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Showing posts with label distress ink. Show all posts
Showing posts with label distress ink. Show all posts

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!

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.






Thursday, 5 July 2012

Heat embossing and Fran-tage

I recently came across the Fran-tage embossing enamels from Stampendous, and being the avid heat embosser that I am, I had to try them out.

These powders are made up of different fragments or various different sizes, which melt into different shapes when heated. There is also glitter in each pot and the enamels come in a range of colours.

The card below was made using a large chipboard flower which is inked with versamark ink and sprinkled on the powder. (sorry the picture hasn't come out too well). The powder used was shabby pink.

You can just about make out the gold flecks in the flower which creates a slightly aged look, and a finish that would not be achieved with normal embossing powders.

Below is another card that I made in the same way.


Because the chipboard was covered with the versamark ink before sprinkling on the powder, you get a thin coverage over the flower and the gold flecks aren't as prominent. For the centre of this flower I used the shabby white powder and didn't use any versamark ink.

After cutting out the circle, I sprinkled the circle with the powder and laid over some shaved ice flakes. Using tweezers to hold it and being careful not to burn myself, I heated the circle from behind. You need to do this from behind otherwise the powder and flakes just fly off. Once the powder starts melting you can then move to the front if you wish. The flakes use the molten powder to adhere to the card. This gave a contrasting, shiny centre to the flower.

After attending a heat embossing workshop, I learnt about the sprinkling technique and had an idea about using the white powder as snow. The below card illustrates my idea!

For this card I first of all stamped and embossed the snowman in ordinary white powder. I then used my mica powders to add a bit of shimmery colour to him.

Then I swiped my versamark ink pad along the bottom of the card and sprinkled a generous layer of the shabby white frantage powder so it stuck to the powder. I added some of the shaved ice flakes on top of the powder and heated from behind. Because of the amount of powder added, this really goes molten when heated and the flakes adhere nicely.

I then took a pinch of the embossing enamel and scattered it randomly over the top of the picture to create falling snow.

I love the shaved ice flakes with the powders and decided to make a sparkly girly card for a friends birthday:


For this card, I first of all I used my spun sugar distress stain to colour the card and then sponged some tattered rose distress ink around the edges. Then I randomly added pools of the shabby pink embossing powder with shaved ice flakes in each pool to give a nice sparkly background.

The large butterfly was made with fusible fibre and the petals were embossed onto vellum. The two blue butterflies were embossed onto acetate and adhered with clear glue dots.

I am planning on getting more of the frantage powders. I had a play with the aged black powder in the workshop, combining it with some gold mica flakes and this looked very effective. So watch this space for more projects using frantage!