through different prisms.
Photos from the 70's! |
But then, miraculously, it was finished! One hundred pages, over 500 photographs, and a permanent record of my mom's history.
It was oh, so satisfying to see it arrive at Mom's as a hard-cover book, and to see the look on her face when she opened it at our Christmas celebration.
Of course, this project only whet my appetite for more. There are still so many photos! And there's still my dad's side of the family to explore!!!