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		<title>Pages in minutes</title>
		<link>https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/03/30/pages-in-minutes/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Mediterranka Design]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 30 Mar 2026 18:18:03 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Traveler's notebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tutorials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mediterrankadesign.com/?p=15670</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Like There are moments when you want to document a memory, but don’t have the time, inspiration or energy to build a page from scratch. Choosing photos, arranging elements, balancing the composition — all of it takes time, and sometimes that’s exactly what holds us back from creating. This is where templates make a real difference. Instead of starting with a blank page, you begin with a ready-made structure that already feels complete and balanced. It allows you to focus on your story, not on the technical side of design. For this tutorial, I used a set of templates designed to make memory keeping faster and easier, while still looking clean and intentional. The templates are available in two formats: 12×12 inches for photobooks and standard traveler’s notebook size. Each template already includes space for photos, built-in digital stamps with phrases, and a text block that you can easily edit and adapt to your own story. This means you don’t have to think about composition or placement — everything is already arranged in a way that feels balanced and cohesive. All you need to do is add your photos and words, and within minutes you have a finished page. At the same time, the templates remain fully flexible: you can move elements around, resize them, or adjust the layout to better fit your photos and style.   Using two templates from this set, I created a spread about one of my February walks. The last week of the month was unusually warm — it already felt like spring. For a few days, the temperature rose to 18°C, and I decided to open my hiking season. Even though the weather changed a bit by the weekend, I still walked 11 kilometers, finding my way to a mill I used to visit by bike from a nearby town. It turned into one of those simple but memorable days that felt worth documenting. For the right side of the spread, I chose a template with three photo slots. I filled them with a photo of horses at a ranch I passed by, a photo of snowdrops — the first flowers already appearing on some lawns — and a selfie where I look tired but happy. Having these predefined spaces made the process incredibly easy. Instead of thinking about how to arrange the photos, I could simply focus on choosing the moments that best told the story. For the left side of the spread, I used another template featuring an “outdoors” stamp and a table where you can record the date, location, weather, and choose your mood from a set of options. I really enjoy using this kind of structured journaling. It helps capture the key details of the day in a clear and visual way, while also adding a sense of order to the page. These small facts might seem simple, but they often become the most valuable part of the memory over time. Using the pre-designed text block, I wrote a short story about that day. Instead of adding another photo, I chose to include a printable element with the phrase “sky above — earth below” to bring a bit more color and visual interest to the page. Since there was still some empty space under the text, I added a piece of journaling card, a colored tag and after printing, finished the page with a stamped phrase in black ink. While these templates are designed to work beautifully on their own, you can easily take them a step further if you want a more layered, traditional scrapbooking look. For example, you can combine them with patterned paper, use them as part of a larger spread, or add printable elements on top to bring in more color and texture. Small details like word strips, extra stamps, or layered embellishments can completely change the feel of the page while still keeping the original structure. This makes the templates a very flexible tool: you can keep things minimal and quick, or turn the same base into a more detailed and decorative composition. Sometimes the hardest part of memory keeping is simply getting started. Templates remove that barrier, giving you a ready-made structure so you can focus on what really matters — your story. This page came together quickly, without overthinking the layout or composition, yet it still feels complete and personal. That’s exactly what I wanted these templates to do: make the process easier, faster, and more enjoyable. Whether you’re short on time or just want a simple, clean starting point, templates can help you turn your photos and memories into a finished page in minutes. Liked this post? Give it a like! PRODUCTS I USED IN THIS TUTORIAL       Olesya Rudenko Manaz Hi there! I’m a graphic designer, scrapbooker and storyteller. I enjoy creating quality supplies to make scrapbooking and storytelling easy, fun and practical for you. Like</p>
<p>Сообщение <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/03/30/pages-in-minutes/">Pages in minutes</a> появились сначала на <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com"></a>.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>ONE STORY: DRIVER LIFE</title>
		<link>https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/03/19/scrapbooking-tutorial-one-story-driver-life/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Mediterranka Design]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 18:02:52 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Tutorials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mediterrankadesign.com/?p=15571</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Like The Driver Story kit is dedicated to everyday life behind the wheel — not road trips or big adventures, but the small, familiar moments every driver knows. Learning to drive, getting your license, buying your first car, sitting at traffic lights, dealing with repairs, enjoying an empty road, or getting stuck in a traffic jam — all those little episodes that slowly become part of your personal story. For this kit, I chose a soft, earthy color palette with muted blues, terracotta brown, warm gray, and mossy green, accented with small touches of pink and gentle red — like a stop sign or a traffic light glowing in the distance. These tones help keep the pages calm and grounded, perfectly matching the everyday nature of the theme.   For this page, I chose just one photo from 2015 — a snapshot of me driving my very first car, stopped at a traffic light on one of the city streets. It’s a very ordinary moment, nothing dramatic or special, but that’s exactly why I wanted to document it. I often find myself thinking about that first car. I had to sell it when I moved to Germany, but before that we drove many kilometers together, and every trip felt like freedom. It was the time when driving was still new, exciting, and a little bit scary in the best possible way. Because the memory itself is simple and very clear to me, I kept the journaling short. Sometimes a page doesn’t need a long story to feel complete. A few sentences are enough to bring the feeling back, while the photo holds the rest. Instead of adding more text, I focused on the layout and small details to support the mood of the page. For the left side of the spread, I used the journaling card with stripes and simply resized it in Photoshop to fit the size of my traveler’s notebook page. Like many scrapbookers, I really love working with striped patterns. They look simple, but at the same time give you a lot of creative freedom. You can leave them as they are for a clean background, or build your composition on top of them by adding small elements. For this page, I chose the second option. The stripes create structure, while the decorations help tell the story. I added a tag with a short note about when and where the photo was taken. A tag works perfectly for small memories like this — it keeps the text separate from the main page and makes the layout feel more layered and interesting. To balance the composition, I stamped two digital stamps — one at the top and one at the bottom of the page. Both of them fit the story perfectly: the upper stamp reflects the situation in the photo, while the lower one expresses my feelings about driving the very first car in my life. These small details help the simple striped background feel complete without making the page too busy. For the right side of the spread, I chose a white background, which I often use when I want the photo and decorative elements to stand out more clearly. A clean base makes it easier to combine different stamps and details without making the page feel too heavy. I placed the photo slightly above the center, closer to the top of the page. Above it, I added a downtown stamp, the “Queen of the road” stamp as the title of the spread, and a small tag with a traffic light. All these elements help set the scene and immediately bring the viewer into the everyday driving atmosphere. The “Queen of the road” stamp adds a playful touch to the page. It makes me smile, because it almost feels like a question — who was really the queen of the road back then, me or my car? Maybe both of us. And that little bit of humor fits perfectly with the light, nostalgic mood of this memory. Below the photo, I designed the page as a mosaic, alternating stamps with decorative elements from the kit. In one of the empty spots, I added a short piece of journaling — just a couple of lines about how I still enjoy remembering my first car and all the kilometers we drove together. Using a mosaic layout is one of my favorite techniques. It allows me to include many different elements and stamps on one page, while the grid structure keeps everything organized. Because each piece has its own place, the layout looks detailed and interesting without feeling messy or overloaded. If you like working with many small elements but don’t want your page to look too busy, try using a mosaic or grid layout. Dividing the space into smaller sections helps keep the composition organized while still allowing you to include stamps, tags, and decorations from the kit. This technique works especially well for everyday stories, where the mood is built from small details rather than one big focal point. Each element becomes part of the overall rhythm of the page, and the result feels dynamic but still balanced. A mosaic layout is also a great way to use more pieces from the kit without overwhelming the photo or the journaling. Not every story needs to be about a big trip or an important event. Sometimes a simple memory — like sitting at a traffic light in your very first car — can bring back a whole chapter of your life. The Driver Story kit was created for exactly these kinds of pages. Learning to drive, buying your first car, getting lost in the city, enjoying an empty road, fixing something that broke, or just going through everyday routines behind the wheel — all these moments become part of our personal history, even if they don’t seem special at the time. This spread is a small reminder of how exciting those first years of driving felt, and how many memories can be hidden in the most ordinary situations. If you have photos from your driving life — old cars, city streets, traffic lights, road signs, or simply moments behind the wheel — try turning them into a page. You might be surprised how many stories are waiting there. Liked this post? Give it a like! PRODUCTS I USED IN THIS TUTORIAL       Olesya Rudenko Manaz Hi there! I’m a graphic designer, scrapbooker and storyteller. I enjoy creating quality supplies to make scrapbooking and storytelling easy, fun and practical for you. Like</p>
<p>Сообщение <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/03/19/scrapbooking-tutorial-one-story-driver-life/">ONE STORY: DRIVER LIFE</a> появились сначала на <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com"></a>.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Driving prompts</title>
		<link>https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/03/19/driving-prompts/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Mediterranka Design]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 17:53:03 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Journaling prompts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Inspiration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mediterrankadesign.com/?p=15604</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Like Life on the road is full of stories, memories, and small moments worth capturing. Driving isn’t just a way to get from point A to point B—it’s an experience. Every trip, whether a daily commute or a long road trip, holds something unique to remember. Journaling about these moments can make even ordinary drives feel special. With driving prompts, you have a fun way to explore your experiences behind the wheel. They help you remember first drives, favorite routes, and unexpected adventures. You can write about your car’s personality or the quirks of your daily commute. Prompts make it easier to start journaling when you’re not sure what to write. They can inspire funny stories, like karaoke sessions in traffic. Or reflective ones, like lessons learned from a long drive. You can capture the joy of new cars or the nostalgia of an old ride. Prompts also let you record road trip highlights, stops at unusual places, and roadside discoveries. They’re perfect for junk journals, traveler’s notebooks, and scrapbooking layouts. You can include your favorite music, snacks, or coffee rituals while driving. Write about traffic jams, city chaos, or the freedom of the open highway. Prompts encourage you to document car care routines, repairs, or memorable maintenance stories. They’re great for beginner drivers, experienced road warriors, or anyone who loves automotive adventures. Using prompts regularly helps build a creative habit in journaling. You’ll start noticing small details in your drives that you never thought to record. Over time, these entries turn into a personal driving diary full of memories, humor, and inspiration. To help you begin (or deepen) your journaling practice, I’ve created a free printable sheet of journaling prompts — thoughtful, personal, and a little unexpected. Driving prompts don’t just capture events—they capture emotions and experiences. They give a voice to the everyday moments of life on the road. Whether it’s the thrill of a first highway drive or the comfort of your favorite local route, prompts help you reflect. They make journaling easier and more consistent. Prompts can spark creative layouts in scrapbooks or fun additions to travel journals. Writing about your car, music, or snacks can be surprisingly therapeutic. With a set of driving prompts, you’ll never run out of ideas to document your journey and celebrate your life behind the wheel. You can download the file by clicking on the image.     Olesya Rudenko Manaz Hi there! I’m a graphic designer, scrapbooker and storyteller. I enjoy creating quality supplies to make scrapbooking and storytelling easy, fun and practical for you. Like</p>
<p>Сообщение <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/03/19/driving-prompts/">Driving prompts</a> появились сначала на <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com"></a>.</p>
]]></description>
		
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		<item>
		<title>One Story: Spring Intentions</title>
		<link>https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/02/18/one-story-spring-intentions/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Mediterranka Design]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 18:26:25 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Traveler's notebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tutorials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mediterrankadesign.com/?p=15532</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Like The Spring Intentions kit is all about fresh starts, small promises to ourselves, and the quiet shift from winter stillness to outdoor living. For this page, I wanted to capture a simple but meaningful milestone of the season — our very first outdoor meal of the year. The color palette of the kit reflects this awakening of nature. A deep blue-green brings depth and balance, paired with pale pink and soft lavender tones that echo the delicate blooms of early spring. Dark blue grounds the palette, while vibrant green and pale blue highlight the freshness of the season. The elements themselves enhance the story: swallows in flight, snowdrops, various flowers, a nest with eggs nestled among blooms, and playful rabbits. Each piece speaks to the new beginnings that spring brings — growth, renewal, and the quiet joy of observing nature stir back to life. There is something special about that first picnic. It’s not just about the food. It’s about stepping outside again, feeling the air change, and realizing that a new season has truly begun.For this page, I used the journaling prompt: “Tell the story of your first outdoor meal this season.” It was the perfect starting point for these photos from our first Saturday picnic of the year. It was the second week of March 2022. The air had carried the unmistakable scent of spring all week, and finally, on Saturday, we opened the outdoor dining season. We picked up sandwiches and hot drinks from our favorite bakery and headed to the pond. The day was still cool, but the sun shone so brightly that everything seemed to sparkle. At the pond, we met some familiar friends — a family of Egyptian geese with fluffy brown chicks, waddling along the freshly green banks in search of snacks. A grey heron peeked at us from the reeds, calmly observing. It was wonderful to sit on a sunlit bench, enjoying sandwiches and hot tea, fully immersed in the simple joy of the season.For the right half of the spread, I chose a Traveler’s Notebook insert with a delicate bow and snowdrop pattern on a deep blue-green background. It creates a beautiful contrast with the lighter left side of the page and brings depth and visual balance to the overall layout. Layered on top, I added a card featuring a nest with eggs surrounded by flowers — a symbol of new beginnings, protection, and the quiet anticipation that comes with early spring. It perfectly echoes the theme of the Spring Intentions kit: renewal, growth, and gentle seasonal transitions. I adhered the title “spring days” and, over a tag, stamped the phrase “adorable moments – captured in March” using black ink and a sentiment from the spring clear stamp set. This phrase felt especially fitting because the page isn’t about a grand event — it’s about small, fleeting scenes: warm tea in cold hands, sunlight on the pond, fluffy goslings by the shore. These are the kinds of moments that might seem ordinary at first, but later become the memories that define a season.On the right side of the spread, I placed the photos and journaling together as one cohesive storytelling block. I arranged four square photos to capture these moments. This multiple-photos layout works beautifully to show a series of small details — the birds, the sparkling pond, the sunlit bench — all connected to the story. Using square photos in a multiple-image layout makes the page feel structured and balanced. Squares naturally create a clean grid, which is especially helpful when working with four images. The symmetry keeps the composition calm and organized, allowing the story to unfold without visual clutter. Another advantage of the square format is focus. By cropping photos into squares, you remove distractions and highlight the most meaningful details — like the geese by the water, the sparkle on the pond, or the warmth of the sunlit bench. Finally, squares pair beautifully with layered embellishments. Because the layout is structured, you can confidently add circular tags, stamps, or small accents without overwhelming the page. The contrast between geometric structure (squares) and softer elements (flowers, tags, wordbits) creates a dynamic but harmonious result. If you’re documenting a sequence of moments rather than one single highlight, try a square grid — it’s simple, effective, and always timeless.To visually unite all four images, I added a round floral tag right at their intersection point. It acts almost like a soft focal anchor, gently tying the photos together and preventing the grid from feeling too rigid. The circular shape also contrasts nicely with the square format, adding movement and flow to the composition. Beneath the photo block, I placed a ready-made stamp from the kit where I recorded the date and location of our picnic and marked March with a small cross. I love including these tiny documentary details — they ground the page in a real moment in time. Below that, I added my journaling and finished the page with the green wordbit “fresh air today.” It felt like the perfect closing note — simple, honest, and exactly what that day was about.Spring doesn’t always arrive with grand gestures. Sometimes it begins with a quiet picnic, warm tea in cool air, and the simple decision to step outside again. The Spring Intentions kit was designed for exactly these kinds of stories — the gentle transitions, the small seasonal rituals, the moments that mark a new beginning in subtle ways. If you’re starting to feel that shift into spring, try one of the prompts you can find on my blog and let it guide your storytelling. Gather a few photos, document the details, and allow your page to reflect your own version of renewal. Because often, it’s the ordinary days that become the most meaningful chapters of the season. Liked this post? Give it a like!PRODUCTS I USED IN THIS TUTORIAL Olesya Rudenko Manaz Hi there! I’m a graphic designer, scrapbooker and storyteller. I enjoy creating quality supplies to make scrapbooking and storytelling easy, fun and practical for you. Like</p>
<p>Сообщение <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/02/18/one-story-spring-intentions/">One Story: Spring Intentions</a> появились сначала на <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com"></a>.</p>
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			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Spring prompts</title>
		<link>https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/02/18/spring-prompts/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Mediterranka Design]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 18:11:33 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Journaling prompts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Inspiration]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mediterrankadesign.com/?p=15523</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Like Spring is a season of quiet awakenings. It isn’t just about flowers appearing or birds returning — it’s about noticing the small shifts in your life and your surroundings. The way sunlight hits the window differently in the morning, the scent of wet grass after a soft shower, or the gentle tug of curiosity when you see a new trail in the park. Spring invites you to slow down, pay attention, and reflect on growth — both in nature and within yourself. Journaling prompts are a simple way to capture these fleeting moments. They help you pause and explore your thoughts, your feelings, and the little things that make each spring day unique. With prompts, you can record how the season inspires your creativity, what foods make you feel alive, the books or songs that shape your mood, and even the small adventures you take outdoors. They are reminders to notice beauty, gratitude, and personal growth in real time.Using spring prompts transforms journaling from a routine into a mindful practice. You can explore your relationship with nature, track subtle changes in your energy and habits, and create a record of your seasonal experiences. Prompts also make it easier to reflect on personal intentions — the goals you want to nurture, the habits you want to grow, and the joy you want to invite into your days. Whether you’re documenting quiet walks in blooming gardens, a favorite spring recipe, or the feeling of fresh air on your skin, spring journaling prompts give you permission to slow down and observe. They turn ordinary moments into treasured memories, letting you capture the light, energy, and renewal that make this season special.If you love reflecting on the season, my spring journaling prompts, cards, and printable elements are designed to help you notice, record, and celebrate these moments. They’re perfect for planners, notebooks, memory keeping, or simply a mindful pause in your day — tools that help you make spring a season you will remember long after it’s gone.You can download the file by clicking on the image.Olesya Rudenko Manaz Hi there! I’m a graphic designer, scrapbooker and storyteller. I enjoy creating quality supplies to make scrapbooking and storytelling easy, fun and practical for you. Like</p>
<p>Сообщение <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/02/18/spring-prompts/">Spring prompts</a> появились сначала на <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com"></a>.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Setting yearly goals</title>
		<link>https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/01/30/turning-dreams-into-pages-yearly-goals/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Mediterranka Design]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 30 Jan 2026 11:23:45 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Traveler's notebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pocket life tutorials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tutorials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mediterrankadesign.com/?p=15455</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Like Every year, I start a new album the same way — with a page dedicated to my yearly goals. It’s a small ritual that has become an essential part of how I approach both planning and memory keeping. This page is not about pressure or perfection. It’s about direction. It helps me pause at the beginning of the year, reflect on what I’m dreaming about right now, and turn those thoughts into something tangible. Once the goals are written down, they stop being abstract ideas and start feeling like a path I can actually walk, step by step. Over the years, this first page has become more than just an introduction to the album. It’s a reference point I return to throughout the year — to check in, to mark progress, and sometimes simply to remind myself why I started.For me, planning is the first real step toward making a dream come true. As long as a dream stays in my head, it remains abstract — beautiful, but distant. Writing my goals down turns that dream into something tangible, something I can see and work toward. This yearly goals page helps me translate vague wishes into clear intentions. It doesn’t mean that everything has to be perfectly defined or set in stone. Instead, it creates a direction. A plan becomes a quiet guide for the year, reminding me what I want to move closer to and why it matters. By putting my goals at the very beginning of the album, I give them space and importance. They become part of the story of the year — not separate from everyday life, but woven into it, one small step at a time.From a scrapbooking point of view, the yearly goals page gives my album a clear structure right from the start. It works as an anchor — the first page that sets the tone and intention for everything that follows. I come back to this page many times throughout the year. Sometimes to check in with myself, sometimes to mark what has already been done, and sometimes simply to see how my priorities have shifted. In that sense, this page is not static. It evolves together with the rest of the album. Having this reference point at the beginning also helps the album feel more complete and intentional. The stories I document during the year don’t exist in isolation — they relate back to the goals, dreams, and directions I set at the start.The goals I write down each year are not random. They are meant to move me closer to a specific dream — or sometimes to several smaller dreams that shape the season of life I’m in. I don’t see goals as rigid rules or boxes to check. Instead, they act as gentle markers along the way. Some of them are practical, some emotional, some creative — but together they point in the same direction. This approach takes away a lot of pressure. The purpose of these goals isn’t to achieve everything perfectly, but to stay connected to what matters to me right now. Even if a goal changes or no longer feels relevant by the end of the year, it still served its purpose by helping me move forward with intention.When it comes to my yearly goals pages, the focus is always on the words. The design, embellishments, and techniques are there to support the text, not compete with it. Over the past three years, I’ve created three very different yearly goals pages — each reflecting where I was at that moment. Sometimes I choose a more free-flowing text format, where I describe in my own words what I’m hoping and striving for in the year ahead. This approach feels intuitive and allows space for emotions, uncertainty, and nuance. More often, though, I prefer working with a list. A list gives structure. It makes my goals more visible, easier to revisit, and simpler to track over time. Visually, it creates clarity on the page, and practically, it helps me stay focused without overwhelming myself. For me, lists don’t limit dreams — they help hold them gently in place. This year, I combined both approaches on one page, pairing a structured list of goals with a short section of free-form journaling. That balance felt just right — clear, but still personal.The techniques I use on these pages are always simple and intentional. Because the text carries the main meaning, I avoid anything that might distract from it. I usually start by placing the words first — deciding where the journaling or the list will live on the page. Only after that do I add photos, cards, or small decorative elements, using them to frame the text and create visual balance. These pages are not about showcasing complex techniques or perfect compositions. They’re about creating a calm, readable space where my goals can exist and be revisited throughout the year.Starting the year with a yearly goals page is more than a planning exercise or a scrapbooking step. It’s a way to pause, reflect, and connect with what matters most in this moment of my life. Each goal, whether listed or written freely, becomes a thread in the story of the year. Returning to this page throughout the months reminds me not only of what I hoped to achieve, but also of how far I’ve come. The page evolves with the year, just as I do. I hope this post inspires you to create your own yearly goals page — a place to capture intentions, celebrate small wins, and hold space for the dreams you want to bring to life. One page, one story, one year. Liked this post? Give it a like!PRODUCTS I USED IN THIS TUTORIAL Olesya Rudenko Manaz Hi there! I’m a graphic designer, scrapbooker and storyteller. I enjoy creating quality supplies to make scrapbooking and storytelling easy, fun and practical for you. Like</p>
<p>Сообщение <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/01/30/turning-dreams-into-pages-yearly-goals/">Setting yearly goals</a> появились сначала на <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com"></a>.</p>
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		<title>WINTER JOURNALING PROMPTS</title>
		<link>https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/01/15/winter-prompts/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Mediterranka Design]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Jan 2026 20:02:35 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Journaling prompts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Inspiration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mediterrankadesign.com/?p=15341</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Like Not all winter memories arrive wrapped in celebration. Some of them live in quiet mornings when the world outside your window is still half asleep, in the soft crunch of snow under familiar boots, in the way steam curls up from a mug held between cold hands. They hide in ordinary afternoons, in the rhythm of shorter days, in the gentle comfort of staying inside while the wind hums against the glass. Winter isn’t only about holidays and bright lights. Sometimes it’s about noticing how your thoughts slow down with the season, how certain songs sound warmer in December, how a simple walk through bare trees can feel like a conversation with yourself. It’s in the small rituals you didn’t plan — the soup you cooked without a recipe, the book that kept you company on a gray Sunday, the view from a bus window dusted with frost. These are the moments worth writing down. Not because they’re dramatic, but because they’re honest. Tiny pieces of everyday life that quietly shape how you experience this season. The kind of memories that might seem ordinary now, yet grow more meaningful as years pass.   If you enjoy slowing down and reflecting on the gentle details of winter, I invite you to explore my collection of winter journaling prompts and creative tools. Designed to inspire thoughtful writing and cozy reflection, they’re perfect for documenting everyday moments, seasonal traditions, indoor comforts, and snowy adventures. Discover prompts, journaling cards, and printable elements created to help you hold onto the quiet magic of the season — and turn your winter stories into lasting keepsakes. To help you begin (or deepen) your journaling practice, I’ve created a free printable sheet of journaling prompts — thoughtful, personal, and a little unexpected. You can download the file by clicking on the image.     Olesya Rudenko Manaz Hi there! I’m a graphic designer, scrapbooker and storyteller. I enjoy creating quality supplies to make scrapbooking and storytelling easy, fun and practical for you. Like</p>
<p>Сообщение <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/01/15/winter-prompts/">WINTER JOURNALING PROMPTS</a> появились сначала на <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com"></a>.</p>
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		<title>One Story: Winter Tales</title>
		<link>https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/01/15/one-story-winter-tales/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Mediterranka Design]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Jan 2026 19:44:46 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Traveler's notebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tutorials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mediterrankadesign.com/?p=15337</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Like The January Pocket Life kit, Winter Tales, is a quiet ode to winter — its sounds, its scents, and the memories it carries. While creating it, I kept returning to my own childhood, to winters so snowy that the drifts sometimes reached up to my waist. We spent our winter holidays in the countryside, and nothing felt better to me than wandering through a snow-covered forest or skating on a frozen pond. Those moments shaped the way I still feel about winter today — calm, crisp, and full of small magic. That’s why I included elements like a moose, an arctic fox, and ice skates in this kit. They’re not just decorative details, but gentle references to those memories that are still very much alive in my mind.The color palette grew naturally from the same place. Deep blues reflect the evening sky and winter twilight, soft periwinkle echoes snow and ice, and green brings in the presence of evergreen trees — fir, pine, and cedar standing quietly in the forest. I softened the palette with touches of pink, inspired by the northern lights, and warm brown, reminiscent of a cup of hot chocolate on a cold day. In this post, I’m sharing one way I used the Winter Tales kit to tell a single story — not as a set of rules, but as an invitation to start your own.For this page, I chose a few photos from our trip to Kaltenbronn in January 2022. Most people go there for skiing or sledding, but what draws me back every time is the forest itself. This area is part of the Black Forest, and it’s breathtaking in any season — but in winter, it truly turns into a fairytale. That landscape is where I can reconnect with the winters of my childhood: snow-covered treetops, deep drifts, and that quiet, almost magical stillness that only exists after fresh snowfall. These photos bring back the feeling of our walk through the forest — shaking heavy spruce branches to create a little snow shower, hesitating before leaving the first footprints on a perfectly untouched clearing, jumping into snowdrifts, making snow angels, throwing snowballs, and finally warming up in the car with hot tea and freshly grilled sausages. They don’t just document a place or a trip. For me, they capture a very specific winter feeling — one that instantly connected with the mood of the Winter Tales kit and became the natural starting point for this story.For this story, I started with one of the free journaling prompts: “Describe a moment when winter felt magical.” It immediately resonated with the photos I had chosen, but as I sat down to write, I realized that a single moment wasn’t enough. Instead, I changed one small word — moment became day. That day in Kaltenbronn truly felt magical from beginning to end. There was something almost unreal about the beauty of winter in that forest, as if we had stepped into a perfectly preserved winter wonderland. This small adjustment gave me more space to tell the story honestly. It allowed me to write not just about one snapshot in time, but about the full experience — the walk through the forest, the playfulness in the snow, and the quiet warmth that followed. For me, this is exactly how prompts work best: not as fixed questions, but as flexible starting points that can be reshaped to fit your memories.For the left side of the spread, I chose two photos and placed them one above the other. I liked how this vertical layout echoed the tall trees in the forest and helped keep the composition calm and grounded. At the very top of the two photos, I added a snowflake embellishment to visually tie them together and reinforce the winter theme without overwhelming the images. Above the photos, I added two stamps and a tag — each of them carefully chosen to match the overall mood and concept of the page. Rather than decorating for the sake of it, I wanted every element to feel connected to the winter atmosphere and the story I was about to tell. Below the photos, before starting the journaling itself, I placed one more stamp. This small detail helps anchor the story by drawing attention to the time, the place, and the main theme of the page, gently guiding the reader into the narrative. The final touch on this side was the beginning of the story — a few lines about how and why we ended up in this beautiful place, setting the scene for everything that follows.I started the right side of the spread with journaling, where I described everything that made this day feel truly magical — a direct reflection of the prompt I had chosen earlier. Writing first helped me stay focused on the story rather than the decoration, allowing the words to lead the rest of the page. At the very bottom, I added one more photo to visually close the story. Between the text and the image, I placed a moose figure along with a tag featuring pine cones, which I resized by trimming it down from a journaling card. These elements act as a soft transition between words and image, while also reinforcing the winter forest theme of the spread. This combination of journaling, imagery, and subtle decorative details helped the page feel complete without overpowering the story itself.This spread is just one example of how the Winter Tales kit can come together on a page. It started with a few photos, a gently adapted prompt, and a feeling I wanted to hold onto — and slowly grew into a story that feels complete and personal. For me, this is what memory keeping is really about. Not filling pages perfectly, but giving meaningful moments a place to live. The kit elements, stamps, and prompts are simply tools that help guide the process, while the story itself always comes first. I hope this post inspires you to use the Winter Tales kit to tell your own winter story — whether it’s a quiet walk through the forest, a childhood memory, or a single day that felt a little bit magical.Liked this post? Give it a like!PRODUCTS I USED IN THIS TUTORIAL Olesya Rudenko Manaz Hi there! I’m a graphic designer, scrapbooker and storyteller. I enjoy creating quality supplies to make scrapbooking and storytelling easy, fun and practical for you. Like</p>
<p>Сообщение <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/01/15/one-story-winter-tales/">One Story: Winter Tales</a> появились сначала на <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com"></a>.</p>
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		<title>Creating Final Album Spread</title>
		<link>https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/01/14/creating-final-album-spread/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Mediterranka Design]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Jan 2026 20:41:45 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Traveler's notebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tutorials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mediterrankadesign.com/?p=15289</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Like The last spread of an album always feels special to me. It’s not just another page — it’s a quiet place where the whole year slowly comes to rest. For my 2025 album, I wanted that final spread to be both reflective and interactive, something that could hold more than what fits on the surface. That’s why this layout is built around a pocket. Pockets create space for stories, letters, and small details that don’t need to be visible all at once. They invite you to pause, pull something out, and really engage with the page — which felt exactly right for closing a year. In this tutorial, I’m sharing how I created this final spread, step by step, using a mix of printed inserts, journaling, and simple design choices that help turn memories into something tangible and meaningful.   For the left side of the spread, I started with a card from the December Pocket Life kit. I added a stamped message to myself, wishing for more pleasant surprises in the year ahead — a small intention hidden right inside the page. Next, I glued a pocket along the left edge of the spread. I made it from patterned paper using a simple template (you’ll find the download link at the end of the post). Inside this pocket, I placed a double-sided insert that I designed in Photoshop. First, I created a new 8 × 17 cm document and added a photo of a champagne glass, letting the image fill the entire side. I chose not to add a white border here, because the base page of the spread is already white — a frame would only make the photo look smaller and visually weaker, without adding any real contrast or structure. That said, if you’re working with a colored or patterned base page, I do recommend leaving a thin 0.5 mm white border around the edges of your photo. That subtle frame helps the image breathe visually: it separates the photo from the busy background, makes the colors feel cleaner, and gives the whole insert a more intentional, finished look — almost like a tiny print mounted on paper. Then I created a second document in the same size, where I typed a short story about how my New Year’s Eve went and added a couple of stamps for texture and rhythm. After printing both pages, I glued them back to back and slipped the finished card into the pocket, turning it into a little interactive moment inside the spread. On the right side of the spread, I wrote a letter to myself about this past year. Even though 2025 was incredibly challenging, I still made it through — and that alone felt important to acknowledge. Alongside all the hard moments, there were also many small, meaningful joys, and each of them deserved to be seen and remembered. For the title, I used a card from the Year in Review kit, because it perfectly reflects the purpose of this page: looking back with honesty, not just at what went wrong, but at everything that shaped the year. At the bottom of the page, I added another card with my five favorite memories from 2025. This kind of summary helps anchor the whole story — when a year feels overwhelming, narrowing it down to a few bright highlights makes it easier to see that it wasn’t only about survival, but also about moments worth holding onto. The final touch was a “highlights” stamp. I love how it subtly reframes the page: instead of feeling like a list of struggles, the spread becomes a curated collection of what truly mattered, giving the entire layout a more positive, reflective tone. Finishing this spread felt a lot like closing a chapter — not in a rushed way, but gently, with intention. By combining journaling, photos, and hidden elements inside the pocket, I was able to give both the difficult and the beautiful parts of the year a place to exist side by side. This kind of final page isn’t about making the year look perfect. It’s about honoring everything it was, and allowing yourself to see the full picture before turning the page. For me, this spread became a small act of self-recognition — proof that even in a hard year, there were moments worth remembering, and strength worth celebrating. I hope this tutorial inspires you to create a meaningful ending for your own album, whether it’s with a pocket, a letter to yourself, or a simple list of memories that mattered. PRODUCTS I USED IN THIS TUTORIAL DOWNLOAD POCKET TEMPLATE       Olesya Rudenko Manaz Hi there! I’m a graphic designer, scrapbooker and storyteller. I enjoy creating quality supplies to make scrapbooking and storytelling easy, fun and practical for you. Like</p>
<p>Сообщение <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com/2026/01/14/creating-final-album-spread/">Creating Final Album Spread</a> появились сначала на <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com"></a>.</p>
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		<title>BIRTHDAY 2025 PARTY – FINAL!</title>
		<link>https://mediterrankadesign.com/2025/12/25/birthday-2025-party-final/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Mediterranka Design]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Dec 2025 17:37:50 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Community]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://mediterrankadesign.com/?p=15250</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Like Hello dears. Thank you for joining my Birthday party and for all your Birthday wishes! As always you made my Birthday worth remembering. I appreciate your kindness. The winner of Win your wish game is Rachel I. Dear Rachel, please email me at info@mediterrankadesign.com to receive the Coffee 03/2025 Pocket Life Kit as a free gift. It’s also time to wrap up my Birthday Lottery and send out the gifts.All links are on their way to you by email or via PM (if you participated through Instagram).MINII KIT 1MINI KIT 2ACCENTSWORDARTSLAYERED TEMPLATE 1LAYERED TEMPLATE 2ARTSY PAPERSWant to complete your Winter Sparkle collection? The Winter Sparkle Grab Bag is available in the shop if you’d like to grab the remaining parts you didn’t win.WINTER SPARKLE &#124; MINII COLLECTIONOlesya Rudenko Manaz Hi there! I’m a graphic designer, scrapbooker and storyteller. I enjoy creating quality supplies to make scrapbooking and storytelling easy, fun and practical for you. Like</p>
<p>Сообщение <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com/2025/12/25/birthday-2025-party-final/">BIRTHDAY 2025 PARTY – FINAL!</a> появились сначала на <a href="https://mediterrankadesign.com"></a>.</p>
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