My Nephew-in-law loves trains, so I thought it would be fun to make him a train themed Birthday card. I went a bit to town given it is interactive and a shaker card too. I used the Tim Holtz stamps which were really good as you could circle the date on the ticket which was of course his birthday. This is my first attempt at either an interactive or a shaker card. I have a fair few projects on the go so haven't been making many cards - I am working on a crochet blanket that needs 195 pieces so that has been taking most of my craft time.
Materials:
Card:
White CardSotck
Cream Cardstock
Black Cardstorck
Watercolour Paper
Stamps:
Stamper's Anonymous - On The Railroad
Inks:
Versafine - Onyx Black
Distress - Pine Needles
Distress - Vintage Photo
Distress - Fired Brick
Pens:
Sakura Stardust - Silver
Sakura Stardust - Brass
Extras:
Acetate
Hobbycraft Fun Foam
Die Cutting Machine
Circle Dies
White Card
5 pence piece
Table Sprinkles - Black
Stix2 - White Beads
Method:
1. Stamp the train onto watercolour paper using the versafine black ink and allow to dry before colouring using water pens with the distress inks (pine needles for the engine, fired brick for the cab and vintage photo for the track) when dry add the brass effects using the Sakura stardust pen
2. Stamp two sets of the track onto white cardstock using the versafine and allow to dry, then colour using water pens and the vintage photo, use the sakura stardust silver pen.
3. On the cream card stock print 2 tickets and circle the date of your choice.
4. Print the background of your choice (I chose an old map from 1855) TWICE
5. Matt the black Cardstock on to the card blank and then matt one of the backgrounds onto the black cardstock.
6. Using the same circle die cut a circle out of fun foam (you want the frame rather than the circle), trim the edges so that none pokes outside the edge of your background.
7. Using a circle die cut, cut a circle in the top right - align the cut background and the one on the card and draw around the circle - place the foam frame around this circle on the background on the card.
8. Stick acetate to the back of the background with the circle cut from it.
9. On the circle cut background layout your track which you have fussy cut and work out where to put the cut into the card so that the train will move along the track, make the cut smaller than the diameter of a 5 pence piece. Trace the cut onto the background on the card.
10. Place a 5 pence piece on the background on the card where the pencil marks from the cut are - create a foma frame to hold the 5 pence piece in the "track" - remember the frame will be bigger than the pencil cut as it has to fit the 5 pence - the top piece is smaller to hold the 5p in place.
11. Place fun foam at the corners.
12. Put the stamped tickets and some sprinkles into the circle foam frame on the card and put the 5 pence piece in it's track.
13. Overlay and match the top background gluing it in place
14. With a decoupage foam pad, stick this on top of the 5 pence piece and then adhere the train to the 5 decoupage pad.
Adventures in papercraft, card making, embossing, baking, crochet and craft-tastic moments in history.
Showing posts with label Distress inks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Distress inks. Show all posts
Friday, 3 July 2015
Monday, 15 June 2015
Fan of peacocks
I love the extravagance an opulence of peacocks so I have tried to capture it in this card, which is a submission for the Chocolate Baroque Challenge 11.
Materials:
Card:
White Card stock A3
Watercolour paper
Scrap card
Vellum
Watercolour paper
Scrap card
Vellum
Stamps:
Chocolate Baroque - Tangled Peacock
Chocolate Baroque - Peacock Parade
Chocolate Baroque - Peacock Fan
Chocolate Baroque - Peacock Parade
Chocolate Baroque - Peacock Fan
Ink:
Versamark
Distress - Mowed Lawn
Memento - Grape Jelly
Memento - Angel Pink
Distress - Picked Raspberry
Distress - Mowed Lawn
Memento - Grape Jelly
Memento - Angel Pink
Distress - Picked Raspberry
Embossing Powders:
Green Glitz
Blue Glitz
Purple Glitz
Blue Glitz
Purple Glitz
Quilling
JJ Quilling Pink 3mm
Extras:
Quilling tool
Quilling board
Stencil brush
water pens
PVA Glue
JJ Quilling Pink 3mm
Extras:
Quilling tool
Quilling board
Stencil brush
water pens
PVA Glue
Method:
1) Start by printing the Peacock parade peacock onto some scrap card to make a template for the centre piece. I made mine "egg" shaped
2) Turn the template over and draw round it in pencil cutting it out of watercolour paper. I flipped it over so that the pecil marks would be on the back
3) Stamp the peacock on your watercolour egg shaped paper using versamark and then sprinkle with the blue glitz embossing powder. Shake off excess blowing where necessary and then cure with a heat tool. When set place in a heavy book to flatten it.
4) Cut 65 strips of 3 inch quilling paper and quill into 8mm coiled circles, use a quilling board to help with the sizing and glue - leave these to dry.
5) Take the fan piece from peacock fans and load up with versamark stamp this onto the vellum and cover in blue glitz, using the heat tool to cure. Remember not to scorch the vellum, repeat until you have 5 blue pieces.
6) Load up the "feather" from tangled peacock and stamp this onto vellum using versamark. Sprinkle with purple glitz and cure with heat tool. Do this until you have 10 pieces of the purple feathers
7) Take the small leaf shaped feather from the peacock parade set and stamp this in vrsamark 6 times onto vellum, sprinkling green glitz embossing powder. Cure the powder with the heat tool.
8) Fussy cut out all the blue, purple and green pieces from the vellum paper and slightly curl the purple ones so that they have some dimension. I gentle squeezed them in half.
9) Retrieve the egg shaped watercolour stamped paper from the heavy book and then blot some of the mowed lawn ink onto the back of an acrylic block, pick up the ink from the acrylic block onto the nib of the water pen and colour and shade the peacock as per the image.
10) Add the grape jelly purple colour in the same way as the mowed lawn colouring the segments as in the image
11) Clean the acrylic block and blot some angel pink onto it, load your stencil brush with the pink, practice swirling on some scrap paper and then move the swirling so that there is a border of light pink around the peacock which is heavier towards to the edge.
12) Run the edge of the egg shape over the distress ink picked raspberry (think of the edge of the card as a knife so it is at right angles to the ink pads) and lightly coat the very edge
13) Let the peacock dry and then flatten again using heavy books
14) Take the quiled circles and using your fingers shape them into tear drops. If you use the "join" where you stuck the paper as the point of the teardrop then it gives the best results.
15) stick the blue fan pieces behind the egg shaped template as per image, next glue the image onto some A3 card, and then add the purple and green feather of the peacock tail.
16)Put the quilled teardrops as a border around the egg shape leaving space at the bottom
17) Cut the outline around the peacock tale leaving a flap at the top (this is to fold over to add the back of that card as it is a custom shape
18) Make the back of the card, using the front as a template - you can skip the blue pieces if you like - it is an "igloo" shape. Stick the back onto the folded flap you created in step 17.
Wednesday, 3 June 2015
Set sail
A notelet for a friend who has a surname of viking origin. I thought this was appropriate and fun to make.
Materials:
Card:
Black Card Stock
Paperado Chocolate Card Stock
Watercolour paper
Stamps:
Sheena Douglass A Little Bit Sketchy A6 Stamp Set - Be Strong Stamp
Ink:
Ranger Archival Jet Black
Memento Dandelion
Distress Aged Mahogany
Distress Gathered Twigs
Distress Faded Burlap
Distress Vintage Photo
Paints:
Aquatints Landscape
Method:
1) Cut a rectangle of watercolor paper that allows for a 1cm border on the card base.
2) Load the long ship stamp with the archival black ink and stamp it so that it is about 1/3rd of the way from the bottom of the paper, set aside and allow to dry.
3) Next load up the celtic circle with the black ink and stamp it once onto the watercolour paper.
4) Using the landscape aquatint inks apply the dark blue as the start of the sea, then layover it with the green, adding a further payer of the dark blue
5) Use the light blue to create the sky, use the faux bleaching technique to create the clouds. Allow to dry and then "squash" flat using heavy books.
6) Using water pens colours the celtic circles with the dandelion ink, and add a highlight in aged mahogany (water this down first)
7) Returning to the ship, use the frayed burlap to highlight the loops of the sails and then highlight with yellow.
8) Use the gather twig to cover the boat, darker at the front and paler towards the back
9) Use vintage photo and gathered twigs to create the shields on the boat.
10) Matt a black background onto a white card and then cut a piece of paperado chocolate that is 1cm less the width and the breadth and matt this on to the card.
11) Cut the celtic circle into quarters and then add to the corners of the ship scene
12) Matt the ship with corners on to the brown background leaving roughly 5mm at the top, bottom and both sides.
Friday, 29 May 2015
Old as the hills
This is a 50th Birthday card for a male friend, people think that it is hard to do cards for men, but I think this is a nice unisex card applicable for either.
Materials:
Card:
Black Card Stock
Watercolour Paper
Paperado Chocolate Card
Inks:
Spectrum Noir Aquatints: Landscape
Stamps:
Cherry Pie Art Stamps - P430 Two Celtic triple knots
Cherry Pie Art Stamps - R515 MONOLITH (Stonehenge)
Ink:
Distress Aged Mahogany
Memento Bamboo Leaves
Memento Gray Flannel
Versafine Black Onyx
Embellishment:
Rope on a Bobbin (woodware) from Chocolate Baroque
Method:
1) Load up the stonehenge stamp with versafine Black Onyx and stamp onto the watercolour card, allow to dry
2) Take the celtic knot and load the stamp with the aged mahogany - stamp 3 times (you might want to do a few spares)
3) Next matt some balck card onto the white card base covering it, then matt the chocolate coloured card on top of this - I left 5mm either side.
4) Allowing for a 5mm indent from the mated chocolate card stock, cut a rectangular piece of watercolour card
5) Using the landscape aquatint inks create a back ground. At the bottom I used the dar brown and the honey brown and then overlaid the green on to this.
6) The sky was done using a combination of the two blues and the grey, the clouds use a "faux bleach" technique. Set aside and allow to dry
7) Returning to the stonehenge print, load up a water pen brush with gray flannel and then use this to colour in the henge, set aside and wait for it to dry.
8) Clean the nib of the water pen brush and load it with bamboo shoots (stamp the ink pad onto an acrylic stamp board and pick the ink up from there). Colour in the white parts of the celtic knot with the bamboo laves green.
9) Carefully cut out the henge and the celtic knots.
10) Using PVA glue seal the rope on a bobbin at both ends and apply to the card (mine is roughly 4cm in from the left) and then attach the knots
11) Matt the henge onto the card.
Wednesday, 27 May 2015
Dancing Dragonflies
This is a submission for the Chocolate Baroque Challenge 11. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did making it!
Materials:
Card:
White Card Stock
Scrap Paper
Watercolour Paper
Inks:
Spectrum Noir Aquatints: Perfect primary
Stamps:
Chocolate Baroque - May AYOS
Ink:
Versamark
Memento Grape Jelly
Memento Grape Jelly
Distress Picked Raspberry
Versafine Black Onyx
Pens:
Sakura stardust silver
Quilling Paper:
JJ Quilling Opal Green 3mm
Embossing Powder:
WOW Silver super fine
Method:
1) Load up the stamp with versafine black and stamp onto scrap paper, this is to be used as a template for husking the dragonfly wings.
2) Place pins around the "clear" dragon flies wings and husk using a triple wrap, do each wing individually using the opal green paper. Repeat this until you have done all the wings on all the dragonflies. (husking involves wrapping quilling paper around the pins to create a shape).
3) Once you have constructed all the wings, cut 1 and 3/4 inch strips of the opal green quilling paper and create S scrolls to fill the wings.
4) Put all the quilled piece in a box, arranging the wings in the order on the stamp (so you don't get confused later)
5) Using versafine black load the AYOS May stamp and print onto white cardstock, once dry cut out the dotted background.
6) Get some watercolour paper and using the two blues from the perfrect primary aquatint range, apaint a background to look like water (I alternated and used water to blend), allow this to dry.
7) Once the watercoloured background is dry matt the cut out stamp on to it, colour in the background of the plain dragonflies using the silver sakura pen and start to mount the quilled dragonfly wings, I did all the wings and then added the scrolls. Make pegs (tight circles) for the bodies using the opal green.
8) Using versamark, load up the stamp and imprint onto the watercolour card and emboss using the silver powder.
9) Using water pens colour the embossed wings using the grape jelly and picked raspberry inks to colour the wings, cut them out.
10) Mount the embossed dragonflies at different heights using the decoupage foam and the quilling to create depth.
11) Use the grape jelly ink to create a border with the water pens.
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