Showing posts with label Lace Leaf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lace Leaf. Show all posts

Wednesday, 9 November 2016

Clean and Simple shaker card for autumn or fall


Hi everyone, it's Esther here with a Clean and Simple shaker card for autumn or fall. 

Don't you love this time of year? I'm lucky to live right next to woodland. When I get out to walk the dogs there on an afternoon, the sky is a wonderful clear pale blue, the air is sharp, and the leaves crunch under our feet. Perfect!

I wanted to capture these sensations in a card, and thought I'd also show some of the steps for anyone who might find that helpful. 

Here's my card:


I used four products for this card. The front panel is cut using the Concord & 9th Grateful Leaf Dies. The sentiment is from the matching Concord & 9th Lace Leaf set. I've been so impressed with this stamp set - did you see my Christmas card that used the small leaf? This is a really versatile set for every season and I'm going to get a lot of use out of it. 

The inner layer of the card uses Zig Clean Color Real Brush Pens for the background, the grey shading on the birch trees and the colouring on the leaves. These pens are another absolute win. I got the 24 pen set to test them out, but the bigger 60 pen set quickly went onto the wishlist! A massive bonus is that these pens don't bleed through decent quality card stock, so you can colour images on one layer cards with no leakage through to the other side. (Obviously don't use water with them unless it's watercolour card stock!)

Finally, those beautiful birch trees are from Mama Elephant Birch Trees Creative Cuts.


I used leaves as the shaker element of this card instead of sequins so that they would have the right matt texture and would "stick" in the tree branches when the card is shaken. I'm thrilled with how that worked; it produced exactly the effect I was aiming for.

Just get your Zig Clean Color Real Brush Pens and shade from dark to light on the front and back of a scrap piece of card using each lighter colour to blend over the darker colour next to it. From the left, I used 062 Dark Brown, 060 Brown, 070 Orange, 052 Bright Yellow and 050 Yellow. Then die cut multiple leaves using the various sizes of leaf die in your Mama Elephant Birch Trees Creative Cuts.



To get the loose watercolour background, take your Zig Clean Color Real Brush Pens and scribble them onto an acrylic stamping block, slightly overlapping each colour with the previous, then mist lightly with water so the colour beads up. I find I get a softer edge if I then take a sheet of kitchen paper and lightly tap excess ink away from the edges of the block. Then press your base panel over the acrylic block, lift away and either dry with a heat tool or leave to dry naturally. I repeated this step twice to get the coverage I wanted. From the top, I used 092 Blue Gray, 031 Cobalt Blue, 043 Olive Green, 072 Beige and 062 Dark Brown.



Finally, the sentiment! I love that long sentiment strip from the Concord & 9th Lace Leaf set with its descriptive autumn/fall phrases. Here's how to shape it perfectly for the edge of the negative leaf shape on the front panel if you're using a MISTI.

Place your die cut front card panel into the MISTI, use the magnets to hold it down and close the lid. Use a dark colour of Zig Clean Color Real Brush Pen to draw on the top of the lid along the right hand edge of the leaf. Remember, Zigs are waterbased pens so it will wipe right off when you're done with a baby wipe or damp tissue. 



Then open the lid and press the sentiment into place on the underneath of the lid, a short distance from the line you've drawn. 



Keep closing the lid to check you have the placement right on the card panel in real life. When you're happy with the placement, ink up the sentiment and stamp it onto the card panel. You can then clean up the stamp as usual and wipe the Zig off your lid.

Final tip - always give the acetate on your shaker cards a quick wipe with an anti-static pad before adhering everything together. That way, your shaker filling won't stick to the acetate but will instead move freely.

Thanks for stopping by!




Wednesday, 26 October 2016

Christmas card using everyday stamps and dies


Hi everyone, Esther here with a Christmas card that was fun to make and mostly used everyday stamps and dies - though I did make an exception for the gorgeous sentiment stamp! As you've probably picked up by now, I think it's great when you get lots of different use out of products, especially if it's something where you might not immediately think of using them.



For this card, I stamped and gold heat embossed My Favorite Things Bundles of Blossoms. This is such a gorgeous background stamp, really versatile, and its look totally changes depending what you do with it - plain stamping, heat embossing, emboss and watercolour, have it in black and white or vibrantly multi-coloured, have it all showing or just a corner peeping out from under something else... love it! 

I then used My Favorite Things Inside and Out Stitched Circle STAX Dienamics to cut a circle and a matching frame. I coloured the circle with inks to get an ombre effect, and then splashed with water and mopped up to bleach out splatters here and there. I glued the circle and the frame to the embossed background.

Using My Favorite Things Make a Wish stamp set and coordinating Make a Wish Dies, I then stamped, heat embossed and die cut three candles and three flames and adhered these over the circle.

The little leaf from the stunning new Concord and 9th Lace Leaf stamp set looked really festive stamped and heat embossed in gold. I cut it out multiple times using the coordinating Grateful Leaf Dies and glued the leaves into a decorative foliage cluster at the base of the candles.

Next, it was that sentiment set I couldn't resist - My Favorite Things Hand Lettered Christmas. How fab are they?! I stamped and heat embossed "noel" in gold on vellum, and used a trimmer and fussy cutting to get it to the shape I wanted before wrapping it over the leaves and gluing it on the rear of the embossed panel.

Finally, the whole panel was mounted on matching blue card stock and then on to a heavy weight card base.



I hope this helps to inspire some of your own Christmas cards. Luckily, this year I "only" have 86 to make compared to over 100 last year, but I know some of you make way more than that, and others just do a few for special friends and family. How about you? What's your card making target for Christmas this year? I'd love to know :)

Thanks for stopping by!