Showing posts with label Fodder School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fodder School. Show all posts

Monday, 24 June 2024

NEW PaperArtsy Products: Alison Bomber {June 2024}


A note from Leandra:
Ohhh do we have some beautiful things to share with you today! 

We all have become great fans of Alison's botanical stamps - the gorgeous mixture of ephemera, nature and words are pulled together across a variety of media: ink, paints and watercolours. In this release she shows you a myriad of ways to use these new designs, from gel printed 'blueprints', to watery loosely stamped images and even a candle holder!

Alison's month as a Fodder School 3 tutor is coming up in August, so keep your eyes peeled for her supply list, which will soon be announced. Of course you may already know her stamp set (EAB-F) and recommended Fresco paints are already available from our stockists around the world.
 
Alison will be along to share with you LIVE her new products and ideas over in our Facebook Group, 'PaperArtsy People' shortly after this post publishes, and ... don't forget ...
 
These stamps are available EXCLUSIVELY from our approved stockists. Please check the list at the foot of this post to find a retailer online or geographically near you, it makes sense to order within your country where possible. Our retailers also endeavour to join the designer's live to share their direct shopping links - this makes it super easy for you to find a store with product in stock immediately.

Hello, all!  Alison here from Words and Pictures, and I'm thrilled to be introducing these three new stamp sets to you.  They are a continuation but also a development of the Botanical Textures series which began in February. Welcome to the Pressed Botanical Textures!  Once again, I've really been thinking about how the stamps could be used both for simple stamping and also for exciting mixed media techniques.

You still get beautiful botanical sketches on these plates - but this time a sketch and a silhouette in each set, which gives you so much flexibility.  There are scrumptious textures to layer up, as well as ephemera for adding detail.  And of course there are words to go with the pictures... fragments of poetry and carefully chosen individual words.  I can't wait to share them with you. 


Alison Bomber Red Rubber Stamps
Price: RRP €23.00 +VAT    
Size:5" x 6" (13 x16.5cm)
All stamps are individually trimmed onto cling foam, with a laminated storage/index sheet

I love the leafy stems in this first set, EAB39 Pressed Foliage.  They are reminiscent of ferns, but also have an echo of the formal decorative foliage you find in old books or in architectural detailing.  The texture is some dry brush strokes which have a great distressed look.  And there's storytelling in the ephemera as well as in those word fragments, as you'll see in the first sample I made with this plate.

Eclectica³ Alison BomberSet 39 (EAB39)


A Summer's Day Out By Train


This prosperous gentleman is the managing director of the Agences Generales de Voyage, and he's busy promoting the wagons lists or sleeping cars on his new trains.  Have you ever thought of travelling overnight from the city and waking up to fresh country air and beautiful forests and fields!?  And you could send a postcard home, with stamp and postmarks included.  Those little pieces of ephemera can tell big stories, you see... 
  

The pressed foliage leaves (layered as both sketch and silhouette) provide an organic spontaneity in the background, contrasting with the geometric squares and circles of the photo and the ephemera labels.  


And those strips of masking tape have other foliage and meadow grasses on them (the strips are left over from creating the quartet of panels you'll see later in the post).  
 


Pressed Foliage Tag Pair


For each set, I've created a pair of simple tags showing you why it was important to me to have both the sketch and the silhouette on each plate.  You've already seen how beautifully they can layer up together... but the silhouette can really hold its own against a background texture. I love how the dry-brushing has a look of woodgrain when 
repeat-stamped to cover the whole tag.
 

And the detailed sketch is perfect for a simple stamping - so delicate and effective whether you colour it in or not.  Got to love the detail on that postage stamp too, straight off a postcard sent from Prague in 1949 to some relative or other of mine!


Thursday, 21 March 2024

2024 Topic 2 : Mattints {by Alison Bomber} on the PaperArtsy Blog


Hello all, Alison here with you today from Words and Pictures. I've been playing with my new botanical textures stamps along with experimenting with creating some Mattints textures.

Given these new stamp designs only launched a couple of weeks ago, I'm still exploring them, and I know we're all exploring what the amazing Mattints can get up to (answer: SO much!). 

Texture is the name of the game in this tag book. Tags are the perfect experimentation substrate for me... you can make lots of them, and if something doesn't work out, you haven't broken the bank in the meantime. And with all your tag experiments, you've got the makings of a tag book ready to play.


The problem with a tag book, of course, is that it's tough to share the look of the thing in a single photo!


So I'm sharing a couple of angles here so that you can get a look at what's going on both on the individual tags... 


... as well as a glimpse of the overall look of the book.


I'm really pleased with the simple binding technique I used here - you'll find out all about it as you read on.



I'm still enjoying the winter-spring transitional palette of soft blues and greens, with a touch of brown for the bare trees (and mud), so three of the Mattints I chose to work with are from the original four colours, Shark, Fern and Nutty. But I couldn't resist the allure of the beautiful Dragonfly from the more recent colours released. It adds a lovely springtime brightness to the muted natural colour tones of the others.  

And I'm mixing and matching my three new stamp sets too... EAB36 Bells Edition, EAB37 Poppy Edition, and EAB38 Umbellifers Edition, making the most of the loose botanical sketches and the words, with a bit of additional texture from the background blocks. 


Here's the full collection of Mattints textures I created before I added any extra layers... so how did I make them?  Well, in various ways - read on!


The first batch are as easy as can be - just a little bit of simple gel-printing... brayering the Mattints onto my small gel plate and pressing my die-cut tags down onto them. I cut the tags from fairly cheap sketchbook paper, and applied more than one colour to the plate at a time (without worrying about cleaning up in between times either - I like a messy grungy look if it happens!).


For another batch, I simply put blobs of the Mattints direct onto my craft mat, spritzed them with a bit of water, and smooshed the tags down into the resulting puddles and droplets. With different amounts of water, you get different consistencies and therefore different textures, and by drying after each smoosh or dab, you can build up layers.


With lots of Mattint in the mix you get the almost tree-bark texture as you peel the tag up. With more water, you get the droplets which add lovely textural splotches. I layered some splotches over some of the gel printed backgrounds too.


And for a couple of tags, I brayered Mattints from the craft mat onto the background stamp from EAB37 Poppy Edition and stamped that repeatedly over the tag to get full coverage (that's the one in the middle of the bottom row, and the one towards the top left of the photo).


I love the variety of textures here, and also that the Mattints can give you such subtle colour tones. It means that it will be all the easier for the next layers (the ones we're about to add!) to  have a strong presence over these gentle tones (and the chance for many more layers in that case!). 
 

I was enjoying the texture play, so I decided to bring the textured blocks from the stamp sets into action too.  I used them very sparingly, just pressing a corner or edge of a stamp into a corner or along the edge of a tag. And I stamped in tone-on-tone colours for the most part - Ranger Distress Ink in Salvaged Patina, and Ranger Archival in Leaf and Olive. (The edging from EAB38's block is on the left, and the gelprint texture from EAB37 is on the right hand tag, as well as in the top corner of the one on the left.)


Next, I used a natural sponge to add Nutty Mattint in various places. I love how this warms up the colour palette, and gives a sort of rusted vintage look to parts of the tags. It's so good over the textured areas too... the translucent glaze of the Mattints means the colours blend, so over white paper it's properly rusty, and over the blue greens, it changes colour.  (You'll see that more clearly in some of the finished photos later on.) 


Then I had a wonderful time with my three new stamp sets, mixing and matching and combining words, botanicals and ephemera stamps on each tag. Again, I used inks that would tone with the Mattint colours - Ranger Archival in Sepia, Leaf, Garden Patina, Pebble Beach, and Coffee.

I added some torn book page fragments for extra texture and detail (gesso'd beforehand to whitewash them), and used the margins of the book pages (where there's no text) to stamp the words and phrases. I love those torn edges!


I ended up with 14 tag backgrounds that I really liked, so I lined them up in two sets of seven before I did the stamping, ready to create an accordion book structure. I arranged them so that different background styles were next to each other. That meant as I was stamping, I could spread out which stems went where. And for the binding I used some cheap seam binding ribbon.


I glued two strips of ribbon onto the backs of one of the sets of seven tags (leaving just a little gap between tags), and then glued down the second set on top. That means each "page" has a bit more stability (now that it's two layers), and the accordion can fold in both directions (meaning I have to choose from four possible covers!!). I'm really pleased with this simple binding technique. All I had to do was trim the excess ribbon from the edges, and it all works beautifully.



I'm not going to lie, I've got a LOT of pictures of the finished project... 



I've already mentioned there are 14 different tags to show you, and four different possible book covers.


You can just scroll through them really quickly, and it will give you a feeling of what it's like unfolding the concertina.


And you'll have to decide which one is your favourite... I can't.


I don't want to leave any of them out of the spotlight!


Plus I also used Mattints to tint the leftover seam binding trimmings. I had four pieces after cutting them off, so I alternated them in the tops of the tags with some of my favourite fine twine.


Because the Mattints are also a glue medium, the ribbon sets in those crinkles beautifully - no need to worry about them going floppy!


As often seems to be the case with my projects, it's not easy to capture all the details in one go, so I ended up with a lot of eye-candy photos...


Lots of different angles and page combinations... 


Because, of course, part of the joy for me is how different images bump into other images...


... how different words meet other words...


... how one texture looks next to a different texture...


... and how colours (even subtle ones) contrast and change the look of the colours next to them.


I suppose that's what I was talking about with the phrase "visual poetry" during the live launch of these new stamps.


That repetition and variation asks us to look with fresh eyes as the colours, images and words move and mutate.


And this accordion book encourages that meditative frame of mind, I hope.


Or maybe it's just me...!!


I had a really lovely time with this gentle accordion album. I'm ready to try some bright colours with these stamps next, I think. Maybe it's time to add some of those other new Mattints into the mix... Jam and Squeezed here I come!

I hope you enjoy the visual poetry of all these words and pictures, and I hope you'll be inspired to explore some texture experiments with the Mattints too. Thanks so much for bearing with me through this huge art gallery of a post, and happy crafting all!

Alison xx



I'm also currently one of the twelve teachers on Fodder School 3... my month is yet to come (with my exclusively designed PaperArtsy Fodder Berry Edition stamps and specially curated paints sets involved) and you can still sign up any time.