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Articles tagged "family recordings"

Voice memory and family storytelling articles tagged with "family recordings" — practical guides, reflections, and prompts to help you preserve the voices of the people you love.

Holiday Tradition Recordings Your Family Will Replay Every Year — LifeEcho
Cooking & Traditions

Holiday Tradition Recordings Your Family Will Replay Every Year

Some recordings become part of the holiday itself — replayed every year, growing more precious with time. Here's how to create recordings that belong in your family's annual traditions, and how to build that practice over years.

How to Create an Oral History Archive for Your Family — LifeEcho
Genealogy & Family History

How to Create an Oral History Archive for Your Family

A step-by-step guide to building a lasting oral history archive: recording, transcribing, organizing, and preserving family stories so future generations can find and use them.

Step-Parents: How to Record Your Story for a Blended Family — LifeEcho
Parenting & Family

Step-Parents: How to Record Your Story for a Blended Family

Step-parents often wonder whether their stories belong in the family record. They do. Here's how to record your legacy — and your love — in a blended family context.

Voice Messages for a New Baby from the Whole Family — LifeEcho
Parents & Children

Voice Messages for a New Baby from the Whole Family

When a baby arrives, the whole family shows up with gifts and love. Ask them to also leave a voice message. Years from now, your child will hear the voices of everyone who was there at the beginning.

Recording the Milestones a Deployed Parent Will Miss — LifeEcho
Veterans

Recording the Milestones a Deployed Parent Will Miss

First steps, first words, first day of school — deployed parents miss milestones that cannot be re-created. Here is how families can capture and share them, and what the deployed parent can record in advance.

Sandwich Generation: What to Record Right Now — LifeEcho
Adult Children

Sandwich Generation: What to Record Right Now

Adults caring for aging parents while raising children are uniquely positioned to capture family stories — and uniquely time-poor. Here is what to record and how to make it doable.