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Friday 28 September 2012

Stamping onto Candles

I first heard about this technique from a friend and when I become stuck what to make my Mum for mothers day I decided to give it a go. The results where brilliant (if I say so myself) so I thought I would try it again and experiment with heat embossing - my favourite!

I also thought I would share a quick tutorial with you as well.

Here is one of the candles that I heat embossed with blue glitter WOW powder. The picture doesn't show the sparkle very well.

What you will need:

A white candle, some white tissue paper, embossing powder, heat gun, talcum powder to stop the static, a large and a small paintbrush, a stamp of your choice and versamark ink.

Instructions:

1) Cut a piece of the tissue paper to the right size to cover the candle. You will be wrapping this around the candle and you don't want any overlap.
2) Brush some of the talcum powder onto the tissue paper using the large paintbrush and tip off any excess.
3) Ink up your stamp with the versamark ink and stamp it onto the tissue paper, pressing fairly hard to make sure all the image comes out. Then carefully take the stamp off being careful not to tear the tissue.
4) Before the ink dries, pour the embossing powder over the stamped image and return the excess to the pot. The heat the image until all the powder is melted. Repeat this as necessary - with the snowflake candle I stamped my image twice which was enough to cover the candle.
5) When you have your image ready, cover the back of it with a small amount of Pritt Stick and wrap around the candle. This keeps the image from moving when heating.
6) Some people prefer to use baking parchment when heating - wrap this around the candle and heat through it, however I didn't use this. Apply the heat gun to the image on the candle, being careful not to heat the wax too much. You can see through the tissue paper and easily identify when it is melted to the candle because it becomes more see through.

The key is not to heat the wax too much and do it in small sections. I heat a bit and then rub it over with my fingers to make sure it's stuck down and it's smooth. This does mean I get covered in wax but once it's dry it easily peels off!

Some of the edges might be harder to stick down, so if you do find they are curling, apply a little bit more of the pritt stick and heat again, smoothing the tissue down with your finger immediately after removing the heat.

Then you have your finished candle. Here are some more that I made now I've got the hang of it:

The two on the outside are both heat embossed and the butterfly ones in the middle are just coloured images using pro markers before the tissue is heated onto the candle. After heating I then applied some stickles glitter glue to the image.

This technique did require a lot of practice so before going for the best one, buy some cheap candles that you can practice with. They make great presents. I have wrapped mine in cellophane and tied with ribbon and added a small tag to them:


Wednesday 26 September 2012

Journal of my Life

I was thinking of another book to make and decided to look for some ideas on the Sweet Shoppe Designs website. I had previously downloaded a digital scrapbooking kit from here so I thought I would have another look to see what's new when I came across the Journal of my Life scrapbook kit.

I immediately fell in love with the colours used and downloaded it to use. The kit comprises of a number of papers, elements and alphabets and because it's a downloadable pack you can print off and re-size the pieces you want to use.

I chose an 8x8 book because it leaves enough space to add both photos and embellishments. I bound it using the Zutter Bind it All machine because it makes a very sturdy book and looks professional.

The Love and Life were cut out from the kit and glittered using stickles glitter glue. I stuck a piece of white lace along the bottom with double sided tape and then die cut a heart from chipboard. Then, using the frantage embossing powder in shabby pink and some shaved ice, I embossed the heart and stuck it over the lace.

The circular butterfly element was embossed onto black card using WOW violet pearl powder and mounted onto a scalloped circle coloured with distress ink. The yellow card candy was made using some kraft card candy and embossed with yellow WOW powder.

The inside of the book has individually decorated pages that have enough room to put pictures on them and to add your own embellishments.

 This is the first page and I have made a frame out of ribbon. I cut 4 strips of ribbon to the same length and trimmed the ends diagonally. I then put double sided tape onto each strip and layered them over each other, ready for a picture to be added.

The turquoise paper on the right is my favourite and I felt that I didn't want to add too much to these pages. A journalling element was added to the left hand page to record details of the pictures added.

This one is another of my favourite papers - the journal page. I wasn't sure what I could add to this page so just a butterfly with some glitter added. On the right hand page I die cut another chipboard heart but this time I embossed with blue lagoon WOW powder, punched a hole in it and threaded through some twine.

The paper on the left hand side of the above is a replicate of some newspaper, which I love. I really couldn't  find an element that would go with this paper so I left it blank and complimented it with some purple wood effect paper opposite, finished with a tag.

And the last page I'm going to show you is this one. The left hand page features a tag and a felt circle replicated element that was part of the kit. I have glittered the flower detailing and will put a small silver gem in the middle of it.

On the right hand side I have added another journalling tag as well as some butterflies that were heat embossed with WOW powder in pomegranate.

As you can see, there is still plenty of room to add your own personal touch to this book and I have created the pages so that they all co-ordinate and there is lots of colour.

Part of me doesn't want to sell this book but the good thing about it is that if I do sell it, I can always make another one!

Friday 21 September 2012

Recipe Book

I had the idea to make a recipe book several months ago and have been collecting some stamps and elements that I could use for the book. I found the 'From the Kitchen' set of stamps by Darkroom Door which I thought would fit my theme perfectly.

My Mum has a box full of scrappy pieces of paper with recipes written on them which I am planning on putting into this book one day. I need to get my hands on them first and choose my favourite 10 to put in here.

I think the book has a vintage feel to it and I have created 10 unique pages in which recipes can be added.



The cover features a glittered kitchen themed topper which has been mounted onto brown glitter paper. The 'recipes' wording has been heat embossed in Pomegranate WOW embossing powder on cream card. The heart was die cut out of chipboard and then embossed with the same powder and hung from under the circle using some pink glittery DMC thread.

The contents page looks a bit bare at the moment but I'm not sure what is needed to make it more exciting. Perhaps it will look better when it's full of lovely recipes.

Each recipe has 2 pages allocated to it - one to write down all the ingredients and the other to write down the directions. Each set of pages has been covered in co-ordinating papers and embellished with kitchen themed elements. There is plenty of space to add more elements if required.

Each page is slightly different and all are a different colour. Here are a selection of the pages in the book:




And then I had a page left over at the back which I wasn't sure what to do with so I used it as a notes page where you can scribble down anything that you might not have had room for, or need to remember about a recipe from that scrappy piece of paper!

I hope Mum will like it when it's full of recipes. I think it looks too nice to write in - must remember to use my best handwriting!

Tuesday 18 September 2012

Experimenting with Inchies

Back in July I bought some of the Darkroom Door Garden Inchie stamps and up until last weekend I had only made bookmarks with them.

Inchies are exactly what they say they are - stamps which measure 1 inch square and can have any design in them. This particular set has 24 different stamps which feature butterflies, birds, plants and flowers.

The bookmarks I made are below and are really simple to make:

I took a piece of white card and a craft brush (an old fashioned shaving brush can be used for this as well). I took some co-ordinating distress inks and using the brush, swiped the colour over the card, starting with the lightest colour first.

Then I took the stamp I wanted and inked it up well with a black memento ink pad, making sure the stamp is well covered with the ink. Then stamp onto the coloured card and cut out the image. They were then mounted onto coloured, then black, then coloured card, with a piece of ribbon added under the black card.

There are so many co-ordinating designs in this set that the combinations are endless.

Then, last weekend I realised I hadn't done much with these stamps so had some inspiration to make some cards with them. The first one I made is below, which builds on the bookmark idea:

First of all, I took a piece of white card and swiped over pine needles, broken china and dusty concord distress stains, starting with the broken china as the base. I then spritzed the card with water and dried it. Then, on one half of the card I swiped over picket fence distress stain to lighten the colour. Then I spritzed with water again and dried it with the heat tool.

I chose 9 stamps that went well together and stamped them as above with the memento ink onto the side that hadn't been lightened. I then cut them out and arranged them onto a piece of purple card. I then mounted this onto a piece of black card.

Before sticking to the coloured card I used gold perfect pearls and painted a thin border round the edge of the card. This could also be done with a gold gel pen, but I didn't have one so used the next best thing!

I cut a piece of black card to cover a 6x6 card blank and stuck the whole piece onto it. I stamped the sentiment onto some spare coloured card and mounted it onto black and again edged it with the gold.

Perfect pearls are one of my favourite mediums to use in crafting but I normally use them wet as a paint, so I thought I would experiment with using them dry on the next card:

Again, I cut a piece of black card to fit a 6x6 card blank. I took some bubble wrap, cut it to size and stuck it onto an acrylic block with pritt stick. I then covered the bubble wrap with versamark embossing ink and stamped it onto the black card.

I then brushed over the perfect pearl powder so it stuck to the ink. I did this randomly to create the rainbow effect. I removed any excess powder by rubbing the image with a tissue and sprayed it with hairspray.

Yes you heard right - hairspray acts as a very thin glue covering which stops the powder being rubbed off. Just spray it lightly over the image and leave to dry.

I then took this one step further and swiped the versamark to cover a piece of black card. I then brushed the pearl powder over the stamped area. I did this diagonally, again to create a rainbow.

Using Stayzon ink this time, I stamped 3 of the inchie images over the dusted card. Before cutting out, I sprayed with the hairspray again. This technique is quiet effective because the pearl sheen of the powders shows through the black ink so the whole image shines.

I painted round the edge of the images with the gold perfect pearls, mounted them onto a black card strip and painted round this as well.

For the sentiment, I stamped it onto the brushed card and die cut the shape round it and painted the edge again. This card took a bit longer to make as it was more fiddly but it is worth the extra effort because the effect looks brilliant after it's finished.

I decided I was a bit bored of black by now so the next card is much more colourful and again, fairly simple to make:

I chose 4 co-ordinating distress inks: broken china, tattered rose, victorian velvet and milled lavender. I then chose 8 different inchie stamps and stamped them round in a pattern on a white piece of card, varying the colours. I then cut them out and arranged them round a 6x6 card blank. I made sure that no same design or colour was next to each other.

The butterfly and the sentiment in the middle were stamped using blue pearlescent ink.

I am quite pleased with the three cards and now plan to use the inchie stamps to create some co-ordinating notebooks. The stamps are very versatile and can be used for a large variety of crafting projects.