Hi anniebelle
I am in the process of writing up my husband's side of the family tree - we have 2 sons to carry on the surname so hopefully down the line someone will be interested in what I have researched.
I didn't want to just put John Doe* (name changed to protect privacy

) born day/ month/ year, married Mary Brown (as above) day/ month/ year & died day/month/ year. When my research gets passed on to the next holder of the records (after I am gone) they may not understand all the copies of census material, maps etc, so to make it easier to understand & make it more interesting I am writing up a story about each person & the informaton that I have found.
I started with my husband's father & basically wrote the information that I had found as a story - birth details (place & date), census details, navy records(researched the different Naval Bases in the UK that he had served at & included a map showing each base), his place of work details,places that he lived with photos from Library archives or maps of the area, marriage details & pictures of the church, death & burial details. After the "story" I have included the relevant sources like maps, pictures, copies of census & a picture of his headstone. I also have a page for each person with all the major dates summarised in a table format so that at a quick glance you can see when a person was born, parents names, sibling names, marriage details, death details . I will eventually then do a story on his wife's side (the Mother in law !

.
One of my husband's sisters has her paternal grandmother's maiden name as her middle name but knew nothing about that side of the family (her father was very "closed" when it came to talking about his family) so I did a "story" on her father's mother's side including details on her life through census material, details about her parents, their life in America (for 15 years), newspaper articles that I had found about the family in America, & went back to the next generation back in England where the family ran several pubs over the years & how from the census worked out that children who lived next door to each other would years later marry.
I typed all this information just in a Word document, printed it off, put the sheets of the "story" in plastic sleeves & printed off photos of where they used to live, headstones, certificates ,copies of the newspaper reports, census info & anything else that was relevent. It turned out to be about 130 pages in all & then put it all in a ring binder & gave it to my sister in law. I am pretty sure that she was impressed as I received some money months later when it was my birthday as a thank you ( & we would normally only send a card).
I am working my way back through the generations & will do the same with each one - takes a while but it keeps me happy!
Good luck
Cathy