Q: It’s the yellow icon with a white ghost on your home screen. It’s the large circle at the bottom of the camera screen. You can skip this step if you don’t want to use Snapchat’s editing options. It’s the square with an upward-facing icon at the bottom of the screen. This saves your photo to Snapchat Memories. If it’s your first time saving to your Memories, you’ll be prompted to choose a location to which you’ll save your Memories. You can choose “Memories Only” (save to Snapchat’s server) or “Memories and Camera Roll” to also save a copy of the photo on your device. It’s at the top left corner of the screen. This opens your Memories. It’s just beneath the word “Memories” at the top of the screen. You should see your photo. If you don’t see your photo in Camera Roll, you’ll have to save it there. To do this:  Tap Snaps at the top of the screen. Tap and hold the photo until the menu appears. Tap Save to Camera Roll. It’s the circle icon at the bottom of the screen. This will bring you back to the home screen. It’s the rainbow pinwheel (Android) icon on your home screen. If you don’t see it on the home screen, tap the Apps icon (usually a circle with 6 dots inside) and open it from there. If you use another app to manage and edit your photos, you can use that app to rotate the image. It should be at the top of the photo list. If you don’t see the photo, tap the ☰ at the top left corner of the screen, then select Device Folders. You should see the photo in the Camera folder. It’s the icon of a pencil at the bottom of the screen. It’s the third icon at the bottom of the screen that has several arrows pointing in various directions. Tap the button at the bottom right side of the photo to turn it counter-clockwise. Keep tapping until it looks the way you want it, then tap Done. You can do this by viewing your open apps (Usually a square button at the bottom of the screen), then selecting Snapchat. This will open your Memories. Your rotated photo appears at the top of the list. Lift your finger when the gray menu appears. It’s the blue paper airplane at the bottom of your photo. Now you can send the Snap to a friend or post it to your Story.
A: Open Snapchat. Tap the shutter icon to take your photo. Add effects, text, and doodles. Tap the Save icon. Tap X. Swipe up on the camera screen. Tap Camera Roll to find your photo. Press the Home button. Open Photos. Tap the photo to open it. Tap the Edit icon. Tap the Crop and Rotate icon. Rotate the photo. Return to Snapchat. Swipe up on the Camera screen. Tap Camera Roll. Tap and hold the photo. Tap the Send icon.

Q: Press the “Play” button at the back of the camera to view the most recent picture. Pictures taken under the Hybrid Auto Mode will display a SET icon on the upper-left corner of the screen. Press the left and right buttons on the middle circular button to move backward or forward. Each set will be displayed. You can only view the pictures taken, not the movie clips that went with them. The day’s sets under Hybrid Auto mode will be compiled in another one file as the digest movie. This is also stored under a separate item in your camera. The digest movie is differentiated with the other sets by the SET with a play icon on the upper-left corner of the screen. Once you found the digest movie, press the “FUNC. SET” button found at the middle of the circular button. Select “Play Movie” from the toolbar that will appear. The digest movie will play all the sets under it.
A: Review the picture. Scroll through the sets. View the digest movie. Play the digest movie.

Q: Select the type and size of paper you’d like to use for the pages you’ll write on in your diary. Use simple printer paper, colored paper, scrapbook paper, or any other lined or unlined style of your choosing.  For a thinner diary or one with threaded binding, fold larger pieces in half and stack them inside one another so you have a set of several folded pages. Note that this will work best with 10 folded pieces of paper (called folios) or less, though you could attach several of these together.  You may want to trim the outer edges of the paper when doing the folio method, as the inside folios will stick out further than the outer ones. For a thicker diary or one with a glued binding, keep a stack of paper flat with the edges lined up evenly. Gather together a stack of paper that you want to use for the pages of your diary and make sure the edges are lined up evenly. Hold them together with binder clips and apply glue to the edge where you want the spine to be.  Place scraps of paper under the binder clips to protect your paper from becoming indented or marked by them. Use a paintbrush or foam brush to apply a light layer of PVA or Elmer’s Glue to the edge of the stack you want to bind, where the spine of the diary will be. Let dry and apply more coats if necessary.  Glue the bound edge of the paper to a cover made of heavy paper, cardstock, fabric, etc. Or, create a quick and easy spine with some colorful duct tape or similar heavy tape over the glued edge of the paper. Fold 10 pieces of paper or less in half and place them inside one another. Open up this stack, called a folio, to the inner fold to mark and pierce holes for threading the pages together.  Make three marks evenly spaced along the fold for the holes. Use an awl meant for bookbinding to make the holes if you have one, or simply use a needle thick enough to pierce through the pages that you have. Cut linen thread or waxed string to at least four times the height of the paper you’re using. Using a needle, thread it through the middle hole to the inside of the fold, then out through the top hole. Then push it through the bottom hole to the inside of the fold, and out once more through the middle hole. With the excess string, tie a double knot over the thread that spans the two outer holes, then trim the excess.  If you’d like to thread several folios together, thread them individually and tie them together with the excess thread in the center. Or secure them more firmly with a few extra “stitches” to hold them together at the top and bottom holes. Wrap a piece of thicker paper, cardstock, fabric, or leather around your paper to create a durable front and back cover to keep the pages safe. You can also glue several pieces of paper together to create a cover that is thicker.  Measure to cut the cover to the same size as your inner pages, or slightly larger (about ¼-½ inch, for example) if you wish. If you use one piece of material to wrap over the front and back sides of your diary, remember to account for the width of both sides, plus the width of the spine after gluing or threading. You may also want to add a couple of centimeters to the total, to account for any length lost when folding the material over the spine. If you bound your pages with thread, adding a cover is optional or may be done before threading. If you bound your pages with glue, you should glue the bound edge into the center of your cover where the spine will be. Make a “secret diary” by adding a lock to your homemade notebook to prevent others without the key or combo from opening it. Do this by adding loops to the front and back cover that you can put a small toy lock through.  Purchase a small toy lock that has a key or requires a combination to open. Make two small loops out of string, fabric, or even use metal jewelry fasteners to glue to the inside outer edge of both the front and back cover of the diary. Make sure whatever loops you use allow your lock to go through both of them and close securely.  You can hide where you glue the loops to the covers by placing a piece of paper, fabric, or colorful tape over the area.
A:
Gather paper for the pages. Make a glued binding. Make a threaded binding. Create a cover. Add a lock if you wish.