Weekend RoundUp: New on PYP this weekend!

Look for Albertson’s doubler coupons in your Utah and Idaho newspaper this weekend! There are 3, valid from 5/5 to 5/7. For ideas on what to use them on, click below for the most complete list on the internet! (Click on the links to see the full lists!)

Utah and Idaho Albertson’s Doubler Deals list

Target deals 7/5-7/11 *Hot Kashi deals!*

Fred Meyer deals 7/5-7/11
*Fred Meyer ½ Gallon Milk (includes chocolate) or Orange Juice $1.00 with in-ad coupon (first 10)* + more!

CVS deals 7/5-7/11

RiteAid 7/5-7/11

Buy Low Market 7/6-7/11
Free Milk Promo: Free Gallon of Western Family Milk with Purchase of 3 Loaves of Grandma Sycamore Bread (on sale 3 /$6)
Mangos .44
apples .25 lb.
Ground beef .89 lb.
+ more!

Back To School 2009 School supply sales – they get earlier every year!

And .01 prints at Snapfish.com!

PYP Pick of the Day~ Bath & Bodyworks Printable Cpn- 20% off $25 purchase, exp 7.5


Bath & Bodyworks HUGE summer sale is still on! Today through July 5th, you can save an additional 20% on purchases of $25 or more with internet printable cpn or use code 9810 online.

Enjoy!

Children’s Place Monster Sale – Spring Items $2.99 & under

Items like…

french terry hoodie
reg – $19.50
now – $2.99

knit floral dress
reg – $12.50
now – $2.99

comfy cotton pjs
reg – $14.50
now – $2.99

plaid shorts
reg – $14.50
now – $2.99

PLUS save additional 15% off with code FAMILY79
$5 flat rate shipping. No code required.

ChildrensPlace.com LINK

Check out the thread on PinchingYourPennies.com for more information.

PYP Pick of Day ~ Nexcare $1/1 Printable Cpn- can be used on Travel sizes!

Use this PDF printable Nexcare bandage coupon at Target or any other retailer who cares travel sizes and these are FREE, or cost a few pennies. Perfect for purse, car, backpack or stashed anywhere to be prepared. Also, great for your scouts packs at camp this summer.

Other 3M Printable Products found here. Big shout out of thanks to Supermod Deweyville for keeping ALL our printables organized!

Target GDA~ Cheap Degree Women Fine Fragrance Collection Scents


RedPlum.com reset its printable coupons and a HOT! Target store printable coupon has surfaced– Save $2 on Degree Women Fine Fragrance Collection scents. IF you add this with the Man. coupon:

Degree Women Fine Fragrance Collection product, any $1.25/1 (8-9-09) RP-5/17 = HOT DEAL!

Let’s do numbers…

Last time I was at Target, I recall the scents being around $3.79 (prices may vary) so – $2 Target store printable cpn + $1.25 man. cpn = $ .54/ea Good deal! (and this item is perfect for women’s shelters or such charities, too!)

Here’s the link to the Red Plum Target store $2 off printable.

PYP Daily Pick ~ Free Kraft Savings Booklet by mail – up to $55 in savings

Sign up now to receive your Kraft Smile Savings Booklet & Calendar.

Get 2 $20 Rebates + $15 in coupons on Kraft Favorites including Nabisco, Planters, Capri Sun, Ritz Bits and Easy Cheese.

Digital Scrapbooking on the Cheap 3a: Free Digital Scrapbooking Materials

The Internet is jam-packed with digital scrapbooking freebies. This is one of the areas in which you truly don’t have to spend a dime if you don’t want to. If you know where to look, you can build a beautiful digital scrapbooking collection for no cost at all. First, though, you need to understand how and when people give away free scrapbooking stuff on the Internet. Tomorrow I’ll give you several links to great digital scrapbooking freebies, but today’s post focuses on teaching you to find and download great scrapbooking freebies on your own in the future.

Most freebies come from designers who post free items on their blogs in order to increase their readership or interest people in the products they sell. You can get leads on these great freebies by visiting the following two blogs:

Digital Scrapbooking Freebie Guides

Scrapping with Ikea Goddess.

Ikea Goddess is not a designer, but almost every night she scours the Internet for free digital scrapbooking materials and posts the ones she likes the best on her blog.

Strengths:

  • Because she’s a real human, she can cull through all the freebies and only post those that are really good.
  • She doesn’t make a mistake and post that something is free when it’s not, or post that the wrong item is free.

Weaknesses:

  • Because she’s a human, she sometimes takes a day or two off, leaving us starving for freebies. *Whimper*
  • She’s not comprehensive, and she only posts the things that she thinks are cute. If there’s something out there that you would have liked but she didn’t like it, you won’t get a lead on it from her blog.

DigiFree Blog

This blog is written by an automated program that scans several hundred sites for cues like “free,” “freebie,” and “download,” which usually indicate that the blog contains a digital scrapbooking freebie. It automatically catalogs and links to these post.

Strengths:

  • Because it’s a program, it never takes a day off and you can get your freebie fix daily.
  • It’s comprehensive. You’ll see almost all freebies on there.

Weaknesses:

  • It’s not selective. Rather than culling through the best, it just indexes them all. You have to find the best ones for yourself. Digifree does have a star rating system, but those ratings do not indicate the quality of the available freebie; they merely indicate the popularity of the blog based on a variety of variables which often have nothing to do with the quality of the blog’s freebies
  • Sometimes it gets it wrong. The heuristic works most of the time, but sometimes it finds a freebie cue where there actually is no freebie, or pulls the wrong item as a freebie.

Get More Freebies by Knowing How and Why Designers Post Freebies

Once you’ve started following these blogs for freebie leads, you need to understand the contexts in which designers give away freebies so that you know how to best track those leads to even more freebies.

Context 1: A designer posts one section of a freebie kit each day in order to encourage you to revisit or subscribe to their blog. They generally post the papers first, the elements second, alphas third, and any quick pages last.

Current Example: Spring Bouquet by Numb Bumm (She’s actually posting the elements first, so don’t get confused by that.)

How to follow up:

  1. Look for tag or category labels at the bottom of the post or on the blog’s sidebar. (Not all blogs have these, but many do.) Clicking one of these tags or labels will automatically pull up any other post with the same label, enabling you to find other freebies from that kit or theme. For instance, if I find a post that has elements from a kit labeled “Freedom Fire,” then clicking the tag or category labeled “Freedom Fire” would pull up all the other posts in which the blogger had shared papers, elements, or alphas from the “Freedom Fire” kit. I could then download those items as well.
  2. If the blog doesn’t use tags or categories, you can still do a search on the blog to find any post containing that kit’s name. These posts will likely contain additional downloads from that kit.
  3. Look through recent posts for other still-active freebies, either by scrolling through the blog or clicking the tag or category for “freebies” or “free.”
  4. Subscribe to the blog or bookmark it for future visits. If a blogger is giving away a freebie, they likely give them away on a regular basis. If you like the blogger’s work, they’re worth keeping tabs on. (If you plan to track more than three or four blogs, subscribing in a feed reader like Bloglines or Google reader is by far the most efficient way to do this.)

Context 2: Two designers collaborate to make a kit (a collab) with the same theme and color scheme. They follow the usual pattern of posting papers first, followed by the elments and alpha, but they each create their own portion of the overall kit.

Current Example: Stars and Stripes. (Remember that this link is to just one of the collaborators on this kit. Be sure to follow her links to the other collaborator’s downloads.)

How to follow up:

  1. On the blog of the collab partner you first discover, follow steps one through three above.
  2. Go to the design partner’s blog (the first post you find will have a link to the other designer’s blog) and collect the other designer’s half of the free kit.

Context 3: A blogger posts a quick page, alphabet, or mini-kit add-on to a kit that they or one of their creative team members is selling. This is like a free sample that grocery stores give away in order to get you to buy the full-sized product. Since these things are often small and don’t contain a lot of elements, I usually only download them if the product is insanely cute or I see an element that I think I can use with a lot of my other kits.

Current Example: Good-bye Yellow Brick Road Add-On (Scroll to bottom of post to see it.)

How to follow up:
1. If they’ve used the name of the kit as a tag or a category label, click on it to see if they’ve given away any other freebies designed around that kit.
2. Often, several creative team members will each create a quick page based on one of the member’s for-sale kits. If this is the case, each blogger will mention the other bloggers’ give aways in their post. Skim for such mentions and follow the links to download additional add-ons, alphas, or quick pages.

Context 4: Several designers participate in a blog train, wherein each designer creates a few elements revolving around an agreed-upon theme, event, or color scheme. On their own, each blogger offers a small selection but combined they make a massive kit.

Current Example: Those Summer Nights Blog Train

How to follow up:
1. Each post in the train will contain a link to the next blog in the train and possibly a link to the blog train home, which lists all the other participating blogs. Follow these links to collect the entire train.
2. As you travel the train, watch for designers whose work you particularly like, and subscribe to the blog or bookmark it to return to and hunt for more freebies later.

Context 5: A blogger posts a kit (usually a mini kit) in response to a forum-sponsored challenge or contest. There are color challenges, holiday challenges, and design-offs in which dozens of designers compete for spots on a design team. Some of these challenges and contests are simply for designers to stretch themselves or earn a participation award. Others are seriously competitive and designers pull out all the stops to create some insanely beautiful kits.

Current Example: Kim B’s June Color Challenge (Instead of taking you to a blog, this link will take you to a forum where dozens of designers have posted links to their blogs, on which their color-coordinated downloads can be found. You may need to register to see the posts, but registering is well worth it since this challenge is ongoing and you’ll be able to collect a massive kit every month from it.)

How to follow up:
1. If you stumble on a post that mentions that the kit is being given away as part of a challenge or contest, go to the source of the challenge. It’s nice if the blogger has linked to the challenge, but if they haven’t simply google the name of the challenge and the forum to find it. You may need to register to view the forum, but once there you’ll find the challenge thread, which contains links to dozens of other kits or giveaways revolving around the same theme or color scheme. Like trains, these challenges and contests are opportunities to accumulate some extremely large, gorgeous, and varied kits. For free!
2. As usual, make sure you subscribe to or bookmark any bloggers whose work you particularly love.
3. It’s always good etiquette to thank a designer for a giveaway, but it’s particularly important for contests. Sometimes the judging is based partially on the comments and ratings left by forum members.

You should now be well-equipped to begin tracking down your own favorite designers and freebies. The next post will include a lot of links to permanently-available scrapbooking downloads that should have you burning up your bandwidth for a couple of days. To use a metaphor you’re all familiar with, now that I’ve taught you how to fish, tomorrow I’ll give you some fish to keep you fed while you’re learning to plunge the digiscrap downloads depths.

If you’re interested in other aspects of frugal digital scrapbooking, you can read the entire series.

PYP Pick of the Day (2)~ FREE at Barnes & Nobles


Credit goes to Supermod Deweyville for this awesome (and FUN) freebie!

Barnes & Nobles Kids Summer Reading Club for grades 1-6

Details:

Here’s how it works:

1. Kids read any eight (8) books of their own choosing.

2. Kids use the Summer Reading Journal to tell us their favorite part of each book. A parent/guardian signs the journal when it’s complete. You can also get a Spanish-language Reading Journal.

3. Children bring their completed Reading Journal to a Barnes & Noble store between May 26th & September 7th, 2009.

4. We’ll give them a coupon for a FREE book! They choose from a list of exceptional paperback titles.*

See PYP forum thread for all details and club link.

PYP Pick of the Day~ Dining Out Deals (and there’s some goodies)


To make up for the past few missed days, I’m giving you a few good upcomimg deals/promotions for area restaurants, goodies and fast food joints. BTW, HUGE thank you to PYP member Thomsenmom for sharing some of these deals.

Enjoy!

* repost of PYP super mod Jodi’s hot find. Jamba Juice printable buy one get one FREE cpn.

*Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream is offering a buy 1 get 1 FREE Sundae offer every Monday this summer, through 8/31. This page also has store locator. Know that Gateway has a busy location by the Olympic fountain.

*Little Ceasar’s FREE Crazy bread with Pizza Purchase printable cpn. (Note: cpn is from KSL’s website, limited to participating stores in Utah & Colorado)

*FREE Kids meals after 5 PM at Taco Del Mar (only 1 UT location in Clinton, but great idea if you are traveling!)

*Quiznos Printable Cpns, including buy 1 get 1 FREE

*Rubio’s, sign up for the Beach Club, get cpns including one for a FREE Taco!

and my favorite!!!

*Einstein Bros Bagels printable cpn for buy 1 get 1 FREE lunches, bagels or salads. YUM!!! (watch expiration of 7/3)

Diet, Exercise & Healthy Living Forum @ PinchingYourPennies.com

Did you know that PinchingYourPennies.com has a Diet, Exercise & Healthy Living Forum? Meet & share stories with other members with similar exercise and weight loss goals!

Plus, offers like…


Join Curves Now and Get 50% OFF & 30 DAYS ON US!
Sign Up Now and get your FREE Fitness Plan today @ Curves


Attend a free class in your area!
Sign up now @ Weight Watchers

Digital Scrapbooking on the Cheap Part 2: Save Money on Software

A couple of days ago I talked about how to reduce the need for extra hardware when you start digital scrapbooking. Today we’re going to talk about saving money on the software involved. I am not going to discuss the merits and drawbacks of individual software programs; instead, I’m going to show you how to try a lot of them for free, and how to save money on the software that you ultimately decide is right for you.

Use Free Trials
You can put off buying software by using free trials. Almost all scrapbooking programs have thirty-day limited use trials. If you stagger one trial at a time, you can have five or six months of free scrapbooking before you actually have to spring for a program. Before you start a free trial, prep by downloading all the kits you like (that post is coming up next) and planning or sketching some pages you want to do. That way when you start your trial, you can focus on actually generating pages, not on gathering material or planning layouts.

Here are some links for free trials:

Adobe CS4
Adobe Photoshop Elements
Paint Shop Pro
Scrapbook Max
Photo Impact
Digital Scrapbook Place has a page with links to free software trials.
Memory Mixer’s website has a free trial coming soon here.

Use Free Software
Additionally, there are a few free layout programs available online. Layout programs have less versatility and fewer options than design programs do, but they’re still a functional way for a beginning scrapper to put some pages together. I haven’t used any of these programs myself, but I’ve seen other scrappers and forums speak of them favorably.

Scrapbook Flair
Photomix
Paint
Scrapblog (Thanks Jill and Stephen) for the tip.

When You Buy, Buy Cheaply
If you decide that you love digital scrapping, you’re going to end up wanting buy one of the major digital scrapbooking programs like PSE, Memory Mixer, or Photoshop.When that time comes, here are some possibilities for saving money.

1. Search Shoplocal.com for local deals on your software. Shoplocal searches your local ads for sales, so if you find a good deal there you can just run to the store and get it. There are real bargains to be had here, too.
2. Search Shopzilla.com for online deals on your software. To support PYP, you can come back and use PYP’s affiliate links to make your actual purchase.
3. Consider buying an older version. Once a new version of a program comes out, you can often buy the old version fairly cheaply. These older versions usually have most of the features that the new ones have at a fraction of the price. For instance, I inherited PSE 4.0 from my grandmother when she upgraded to 6.0. It’s beautifully functional and I’ve never wanted to do something and not been able to do it because I had an older version of PSE. IF I were just starting out, I could buy this perfectly workable version on Ebay for 15 dollars, and I’d be in scrapbooking business! Just make sure that you’re buying the software, and not a software manual.
4. Check your local warehouse stores for deals or coupons. For instance, right now Costco has a coupon for 30 dollars off the new PSE 7.0 software. This makes it 40 percent cheaper than it is on Amazon.com.

Stay tuned! Coming next is a guide to downloading free digital scrapbooking materials. You’re going to love what you learn!

If you’re interested in other aspects of frugal digital scrapbooking, you can read the entire series.

PYP Daily Pick ~ Jamba Juice – Buy 1, Get 1 Free Smoothie

Cool off this summer by printing out this coupon and getting two Jamba Juice smoothies for the price of 1. Offer valid until 7/12/09.

PYP Daily Pick~ $5 off $25 purchase at Rite Aid (printable cpn)


HOT coupon at the great internet printable coupon site, coupons.com. $5 off when you spend $25 at your local Rite Aid. There are some other great coupons to be found there include $ .75 off gallon of milk. Check it out!

Also check out the great shopping list for all the great deals at Rite Aid (made by PYP SuperStar Rebecca!) this week at Pinching Your Pennies forums.

PYP Pick of the Day~ FREE Quart of Glidden Paint, starts today (6.25)


BIG thank you to SuperMod SeaBrz57 for finding this gem online. The Glidden National Paint Giveaway! Starts 6/25 (while supplies last), pick your color and receive a cpn for a FREE quart of paint. Takes 3-4 weeks to receive your cpn via mail. See PYP forums for discussion. Happy Painting!

Digital Scrapbooking on the Cheap Part 1: External Hard Drives

Lots of people want to try digital scrapbooking, but they’re worried that between the software, the hardware, the digital elements, and the printing and storing of their designs, it’ll end up being just as expensive as traditional scrapbooking was. It’s true that digital scrapbooking can start racking up costs fast, but there are several techniques that can keep costs down. In this series, I’ll explore frugal options for software, hardware, materials, printing, storage and display. Stay tuned, and prepare to get hooked.

Many digital scrappers use external hard drives (EHDs) on which they store their materials and projects. Starting at fifty dollars and going up to 400, EHDs can put a serious dent in an aspiring digital scrapper’s wallet. Fortunately, there are several ways to save space and avoid needing an EHD.

Be selective about the kits you download. Once you find out about the world of free scrapbooking materials (don’t worry, that post is coming soon), you’ll be tempted to go download crazy. Instead, be selective and choose only the kits that you really love. Reserve your precious hard drive space for the best of the kits and for your projects. The truth is that if you download too many, you’ll never use most of them anyway (ask me how I know this).

Choose one or two kits and use them for multiple themed layouts. Instead of collecting a variety of kits to make different-themed pages, use just one or two kits to create an entire series of pages. Not only does this cut way down on your need for kits (and the space to store them), it makes an excellent unified theme to put in a photobook or album.

Use a kit and delete it. If you prefer to use a different theme on every page, another alternative is to use a kit to make the perfect page and then delete it to make room for a fresh one.

Delete your design files. Each digital scrapbook page has two files: the design file in which you made the page and the jpeg you saved it as in order to print it. Once you’ve perfected—and I mean perfected­—your page, delete the space-hogging design file. (But seriously, make sure the page is perfect because once you delete the design file you won’t be able to modify the image anymore; you’ll be stuck with the jpeg you have.)

Using these techniques, you can put off needing the extra space provided by an EHD. If the time comes that you decide you absolutely must have one, here are a few tips for saving money:

1. Check shoplocal.com for deals on external hard drives. Shoplocal searches your local ads for sales, so if you find a good deal there you can just run to the store and get it.
2. Check shopzilla.com for deals on external hard drives. To support PYP, you can come back and use PYP’s affiliate links to make your actual purchase.
3. Newegg.com and Amazon.com have generally lower prices for electronics. If you can’t find a great deal at either of the above sources and you don’t want to wait for one, they’re the best places to buy hard drives.

Join me in a couple of days for frugal talk about scrapbooking software. See you
then!

If you’re interested in other aspects of frugal digital scrapbooking, you can read the entire series.

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