"Hello everyone, Wanda here. I am extremely excited
to be here! I about fell off my chair waaayyy back in December of
2013 when I received an email from Leandra asking if I'd be interested
in being in their line up of guest designers for 2014. I was then
flooded with this mix of excitement and fear and questions to
myself like "should I do this", "what if I totally mess it up", "what if
the stress is too much", "what if life is crazy when I have to do
this", "what if I make something ugly", and on and on and on....
followed by a pep talk reminding myself that if I do this, I just have
to be me! I already had some Fresco Finish Paints and getting
more was on my wish list and I did like most of their stamps so, as you
can tell, my answer was YES!!!! (And yes I still have pep talks with myself
:-)
First
a little bit about me. I've been married to Chuck for almost 31 years and we
have 3 children. The youngest is still at home with one more year of
high school left. We live in Southern Iowa about one hour straight
south of Des Moines. We have a welding shop located just across our
back yard and, yes, I do weld. The hubby taught me when he needed my
help. How much time I spend out there depends on the work load and the
employee situation. I also do all the paperwork for the business. I
began stamping in 1999 and fell in love!!! Stamping and making cards
lead to book making, jewelry making, altered books, altered anything,
atcs, canvases, and art journaling. I've been on design teams, been
published in magazines, and did online classes back when the big thing
was to have them in chat rooms with pictures posted on picturetrails. I
still have my picturetrail Here with all the old classes and other things still there. One day maybe I'll get everything moved to my blog... maybe".
Today
I'm sharing an autumn themed project using Lin Brown stamps from sets
ELB05, ELB06, ELB07, ELB09. A friend was over a couple months ago for
an arty play day and she made the comment that I should do a paper chime
sometime and I could not get that out of my head and thought it would
make a great project to share here. I first thought butterflies and
then flowers (2 of my favorite things), but as I thought about the time
of year and as I was looking at the PA website I settled on autumn. The
combination of Lin's stamps along with Chipboard shapes (ES04) and a cutting die (Branch) seemed like a match made in heaven.
Stencil PS005 |
Shapes 04 |
Branch Die |
I
love it when I see a tree in the fall with an array of colors from
green to yellow and orange and red and that's what I went with for my
colors.
Quite
often when I'm working on a large project I will test drive ideas as I
go along and that's what I did with the leaves. I had already decided
that a spread and dip method of adding paint to the chipbard leaves
would probably work well but wanted to try it out and did so with one
leaf. I put paint on my craft sheet, spread it out, pressed the leaf
into it, picked it up, turned it over, pressed the other side down,
picked it up, dried it a bit and then left it on the craft sheet to
completely dry. Went back to check it out later and noticed that the
grey side was not as bright looking as the white side (made sense and I
had thought it might be that way and it let me know to prep first with
snowflake) and also noticed that spots of paint that weren't dry before I
set the leaf down and then dried against the craft sheet had a shine to
them rather than being matte so I knew I didn't want to do that. Other
than that, I loved the look.
I
took all the leaves I was going to use, painted the grey side and the
edges with Snowflake and let them dry. Next I put puddles of Chartreuse
(from Lin's 1st Limited Edition Set), Yellow Submarine, Tango, and London Bus on the craft sheet and used my palette knife to spread the
paint.
I pressed the number of leaves that would fit into the paint.
I
pulled each one up and set it aside to dry. I again spread the paint
around, adding more as necessary, and continued pressing leaves until
they were all done. After the first side was completely dry on all the
leaves I repeated the process to color the other side of the leaves.
After those were all dry, there were some white spots along some edges
and I used a paint brush and Chartreuse to fill those in as the white
was just too white.
I
also splattered Old Gold paint onto the leaves so as they turn and move
the light catches those spots and sparkles. That can be very hard to
catch in a photo but I tried. You can at least tell there are speckles
on the leaves. I also sponged some Vintage Photo Distress Ink around
the edges.
While
I had been mulling the whole project over in my mind I had decided I
would have a circle of paper for the top but knew that I would have to
put together 2 or more strips for the piece to be long enough to make a
circle large enough which would mean seams in the paper circle and I
didn't want them stand out so I was trying to figure out what I could
do. I decided that I could wrap tissue tape around where the seams
would be and I could even add other wraps so that it all looked
consistent but, again, I didn't want the tissue tape to stand out
either, lol. The matching leaf stamp and die to the rescue!! (The stamp
is the bottom left one on sheet ELB07) I could cut leaves that I would
layer over the tissue tape spots so everything flowed smoothly. I tried
a few practice runs, stamping the image and then die cutting. I
thought I should just be able to eyeball setting the die over the image
and then cutting but it wasn't working. Slightly frustrated I actually
set it aside and walked away.
I did think about using the leaf stamp
from set ELB09 but I really wanted a border that I could leave white to
help the leaves pop from the background. The next day as I was looking
at them again, it hit me, I could take the negative of a cut out leaf,
lay it over my stamped leaf and then place the die in that negative just
where I wanted it to be. I tried it with a left over piece from the
day before and it worked but a little heavier and colored cardstock with
my opening would make lining up the opening and replacing the die
easier so I cut myself a new pattern (the green piece). I stamped on
image on Smoothy White Stamping Card with Jet Black Archival Ink and dried it.
I laid it on my cutting surface and placed the colored negative cut piece over the image so I had a border all the way around.
Then
holding this in place, I placed the die exactly where it needed to be,
put the top cutting plate over it and run it through my die cutting
machine. Because my pattern was a heavier cardstock I had to run it
through my machine a couple of times for it cut through my stamped paper
completely but that was fine.
And then I had my cut leaf!!!!! I repeated this so I had 4 leaves.
I used a water brush along with Yellow Submarine and London Bus to paint these leaves leaving the border area white.
Back
when I was first thinking about the project I thought I would just have
the circle of paper for the top, add eyelets to hang leaves from and to
put the top hanger on, but the more I thought about it and how easy it
would be for the top to get out of shape I knew I wanted some kind of
support. I wondered if you could still find metal rings at the craft
stores and the next time we were in Des Moines we stopped to look and,
yes, they did!! The metal ring has a diameter of about 7 1/4" (just
over 18cm). I had decided I wanted to hang leaves from the center also
so to make a support for that I used craft wire stretching it across and
wrapping the wire several times around the ring. Two wires would
probably have been enough but it didn't take that long and four wires
meant more strength for the center and I felt better about that. I had
already figured circumference of the circle and thought 2 strips of
cardstock (cut the long way from Smoothy Heavy Weight cardstock) would reach
all the way around but I did test run that (with the hubby helping to
hold it) just to be sure and to get a rough idea of how much the strips
would overlap. Two would work fine which would mean 2 seams but decided I
would also place tape and leaves half way between so it would look like
4 sections.
I
cut the strips of heavy smoothy cardstock to 4 1/4" wide. I wanted to
keep to the same color palette as the cardboard leaves but lighten it up
just a bit for the header piece and since yellow and red make orange
and I would be blending a bit as I went I didn't use tango. I put just a
drop of snowflake with the other colors and mixed each one. Before
starting to paint I stamped the leaf image from set ELB09 on the strips
using Archival Ink . I wanted the pattern to be seamless all
around the top so as I stamped or painted I always matched my ends
together.
Here
are the two strips painted. I used Cut N Dry foam to apply the paint
blending a little between colors but allowing large areas of color to
be.
Here
you can see that the ends flow together. I also painted the backside
of the strips in the same way but didn't do any stamping or stenciling
on the back.
Next
I stenciled leaves (PS005). I added just a little bit of Tinned Peas
to Chartreuse as the Chartreuse was just a little too light to show up
very well.
Again I matched up my ends so everything would flow together.
Lastly I stamped another leaf stamp over the pieces using Archival Ink Red Geranium.
The
background is done and I wanted to add some encouraging messages. I
started to just stamp them with Archival Ink Jet Black but then decided I
needed to know about where the tissue tape would be to be sure I wasn't
going to cover up any words, so I temporarily put some down.
Doing a test run of the die cut leaves before they were painted. I alternated the orientation - up, down, up, down.
To
assemble the top header piece, I began by putting together one set of
ends overlapping them by only about 1/8" of an inch, adhering the
overlap with red line tape so I knew it would hold and then wrapped it
with tissue tape overlapping the tape on the back lining up the edges. I
carefully wrapped this around the metal ring, measured exactly how much
the other ends overlapped, and took it back off. I added red line tape
and adhered those ends overlapping to the correct measurement. Again I
wrapped tissue tape around the seam and then also added my in-between
wraps of tissue tape. To blend the tape in a bit, I painted over it with Chartreuse.
Before
actually putting the header on the ring to stay, I needed to start my
cording for the hanger and to hang the leaves on. (I neglected to take
pictures while I figured this out but hopefully you can see it well
enough in these after pics). I cut two pieces that would be long enough
to create the hanger, go down to the metal ring, tie to the ring, and
hang down to the first leaf on each one with enough cord to tie the leaf
on (and some extra in case my estimate was off). I held these 2 pieces
together, ends matching, folded it in half and tied a knot about 1 3/4"
down from the center (this loop is my hanger).
I
then held it over the ring figuring how far down I wanted to go from
the hanger to the ring and wondered how I was going to make sure it all
stayed even as I tied each piece to the metal ring... think... think...
think... ah-ha!!!.... after deciding how long I needed it to be from the
hanger to the metal ring, I laid out the cording in a straight line and
used a marker to mark across all 4 pieces at the same length from the
knot and this is where they would tie onto the metal ring. I tied them
all onto the ring keeping them evenly spaced around the ring and, yay,
it hang straight!!!
Back
when I was first wrapping the header around the ring to figure out how
much overlap I needed on the second seam, I realized that it wasn't
going to just stay in place very well, I needed to do something to keep
it in place. I decided I could tie it on with the same cording I was
using to hang everything and I could do this in the same spots I would
be gluing the leaves on the outside so it would be covered on the
outside. After figuring how far down on the header I wanted the metal
ring to be, I pierced two vertical holes centering them in each of the
tissue tape areas. I cut pieces of cording for each place and threaded
that cording through the holes leaving the ends hanging on the inside to
tie around the metal ring. I slid the header over the ring getting it
in place all the way around with a tail on each side of the ring at all
four places and tied it on. I added a little bit of white glue to each
knot, let it dry, and then cut the tails short.
Next I glued the leaves to the outside using matte gel medium. Where
this leaf needed to be glued on, it left some of the cording showing
but is barely noticeable when you look at the whole project.
Finally
it was time to tie on all the leaves. I have 4 strings hanging down
around the perimeter and one in the center, 2 leaves on each string
spaced out. I punched holes in the leaves using a Crop-a-dile, tied the
cording through the hole, added white glue to the knot, let it dry, and
trimmed the tails close. I hung the leaves so they weren't all facing
the same direction (up, down, sideways) to give a more natural look of
falling.
BONUS!!
When
I was adding paint to the chipboard shapes I "mopped up" the extra
paint with a scrap strip of heavy smoothy that looked fabulous and I
also had that test leaf sitting there so I decided to make a quick card.
The folded white card is 8 1/4" x 4". I cut the strip of painted card
to 5 1/2" long, it was already 2 3/8" wide. I stamped the quote with
Archival Ink Jet Black, dried it with a heat tool, and distressed the
top and bottom edges of the panel. I laid a gold meshy ribbon across
the card, glued the panel over it and glued the leaf on as shown. The
only glue holding the ribbon is behind the panel and the leaf. Finally I
decided it needed some black dots around the panel.
I
hope you've enjoyed seeing these projects as much as I enjoyed making
them!!!!! And I hope you'll consider joining in with the monthly
challenge as well as popping by tomorrow evening to see project #2.
~Wanda~
A huge thank you from all at PaperArtsy HQ Wanda. We are delighted to have you join us and what a debut project you have created with Autumnal colours and falling leaves, it really looks amazing. The construction of the mobile chime was fascinating as was the cording hanger, thank you for sharing this process. I like that you left the border area white on the leaves, not only does it make them "pop" but attracts the eye beyond to the layered backdrop. Bravo Wanda.
We would love you to join in with our monthly challenge. If
you are inspired by any of this month's guests who have blogged between Sept
1st 2014 and Sept 30th 2014 then join in
and link up your creativity HERE. You will go in the draw to win a voucher to
spend on products of your choice from the PaperArtsy online store. You need to
add your link by 19:00 (London time) Sept
30th 2014
Love the colours, so autumnal! Fab project. :)
ReplyDeleteWow, Wanda, welcome to the PA family - this is a fabulous start. Autumn is my favourite time of year, and this looks absolutely gorgeous.
ReplyDeleteWanda, this is absolutely fabulous! I love everything from the color to concept! You are such a talented artist and this is definitely a treat! Congratulations and blessings Wanda! :)
ReplyDeleteFabulous project, love how you created the painty texture on the leaves, wonderful stuff! Ruth x
ReplyDeleteGreat to see something different from card and plaques, great idea and can be scaled down too. Welcome Wanda, looking forward to more of your projects :-) xxx
ReplyDeleteIowa Girls Rule! Fabulous project.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful project, I really enjoyed your first blog here Wanda. I love the leaves you used and great to have matching stamp and die and the colours were beautiful, very inspiring xx
ReplyDeleteGreat idea Wanda, love the colours. Jo xx
ReplyDeleteLove what you have made Wanda great colour choice too. Look forward to more x
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful first project, it's gorgeous & so is the card.
ReplyDeleteLike, Helen, Autumn is my favourite time of year! This is such an inspired make with the gorgeous falling leaves! Welcome Wanda - can't wait to see what you have in store for us tomorrow! xxx
ReplyDeleteWelcome Wanda! What a great stepped project!
ReplyDeleteLucy x
What a great project - those leaves look fab!
ReplyDeleteAlison x
Beautiful! What a unique creation from Wanda... congrats on the guest spot!
ReplyDeleteOUTSTANDING!!! I LOVE it Wanda, it's simply gorgeous!
ReplyDelete~Linda
Fabulous creation Wanda, it's a great home deco for the coming season!
ReplyDeleteFabulous first project Wanda, just love the effects you achieved with your method of paint dipping, gorgeous!!!
ReplyDeleteLin
Welcome to the PA family Wanda. I've admired your creativity from afar on FB for a while and was delighted when I saw from Leandra's tweet this morning that you were the GD last night!
ReplyDeleteFabulous first design for us PaperArtsy fans and perfect to celebrate my favourite colours and time of the year. Can't wait to see tonights project!
Hugs
Lesley Xx
Fabulous inspiration here. Love it, thanks.
ReplyDeleteWow, Wanda! This is absolutely stunning. Love it!!!
ReplyDeleteGlad I mentioned it and so very glad you could not get it out of your head! I like the way it turned out, very inspiring!
ReplyDeleteOoo, this is a fabulous project, Wanda! Love the colors, and the dipping in paint is brilliant!
ReplyDeleteWow wow wow truly awesome stunning creation, I so love the techniques you used and the die cut tip is amazing. Happy Creating ☺ Kezzy xxx
ReplyDelete