How to Create a Family Reunion Memory Book
Most reunion memory books never get finished. Here is how to make one that actually does, by keeping it simple, collecting the right content, and knowing what to leave out.
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Practical advice from people who have actually planned reunions. No fluff.
Most reunion memory books never get finished. Here is how to make one that actually does, by keeping it simple, collecting the right content, and knowing what to leave out.
Most reunion slideshows lose the room after five minutes. Here is how to make one people actually watch, by collecting the right photos, building a narrative, and keeping it under twenty minutes.
Reunions put everyone in the same room. That makes them the perfect time to build or fill in your family tree, if you do it right and keep it from feeling like homework.
Your grandmother has stories nobody else can tell. The window to capture them is smaller than you think. Here is how to start before it is too late.
Family history does not have to live in a binder nobody opens. It can live in a Tuesday text, a birthday call, a recipe shared on an ordinary Wednesday. Here is how to keep it alive year-round.
The generic questions get generic answers. Here are the specific, vivid questions that get your elders talking about things they have never told anyone.
Your family is full of stories that have never been written down. Reunions are the one time everyone is in the same room. Here is how to capture those stories before they are gone.