Showing posts with label October Afternoon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label October Afternoon. Show all posts

Thursday, 21 February 2013

Its a Farm Life!

Hi everyone, its Vanessa here. This month, I am using papers from the Farm Girl range by October Afternoon.  I ordered the washi tape from the range too and I know its such a popular medium to use at the moment, the girls have used it in their projects in fabby and ingenious ways, but I really struggle with it!  So ...... I thought - have another go, and challenge yourself. :)


Woosh is my first layout, where I've used the tape with twine to make some flags. The tree is hand drawn and cut out.  After a little bit of misting, lots of other little pieces cut out from the papers are added.


3 in a Row is next and I as you can see, I've used a couple of strips of washi at the top, but I have also covered some "do it yourself" thickers with the tape, inked the edges and then used glossy accents over the top.


Finally, some little cards for Easter.



Thanks for looking. :)



Monday, 4 February 2013

Cartoon crazy


Hi everyone, Tracie here!
I have always loved cartoons, I find it fascinating how an artist can take an image of someone, simplify it and yet at the same time exaggerate it to create their likeness. It's a talent I have always both admired and envied.
I wanted to bring something of that style into my layouts.
For my first page I wanted to create a simple 'story board' - unfortunately the photos I'd chosen, that I'd been meaning to scrap for a long time, didn't really tell much of a story. I was able to get around this by using some of the Echo Park element stickers, to note key points.


It has often been remarked upon that I may have a bit of a potteries accent, and this is what this second layout focuses on.
We have a regular cartoon strip in our local paper (The Sentinel)  by the hugely talented cartoonist Dave Follows, which is written entirely in the Potteries dialect. I shamelessly copied one of these to use on my layout leaving the heads of the characters off so I could replace them with photos of me and my other half!


and finally, for my last layout, I handcut a simple mask to recreate the planet in the photograph, I then punched out a few stars, and with the simple addition of some October afternoon tidbits, my layout was complete!



If you've got any cartoon layouts you'd like to share with us, we'd love to see them!


Monday, 15 October 2012

An October Afternoon Scrapping....

Yes...I actually spent an afternoon, in October, scrapbooking with papers and embellishments from October Afternoon. Fancy that!! The lovely new Midway line to be precise, and the bright, happy hues and geometric patterns were just what I needed to inject some colour into a dull Autumn day. As always, direct links to the products I have used can be found at the end of the post.

My first page uses pictures actually taken just this weekend - Mr T and I attended a children's rollerblading party where towards the end the adults were all getting in on the action too. I must admit, I wasn't keen and was somewhat harassed into having a go, but I did manage a length of the sports hall and back without breaking any bones! It was good fun :) The round designs on the papers were perfect for recording our "wheely" fun adventure (see what I did there?!!) *ahem*...moving sharply on to the layout then.....

I'm totally in love with the new washi tapes that match the Midway range -  you can see a strip of the "Word Bubbles" across the photo of Mr T, and the "Photo Log" one along the bottom of the page. They are so usable - it is going to be ridiculously hard not to pop these on every page I make!

I had a pack of Pink Paislee "Artisan Words" to play with, and loved the puffy, rubbery texture they added to my page - and how they made incredibly light work of adding a title to my page.

 

The Artisan Words also contain elements other than text, and the Travel pack contains lots of fun stars and arrows. They can be used in their natural state as I did with my title, or customized using many mediums- inks, stains, markers, paint....... I chose to colour some of the stars for this page using mists (spraying liberally and mopping up any excess with a tissue).


I made little flag embellishments by wrapping strips of washi around decorative pins - you can layer up as many different tapes as you like, here I used two:

I then added a word sticker from the October Afternoon sheet, and popped the finished flag onto my page:


My second page utilised the funfair theme of the range to document a recent visit to the fair - and my niece and stepdaughter's first ever ride on a "roller coaster" - it was only a small one for children but I think it's fair to say they both loved it and will be raring to have a go on proper ones when they are big enough.

I wanted the page to be really busy with lots of movement to reflect the chaos of fair rides, and created this by adding lots of layers of elements and using them to move the eye around the page. The long vertical strip on the right takes your eyes down the picture to the title; next the horizontal strip runs your attention from the title across the page, and finally the arrows on the left return your gaze to the photo.

I created the assortment of arrows by beginning with a misted pattern using the arrows from the Artisan shapes as masks - the rubbery texture allowed me to pop them down, mist my paper, and peel them away easily to leave a negative shape. Plus, as they wiped clean, I could return them to the pack to use on another page. I mixed these with arrows hand-cut from one of the strips on the Duck Pond paper.
And now for something completely different.....my third page is very unlike my usual style but I'm pleased with it. It sort of made itself - I kept trying to add little things which I think are my "signature touches" to it, but it kept looking overdone. So I left it as it was - and it is the perfect addition to my pages about our short camping trip during the summer. It just goes to show that sometimes just a few basic elements are all you need to create a page - here I used one sheet of paper, some of the Studio Calico Ephemera, Pink Paislee Artisan Words, mist and a single strip of the Photo Log washi tape, and I was done.

Thanks as always for joining us at the Sarah's Cards Blog!

My Supplies included:

Tuesday, 17 July 2012

Making the Most of Mists

I must admit that, like most people I'm sure, I try to stretch my stash as far as possible, so when I make more expensive purchases I really like to try to get the most bang for my buck as they say! I do love my mists, and barely a page I create escapes a mist or a splatter - but I wanted to know if there was more I could do with the product other than simple spritzing.


So I decided to set about finding out if I could use mists as a painting medium. I began by dabbing some of my selected colours onto a plate (by unscrewing the cap and tapping some ink from the bottom of the spray tube), and grabbing a brush, some water and some cartridge paper.

My first little experiment was in creating colour washes. I found that both wet and dry paper worked equally well, but that a wet brush was (obviously) really important to really stretch the pigments and to blend the different colours nicely. A tiny bit of mist on my brush went really far with the water, and I found I needed to change my water in my bowl often to avoid the colours getting murky. I loved the ways the colours would mix with each other and in places created tone on tone, watermarked effects.

I decided to use a pretty wash I'd created with to make some simple embellishments (for a page I will share with you later in the post), by using a scalloped circle punch to pop out some shapes from my now pastel-coloured paper. You can see below the three mists I used to obtain the wash, and the level of vibrancy I achieved on the punched circles:


This led me to thinking about how the mists could be used just like water colours to colour in images. Grabbing my black American Crafts Slick Writer pen, I quickly scribbled some doodles and coloured them in with the mists. Slick Writers are permanent ink so dry instantly and did not bleed when the water washed over it.
**Disclaimer - I am not by any means an artist!!


With an idea for a layout forming, I set about drawing and painting a larger cassette tape, which would act as the perfect matt for my title later on:

Next up, I wanted to have a go at colouring some stamped images (as my own drawing skills were proving to be rubbish!). I stamped the images using Stazon ink, again so that they would not bleed when wet.

I actually coloured these cameras the day after my own doodles - the mists I had sprayed on to my palette the day before were easily reactivated with a drop of water from a wet brush.

I used all my mist/watercoloured triumphs to create this page - they perfectly complimented the happy, sunny colours of the papers I had chosen, which included pieces from Studio Calico's Hey Day collection, Crate's Little Bo Beep and MME Miss Caroline (all product links can, as always, be found at the end of the post).

 Please click on image for a larger image:

I chose to punch stars form the center of the colour-wash scalloped circles, and add them as a banner tethered together with faux stitching.

Here's my finished cassette tape; once it had dried I added some more details in pen, as well as my title using some cute grey tiny alphas from Pink Paislee:


One thing I totally loved about the "Crush" paper in the Hey Day collection was the decorative area at the bottom that looked like lots of different types of Washi tape layered over each other. I cut this portion away and added it to the bottom of my page, along with some extra pieces of real decorative tape to boost the texture:


This was echoed at the top of my page, with the addition of some torn paper and October Afternoon Little Fliers stickers:

My experimentation didn't stop there though! Ever the intrepid explorer into the world of arts and crafts (!!), I decided to see whether rather than just using the mists to colour in the stamped images, if they could be used to actually stamp with. I must admit, I did have rather mixed results and tried several different techniques, including misting directly onto the stamps (messy and wasteful!) and brushing them on with a brush (murky!), but did find a way to make these interestingly textured stamped embellishments:

The ink coverage was not even, but I loved how the colours blended and gave a soft dappled, shaded effect that you can see more closely here
To achieve this, I added one dot of each desired mist ( a little goes a long way here!) on to a plastic pallette - this doesn't have to be fancy here: I used the discarded plastic packaging from a stamp set. Leave a little space between them - don't be tempted to mix them with a brush - that magic will happen on it's own in a couple of seconds! 

With your chosen stamp attached to an acrylic block, place it down onto the ink,

Then gently move your stamp slightly, and you will see that the colours start to blend themselves as the slippery mist slides around on your plastic palette:
A very slight wiggling action resulted in the colours mixing in this way. 
The wave of purple below started out it's colourful life as a dot of pink and a dot of turquoise!
It's a hit and miss technique - you can't be sure what you will get with each mix of inks and no two stamped impressions will be the same - but it is a whole lot of fun just playing about to see what effects you can acchieve. And when I had finished I had a cute little pile of cut-out stamped images that I can use on pages and cards, which is always a bonus!
Some things I did find useful were to stamp once onto an ink-free part of the plastic pallette before going onto the paper to remove some excess ink, and that sometimes stamping a second time on the paper before reinking gave a nice, more subtle effect. I also found that blocky, solid-effect stamps leant themselves to this technique better than detailed ones - but with a bit of experimentation who knows what you may be able to acchieve?!
I used some of my mist-stamped images to make the card below, along with scraps from my page earlier:
Go on, have a go at using your mists in a new way - you may be surprised!!
My supplies included: