2018 Topic 21: Matchbox Art
Wow!
This clearly was a labour of love for Chris, but what a lot of fun to
be had filling up these little boxes with gifts ready for tiny fingers
to enjoy at Christmas! ~ Leandra
Hi everyone, it's Chris Dark here with
you today, and I'd like to share the matchbox Advent Calendar I've
made. When I saw the topics for this quarter I was drawn to this one
because of a Sizzix matchbox die I have which hadn't had much use, this
was the perfect opportunity to work with it again. I
pondered on whether to attach all the boxes together on top of each
other and make a wrap around them but in the end I liked the idea of all
the boxes stacked up on a big plate and searching through them all for
each number. I've
managed to do a little de-stash of my horde of scrapbook paper for the
making of the boxes themselves which is always satisfying but in
hindsight perhaps some heavier card for the box structures might have
been better as they'll get a fair bit of handling from some tiny hands!
I
chose to do my stamping on top of each matchbox as an additional panel
but of course the entire box could be stamped, stenciled and die cut
afterwards. The toppers worked up beautifully using gelli plate prints
created with Fresco Finish Chalk Acrylics in Tinned Peas, Snowflake, Cherry Red, Turquoise, Limelight, Caramel, Concrete, Winter Green, Pewter and Gold and Kay's gorgeous Christmas Stamp set EKC23 and stencil PS120.
Eclectica Kay Carley Set 23 (EKC23)
The
first print I made I couldn't bring myself to cut up so I kept this one
and one other and made them into Christmas cards. The rest I enjoyed
even more once they'd been cut down into the panels to fit the boxes.
You really can't go wrong with this technique, if you don't like a print
just brayer paint over, allow to dry and go again! My prints are made
up as multiple layers on top of each other with different colours added
and stamps and stencils together. There's lots of interest and layers in
them and I love how the stenciling with the translucent fresco's gives the appearance of see through baubles as if they're made of glass.
For
my first print, I've added the mask parts of the stencil and brayered
paint over them. Many PaperArtsy stencils give you the positive and
negative so you have more options with them.
The resulting print reveals the bauble shape as white from the underlying paper colour and the rest is the paint colour.
For this layer of the same print, I've used the stencil and brayered over the negative part to create some red baubles.
Now there's some stamping with the snowflake stamps and there's that lovely border part of the stencil which I sponged in with white paint. I used the mask part of the stencil here to aid the stamping.
I cut down each print, edged them with distress ink and distressed the edges a bit with scissors.
The tops are attached to the boxes and I've embellished with glitter glue, pearls, sparkly pen, die cut glazed numbers and paper clipping Christmas words. After this a little ribbon is knotted and slotted through as a pull for the drawers.
I added all the extra embellishing in stages with the die cut numbers being the last element on all the boxes so that I didn't handle them too much after glazing with dimensional glue. I like that added bit of shine from the glossy accents, it was definitely worth doing.
The resulting print reveals the bauble shape as white from the underlying paper colour and the rest is the paint colour.
For this layer of the same print, I've used the stencil and brayered over the negative part to create some red baubles.
I've repeated the previous step of the process to create the green baubles.
Now there's some stamping with the snowflake stamps and there's that lovely border part of the stencil which I sponged in with white paint. I used the mask part of the stencil here to aid the stamping.
I cut down each print, edged them with distress ink and distressed the edges a bit with scissors.
The tops are attached to the boxes and I've embellished with glitter glue, pearls, sparkly pen, die cut glazed numbers and paper clipping Christmas words. After this a little ribbon is knotted and slotted through as a pull for the drawers.
I added all the extra embellishing in stages with the die cut numbers being the last element on all the boxes so that I didn't handle them too much after glazing with dimensional glue. I like that added bit of shine from the glossy accents, it was definitely worth doing.
This
project was a labour of love but splitting up the tasks with die
cutting over a few days, sticking together over a few nights, gel
printing in a few sessions helped a lot. The rest I did a bit at a time
when I had an hour or so to spend, I even did the ribbon knotting in my
lunch hour at work so overall it didn't feel like a never ending task.
Once I'd broken it down into bite size sessions I enjoyed the process
and thought about the enjoyment we'd have when we start to open the
drawers each day leading up to Christmas and especially this year as my
little Grandson is old enough to know about chocolate! The matchboxes
are bigger than regular matchboxes which means they'll hold more treats
so we can all have something each day......those Christmas tree hanging
chocolates and gold coins fit inside perfectly :D! I hope you'll join us
in the challenge, there are so many ways to interpret the topic as
you'll see from all the guest bloggers and their gorgeous projects.
Thanks for joining me tonight and happy weekend!
Blog: www.sketchingstamper.blogspot.co.uk
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/christine.dark.7
Instgram: @chrisd999
Pinterest: https://uk.pinterest.com/cdark4163/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/christine.dark.7
Instgram: @chrisd999
Pinterest: https://uk.pinterest.com/cdark4163/
To join our challenge and win a £50 PaperArtsy voucher:
Simply make something arty relevant to the topic, and link your creation from any social URL (eg. Instagram, Pinterest, Blog Post etc) sharing your original make to this challenge page.
The current topic link Topic 21: Matchbox Art will close 17:00 (London Time) Sunday, December 9th 2018, and the winner will be announced 2 hours later at 19:00.
All
links go in the draw to win a PaperArtsy voucher. Please make sure we
can contact you as a prize winner - it helps if you share your contact
info from the platform you opt to use.
Good Luck! If you have any questions, don't hesitate to ask!
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Annual Sale on now at PaperArtsy
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Sale ends Dec 16th
Discount applied at checkout automatically
A good time to stock up, or make your Xmas requests from family.
oh Chris, this was so worth the time it must have taken. Amazing project.
ReplyDeleteThese are absolutely glorious, Chris - so full of festive colour and detail. They'll bring such a lot of joy as each tiny box is opened, but I think they're spectacular just from the outside too.
ReplyDeleteAlison x
Chris it looks amazing. It obviously took a lot of time, even spread over several days, but well worth it!
ReplyDeleteOhh Christine, these are BEAUTIFUL! 😍
ReplyDeleteWhat a gorgeous project Chris and so worth the time and effort put into making them.
ReplyDeleteYour grandson will love them.
A joy to look at, something to look forward to every day when opening the boxes!
ReplyDeleteJust fan flippin tastic! Xx
ReplyDeleteFabulous project Chris. these are beautiful and fun idea. xx
ReplyDeleteWow! These are amazing! Sooo beautiful!
ReplyDeleteOh my gosh, this is awesome! I love all the details and am slightly speechless ;)
ReplyDeleteWhat a fab idea ! Love it.
ReplyDeleteCorrie x
What a delightful project, Chris!
ReplyDeleteLucy x