Saturday, October 13, 2007

Using similes as titles

The simile is a way to create a picture in the reader's mind. It can add an extra dimension to a piece of writing, a poem - or a scrapbook layout. It asks us to picture one thing as being similar to another; it does this by using the word 'like', 'as' or 'than'.

Let's look at some examples:
  • Dance like an angel/princess
  • Shine brightly like the star you are!
  • You sparkle like a diamond
  • Your words are like eyes burning deep in my soul
  • 2 peas in a pod
  • A face without freckles is like a sky without stars
  • Life is like a Bubble Bath... a few splashes, but generally good, clean fun!
  • Spring came that year like magic, and like music, and like song. -- Thomas Wolfe
  • Our love is like a song that never ends
Some similies are cliché - something we have heard so often that it has lost its original power to surprise or amuse us, such as: Cool as a cucumber; like chalk and cheese; softer than silk. The same is true of many scrapbook titles. But if you haven't used them yet - they may be new to you!
  • Sweet like chocolate
  • Sleeping like a baby
  • Blooming like a garden/weeds
  • Swing like a monkey
Can you come up with some more creative similes to be titles for your layouts?
Jot down the name, the event, or a feeling that the photo immediately evokes, then "is like" and see where you go...

Jenny is like a butterfly, always flitting, never settling for long...

Hopping crazy as a cricket

As changeable as the British weather...

Your smile is like a thousand suns

No comments: