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Make headlines! Create a family newsletter

Stay in touch with family and friends all over the world

Published: June 30, 2004
Family looking at newsletter

Sometimes it is hard to get together with family more than once or twice a year. Hectic schedules, children's activities, and work commitments can prevent families from seeing each other more often.

What better way to stay in touch over long distances than with a family newsletter? While a newsletter will never replace face-to-face communication, it's a fun and easy way to keep family members up to date on recent events in your lives.

Here are some simple ways to get started in creating a family newsletter that will amuse and delight your relatives. From content and software to delivery options, here's what you need to know before you begin.

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Start with your family stories

Deciding what to write about is the first step. Here are some ideas to kick-start your creativity:

News of engagements, weddings, births, christenings, birthdays, anniversaries, reunions, and graduations

School and sports updates and other stories about your children and their accomplishments

Vacation stories, photos, or plans

New hobbies or home renovations

Recipes in a format that readers can clip for their files

URLs for family, school, or team Web sites

Family photos or children's artwork

Elaine Floyd, author of Creating Family Newsletters (EFG Inc., 1998), suggests leaving out negative news and avoiding sarcasm, as it rarely comes off the way it was intended.

If they're old enough, let your children write about themselves. Younger children can also contribute to the family newsletter. Teacher AnnCherie Korbut suggests writing short descriptions of an event using a child's own words. Her four-year-old daughter Madison contributes to their newsletter by dictating stories about her playschool to mom.

Decide on design ideas

Above all, your newsletter should be easy to read. "People have trouble reading long lines of type—no matter how fun or interesting it is," warns Floyd. Her book recommends one to three columns, short paragraphs, and no more than three fonts. Use one font for headlines, another for text, and a third for your newsletter's name. They shouldn't be too light, too small, or too fancy.

Family photos, vacation snaps, and children's artwork add life to a newsletter. Be careful not to cram too much into a small space—wide margins and white space make a newsletter easier on the eyes.

Korbut buys special paper with seasonal designs for her holiday newsletters. She also has a great idea for getting kids involved. "Madison loves to decorate the envelopes with stickers," she says. "And she likes to write her name on the back of the envelopes."

Create a family newsletter template

To design a simple format for your newsletter, all you need is a word processing program like Microsoft Word to help organize your information into columns, link text boxes, and insert images.

Add recent photographs to your newsletter by scanning photos or downloading them from a digital camera. Photo-editing programs like Microsoft Digital Image Suite then allow you to make touch-ups and montages. Use clip art graphics or designs to jazz up your newsletter sections. Check out our newsletter templates to get you started.

Finalize frequency and length

You might want to see how much time your first newsletter takes to create before you decide how often to send updates. Floyd offers a handy guide for determining the length and format of your newsletter:

Yearly: Publish at the end of the year or during the holidays.
Quarterly: Design a two-page seasonal update.
Monthly: Write a one-page letter-style newsletter.
Weekly: Use an e-mail newsletter.

If you decide to publish monthly, May, for example, might include a section on summer vacation plans, a section on the end of the school year, a favorite spring recipe or family craft that readers can clip, and a short list of birthdays or anniversaries you're celebrating that month.

Add one or two photos to break up the text. If using more than one photo, Floyd suggests varying the size and shape of photos on the page.

Floyd says one page is ideal for monthly newsletters. She says some of the worst newsletters are ones that are too long or try to do too much.

Korbut agrees, and sends one page each Christmas. "People that you haven't kept in touch with for a year don't need to know every intimate detail of your life," she says. "Our newsletter is just a pleasant 'Hi from the Korbut family!'"

Determine delivery options

If everyone you want to reach is online, you can send your newsletter via e-mail, directly in the message, or as an attachment. Remember that not everyone has the same software. Floyd recommends using very few graphics for e-mail. "You might have the latest and greatest software," she says. "But grandma in Poughkeepsie might not."

Consider the safety issues if you decide to publish your newsletter on a family Web site. Remove e-mail and home addresses, phone numbers, and the location of your children's school.

You'll be sure to reach everyone via regular mail, and you don't have to worry about file sizes or software. Best of all, you can sign each newsletter personally and add a handwritten note.

Article written by Alyson Munroe and adapted from an original piece from Microsoft Home Magazine.
 



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