Archive for September 24th, 2007

Sep 24 2007

A Ghostly Greeting…a sanding technique

Published by Julia Stainton under Blog Misc, Card Designs

I had so much fun making this Halloween card. I don’t actually usually make them but thought this was a fun idea came to me…so ghostly ghosts. ;)

Halloween is coming up soon. Don’t you just wonder where the weeks go?! Craft Critique is having a great Halloween Craft Carnival on their site very soon! It will be a lot of fun with lots of great ideas. Do you have a cool Halloween project to share? If so, you may want to check it out at Craft Critique. :)

Ghostly Greetings

jks_ghostly_greetings.jpg

For this design, I thought hmmm….what if I sanded the paper with a ghost shape behind it. One of the great things about sanding is that it will pick up a texture behind and this produces my faded ghosts. So fun! I was so excited about my idea! LOL Sometimes those ultra-simple smack your head ideas are the best. ;) I free hand cut out a little ghost shape and then punched out a pair of eyes with my hole punch. After simply laying it under my patterned paper, I lightly sanded until the shape became faintly visible and then repeated for his buddy. :)

I had to use some ghostly letters on the design as well to spell out BOO. Heidi Swapp ghost shapes alphabet was the perfect trick and I roughly painted the backs of them to get a worn out look, just enough to be able to read them well. A row of orange brads on the right side and a little scrap of tied on ribbon finishes up the design. Have a fun night!

Edited to Add… I simply use a fine grit sandpaper…the same kind I use to sand paper off the edges of  chipboard

Supply List:

Cardstock: Black - SU

Patterned Paper: Making Memories

Other: sandpaper, ribbon, Ghost Shape Alphabet - Heidi Swapp, white paint & Orange brads- Making Memories,

15 responses so far

Sep 24 2007

What Scrapbooking Item are you?!

Published by Julia Stainton under Blog Misc

I saw this fun quiz on Alison’s blog and just had to take it! Pretty boring, am I not?! LOL I guess I pretty much knew that. Adhesive…hmmm But hey…you just can’t live without adhesive, right?! :) Have some fun and take it yourself…just follow them link! LOL I’ll be honest. I took it twice, and changed a couple of my answers…still the same. But I have to admit…most of it is pretty accurate! And hey…if you do this…leave me a link…I’d love to see some of the results! :)
What scrapbooking item are you?


You are GLUE!You are the adhesive that keeps things together. You go through life helping others. You stick to people and try to keep people together. You like it best when you are surrounded by people and able to help them. But Glue Beware - in your efforts to keep everyone together and with you, you sometimes overlook yourself and find it hard to keep yourself together. Don’t neglect personal time in your overwhelming need to socialize and help others.
Take this quiz!


Quizilla |
Join

| Make A Quiz | More Quizzes | Grab Code

17 responses so far

Sep 24 2007

Thomas Kinkade and Copics

I just adore this Foxglove Cottage stamp from Cornish Heritage Farms. A gorgeous Thomas Kinkade stamp, the image is beautifully detailed and incredible to stamp. The shading on it is remarkable and does half the work for you. For this design, as part of my recent Craft Critique article, I tried out coloring the images with my new Copic Markers. I think this was my fourth project with these markers and I was really pleased with how it turned out.

Foxglove Cottage in Copics

jks-copic-cottage-black.jpg

For this card design, I stamped my Foxglove cottage onto some Very Vanilla cardstock with my Black Palette Hybrid ink. I then worked carefully on the design. The best way to color this image is start really light and build up. By this I mean, color in all the greens with a light green color, the pinks the same, etc. Then come back and build up the color with darker markers where you need to deepen the shadows etc. For the flowers and foliage, I used a dabbing style of adding the color to get a more natural look instead of flat color. Think impressionist style here…it really works well for these images. At the point of coloring this image, I just had the 24B folder of Copics from Ellen’s store so my palette was limited. I can’t wait to try it out again with more range. Yay! My 24A has now arrived and I just have to find some free time!

For my card base design, I used a 5.5″ square card base in Very Vanilla cardstock and layered it with this Daisy D’s paper. The edges were stitched for definition in brown thread. After matting the image with chocolate chip and very vanilla cardstock narrow mats, I searched for an appropriate embellishment. I decided to add a simple, homey touch. A large button from My Mind’s Eye (they carry the most darling little jars!) was tied with some brown gingham ribbon. Note to self…go buy more at Wal-mart! It may be difficult to see in the photo (you can enlarge by clicking on it) but I punched a chocolate chip cardstock circle with my EKSuccess circle punch and then stitched around it with my sewing machine. The thinking of you sentiment…comes from one of my favorite sentiment sets… Simply Sentiments by Lizzie Anne Designs.

Edited to answer…. This design took me approximately an hour to color in. I know it seems like a lot but if you factor in that I really hadn’t had much practice with the Copics and I was making this design for a Craft Critique article and knew I needed to have a good end-product, it wasn’t too bad. From what I know now… I’m sure I could cut that time by half, easily. I know that I want to do this again soon. So when I do…I’ll time it for you. :)

Hope you enjoyed this design as much as I did. It was fun trying a different style of coloring with those Copic markers. I think the more I use them, the better I’ll understand their capabilities. Have a great week! It is going to be a busy one here. Lots to share so stop back in! :)

22 responses so far