Showing posts with label Beeswax. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beeswax. Show all posts

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Learn: CSI case file #39

Hello! We have such a gorgeous case file this week at CSI: Color, Stories, Inspiration. It is our last week of teaming up with Once Upon a Sketch.I hope you will be able to play along and don't miss the stunning layouts of the DT and guests. Here's the case file and sketch:
And my layout:

From the evidence items I used: birds, frame, stars, bits and pieces, globe, book print, and I was inspired by the 'learn' theme of the testimony items. As you can see, I was very inspired by the inspiration photo and did something similar, but with stamps and watercolour.

I first stamped a mix of images on watercolour paper using Archival Jet Black ink, I picked stamps that had to do with nature, play and learning. I was planning to first paint all the images with masking fluid, but forgot to do it before I started to paint. I wanted a soft wet-on-wet look in how the paints mixed on the layout, but to get that you need to work fast and there was no way I would be able to work so fast around all the stamped images. I painted the images with masking fluid, let it dry, then rewet the whole sheet and added paint on the remaining parts. All the paints were mixed beforehand to fit the colour combo. I didn't get the nice blending that I wanted to have -compare the bottom part of the layout where the paint flowed together, to the harsher lines at the top.

When the paint was dry, I removed the masking fluid and painted all the stamped images in the colours of the colour combo. The heart was doodled with a waterproof pen.

After the paint dried, I added some shading to the images with a black coloured pencil. Then I added some Platinum Stickles here and there for a bit of shine and it fitted with the whimsical feeling of the layout.

A piece of old dictionary paper was glued to white mat board and then the little globe was cut from that. I inked it with Shabby Shutters, Tumbled Glass and Scattered Straw, using a craft nib for the small spaces.

The light bulb was stamped on modeling film with Stazon ink and the title was stamped inside it. When the ink was dry, I heated the film with my heat gun and shaped it a bit. Modeling film keeps its shape when it cools down. The ruler was stamped three times on manila cardstock and inked with Scattered Straw.
I love the yellow and blue flying cow and the fun little wagon.I matted the watercolour cardstock on white cardstock and stitched a frame with my sewing machine.

The journaling is typed on a tag tucked behind the photo. It reads: 'There are so many fun and interesting things that you will learn in life. Every day something new. Hardly any place is better for that than among grass and flowers on a beautiful summer's day. You can learn lots of things in books (and not only in schoolbooks), but so much more is to learn from nature, in play, in the world and the everyday.'

Love this Birch leaf from the new Tim Holtz Stamper's Anonymous Mini Blueprints.

Thank you for visiting!

Anna-Karin

Supplies:
Stamps: Stamper's Anonymous Tim Holtz Mini Blueprints; Stamper's Anonymous Folded Paper Background; Artistic Outpost Playtime; TJ Designs Vintage School Days; Odd Bird Planet bird stamps; Beeswax branch and owl stamp; Oxford Impressions star stamps; InkyWings swirl stamps; Graphic 45 Typewriter letters
Dies: Sizzix Vintage Fan & Globe set, Tag & Tie
Ink: Archival Ink Jet Black; Distress Ink: Shabby Shutters, Scattered Straw, Tumbled Glass
Stickles: Platinum
Paint: Daler & Rowney watercolours
Surfaces: Stamper's Anonymous clear modeling film; Sizzix Little Sizzles mat board; Ranger manila cardstock; Daler & Rowney watercolour cardstock

Sunday, September 2, 2012

Trees, trees, trees

Hi everyone! I can't believe it is September already. A new month and a new challenge theme at Craft a Scene. This month the challenge is to do scenes with trees, including at least three trees in your scene. Here’s my first card, of Birch trees standing on a grassy hill full of white and blue Anemone flowers:

I love trees, all kinds of trees, and forests are my favorite places. I am very fond of Birch trees, with their interesting trunks and bright green leaves. I felt like doing another watercolour scene and to ink up this Birch trunk stamp which I hadn’t used yet. The trees were stamped with Archival Ink Jet Black on watercolour paper, after letting the ink dry, I painted masking fluid over the trees and many little spots on the grass (for the flowers). When the masking fluid was dry, the scene was painted with watercolours, starting with the sky. When dry, I rubbed off the masking fluid, added some colour to the trees, a yellow centre to the flowers, and shadows. I made some of the Anemones blue (the blue Anemone is rare and protected in some areas of Sweden, while the white one is very common, so it is always special to see a blue one).

I decided not to put a sentiment on this card, it is good to have some cards at home without sentiments, that will work for any occasion.

I hope you will show us your tree creations! This month we are sponsored by Sir Stampalot and one lucky particpant will win a prize.

Thank you for stopping by! Come back tomorrow for a fun post.

Anna-Karin

Supplies: Beeswax Birch stamp; Ranger Archival Jet Black ink; Daler & Rowney watercolours, masking fluid and watercolour paper

Saturday, September 1, 2012

At the edge of the lake: CSI case file 35

Hi everyone! Time for CSI: Color, Stories, Inspiration challenge #35. If you missed my post yesterday, CSI is having a design team call. You can find my post about it here. This is the case file for this week:

I had fun playing around with the random theme of the case file and literary placed my layout on the floor and tossed some of the items on it, adhering them basically where they fell. This included the photos. I made a double pager:

From the evidence items I used: beads, paint, hearts, wood, tilt your photo. From the testimony items: document something about summer. Here are each of the pages, so you can get a better look:

I used kraft cardstock for the background, which has a sandy sort of look. Heavy texture paste was mixed with paint and microbeads and applied pretty randomly to the background with a spatula. I scratched the surface of the paste to create even more texture and scratched out my son's name on the left-hand side, as you would in ordinary sand. It is pretty thick and took quite a while to dry.

Then the background was stamped with dot, star and bird stamps using green, black and teal ink. I didn’t use an acrylic block when stamping, but just held the cling stamp in my hand and sort of rolled it on the layout, creating a more random look. Then the background was misted a bit with Dylusions teal mist. The black birds were die cut from black modeling film, heated up and shaped a bit (that scrap comes from this card).

A close-up of the texture paste.

The name scratched into the paste.

The three hearts are die cut from mat board and painted yellow and teal (love the shape of that heart). The yellow ones were coated with Crackle Accents and sprinkled with clear and turquoise microbeads.

The second yellow heart.

The teal heart was coated with Glossy Accents, and then covered with clear microbeads. Love the look of the hearts (and ended up with microbeads all over the floor…).

The little boy was stamped on watercolour paper and watercoloured with Distress Inks.

The same was done with the Huck stamp.

The branch was cut from kraft core cardstock and the bird was a scrap cut from mat board covered with sticky-back canvas.

I went through my box of scraps and pulled out some in the right colours, and used them here and there on the layout, also adding to the random theme. The branches, all the birds, the gauze, die cut strips, vellum piece, button, ticket, and negative strip were all in my scraps.

The journaling was printed on kraft cardstock and cut into strips, it reads: ‘There aren’t many better things then a quiet and warm summer afternoon at the edge of a lake, with one (or two) spades in your hand and a lot to discover. Most people have left, the lake is still and glitters. Forest and trees all around. The smells of nature. Here you are with your spade in the water and the sand, much more fun than to swim. So cute in the blue swimsuit.’

Thank you for stopping by!

Anna-Karin

Supplies:
Stamps: Hero Arts: Carbonated Background CG454; Artistic Outpost: Huck Finn, Playtime, Typograhy, Stamper’s Anonymous Tim Holtz Mini Ornates, Impression Obsession Stars; Beeswax boy stamp
Dies: Sizzix: Heart, Stem & LeavesBirds on a Wire, Branch Tree, Mini Bird & Birdcage, Vintage Lace, Filmstrip Frames, Washer Border
Ink and paint: Hero Arts chalk ink Grass, Cerulean; Distress Ink: Shabby Shutters, Broken China, Peeled Paint, Scattered Straw; Versafine Onyx Black; Adirondack paint dabbers: Stream, Lemonade, Juniper
Papers and surfaces: Sizzix mat board; kraft cardstock; Core’dinations Ranger Distress and Adirondack cardstock; Stamper’s Anonymous black modeling film
Other: Ranger Crackle Accents, Glossy Accents; Provo craft microbeads; Studio Calico wood veneer shapes

Saturday, August 18, 2012

CSI case file #33

Hi everyone! Time for another CSI case file, an awesome nautical looking one. Don't miss the stunning layouts by the DT and guests:



Love the clean lines and where inspired to do a rather clean-lined double layout. I just had to scrap these photos after seeing that inspiration photo:

From the evidence I used: clouds, woodgrain, white background, triangles, nautical elements. From the testimony: journaling strips.

I am sorry about the poor quality of some of the photos of this layout, I couldn’t get even lighting for some reason, even though I tried on three different days. All the white areas, are equally white in real life. Here are shots of the individual pages:

Lots of photos on this double layout, and I am adding even more on a paper behind the layout. I took these photos on an outing to a coastal little town, love all the different wooden houses, built pretty close together.

I embellished the layout pretty simply, just some stamping and some die-cuts. The boat, light house and birds were stamped and coloured lightly with coloured pencils. The clouds and nautical stamps were stamped with French Ultramarine Archival Ink. For the title, I used some quite old Making Memories cardboard letters, and dry-brushed some red paint on top.

The cute banners are made with an off cut piece from the Harlequin die (thank you Shelly for this tip!). The twine was attached with mini stapels.

Thank you for stopping by! I hope you can play along with us this week!

Anna-Karin

Supplies: Crafty Individuals and Beeswax stamps; Sizzix Harlequin Sizzlits die; Versafine Onyx Black ink; Ranger Archival Ink French Ultramarine; FabScraps, BoBunny and Kaisercraft patterned papers; Core’dinations cardstock; Making Memories letters; twine; Derwent coloured pencils.

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Magical Garden Scene

Today I have another scenic card to share which I made for Craft a Scene. This month’s theme is Inside the Garden and you could win a prize from this month's sponsor Heartfelt Creations.

I wanted to make a magical, fairytale garden and decided to do a nighttime scene using a monochrome colour scheme.


The scene is done on glossy cardstock (8.5x5.5 inches). All the stamping was done with Ranger Archival Ink Jet Black. As always, I planned the scene on scrap paper first. I wanted to use lanterns, but didn’t have any, so instead I stamped only the top part of a lamp post stamp, right on top of the wall, in three places. The scene was coloured with dye inks using a Colorbox Stylus tool (see this tutorial for this colouring technique), using shades of blue and turquoise, in this order Aqua, Speckled Egg, Peacock Feathers, Stream, Denim, Pitch Black.

When I was finished with the colouring I wanted to include just a bit of silver, so I restamped the leafy branches in the front with Versamark and silver embossed them. Highlights were added with a white gel pen and mist by dry-brushing white pigment ink on the scene.

Thank you for looking! I hope you will play along with us!

Anna-Karin

Supplies: Stampscapes: Buck Lg. 009B, Flock 112A, Oak Branch 203G, Sedge Filler 251C, Pebbles 256A, Twisting Leaves Sm. 275D, Eerie Moon 282F; Sutter: Weeping Willow medium and small, Walkbridge; Beeswax Wishing Well, Street Light; Wildlife Enterprises Stone Wall; Adirondack dye ink: Aqua, Stream, Denim, Pitch Black; Jenni Bowlin ink: Speckled Egg; Distress Ink: Peacock Feathers; Colorbox Frost White; silver embossing powder; white gel pen.

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Wild Garden Scene

Hi everyone! During July the challenge theme at Craft a Scene is Gardens. Have a look at the site to see the details and the fabulous DT work. I really enjoyed this theme, especially since I don’t think I have stamped any garden scenes before. I normally do more wild nature types of scenes.

My garden scene features the type of garden that is my favourite – a wild garden, where everything grows sort of where it wants to, no landscaping in site. A little boy is walking carrying his dog through the garden up the cottage on a hill. I added some birch trees (love birch trees), a rough stone wall and a jagged wooden fence.

My grandmother had white and pink flowers growing in her lawn when I was a child. They were seen as weeds, but I loved them and didn’t understand why she wanted them gone. I wanted those flowers in the grass of my stamped garden. To create the flowers, I used two great little flower stamps in one of my Stampscapes sets (Nature Sheet 4), stamped them repeatedly with Versamark and white embossed. This created great texture in the scene and since they were embossed, they resisted all the inking.

The scene is done on glossy cardstock (half page) and coloured with dye inks using a Colorbox Stylus tool and craft nibs – I recently did a tutorial for this technique of colouring, you can find it here. The birch tree and the boy were stamped first with Archival Jet Black and masked. The rest of the stamping was done with Jet Black and Olive ink. I used the Sedge Filler stamp to create a lot of the grass. The scene was coloured using the inks listed in the supply list, starting with the lightest shades and gradually building up colour.

Highlights and more flowers were added with a white gel pen, and even more flowers with yellow, pink and purple gel pens. I also stamped the flower textures stamps with yellow pigment ink. Three paper roses finished the garden.

Here's a close-up of the wild flowers:

Thank you for looking! I hope you will play along with us!

Anna-Karin

Supplies:
Stamps: Stampscapes: Ducks in Formation 027A, Rocks and Leaves 206E, Sedge Filler 251C, Pebbles 256A, Nature Sheet 4; Sutter: First Puppy, Log House, Country Fence, Mirrored Country Fence, Right Birch, Cottonwood, Pump small; Beeswax: Right Fence, Left Fence, Stone Path; Darkroom Door: Essentials 4, Essentials 5.

Ink etc: Adirondack: Willow, Aqua, Pesto, Stonewashed, Denim, Slate, Espresso; Distress Ink: Peeled Paint, Frayed Burlap, Antique Linen, Vintage Photo: Jenni Bowlin: Weather Wane, Chewing Gum; Memento: Bamboo Leaves; Ranger Archival Jet Black and Olive; Colorbox Frost White and yellow; Ranger Seafoam White embossing powder; Kromekote glossy cardstock; paper roses; gel pens.

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Scenic Stamping Tutorial: Train Ride

After having promised to do a tutorial on scenic stamping for a while, I finally remembered to take all the step-by-step photos of the colouring process (I usually forget many of them). I didn’t photograph the stamping process, because it is more dependent on the stamps that you have. You can use the colouring process for almost any kind of scene. You can find many more tutorials for similar colouring at the Stampscapes site.

This is a full sheet scene (8.5x11), but the colouring can be used for any size scene. I added a cut-out photo of my son to the finished scene. It is part of a series of full-sheet scenes I am making for him where he is placed into the scene. The scene is inspired by CSI challenge #25, you can find the info in this post. Here's the finished scene:


And this is how I did this:
The scene is done on glossy cardstock, and coloured with dye inks. For the stamping, I started out with the train, stamping it with Jet Black ink. I didn’t ink the smoke coming from the train on the stamp, since I didn’t want my son to be sitting in a cloud of smoke. The castle was stamped with the same ink. Next step was to build up the series of hills and for this I used Stampscapes Soft Hill 278F, Oak Row 223F, and Oaks and mist 224F. They were inked with three shades of green ink (Memento Pear Tart, Bamboo Leaves, Cottage Ivy), for variation. I added some brown to the trunks of the trees with a marker. The far off hills were made lighter. The areas in between the hills were filled in with the Sedge Filler 251C, perhaps my most used scenic stamp.

Then I started adding trees here and there, using the same green inks and the brown marker, but also stamping some with Archival Ink Olive. When stamping trees into grass, it looks better if you wipe off some of the ink from the base of the trunk before stamping, then it looks like they are coming out of the grass. I forgot this on a bunch of the small trees, but will fix that later on. Many mistakes in scenic stamping can be fixed, or won't show once the scene is finished.

The Cloud Cumulus stamp was stamped 5 times in the sky with Adirondack Stonewashed ink and wiping off parts of the stamp for variation.

I use a Colorbox Stylus Tool when colouring. I love the control you get with this tool and the sponges are awesome. One of the most important things to do when colouring a scene like this, is to start with the lightest shade of ink and then build up colour on top of it. Don't try to put a dark ink as the first layer, not only will it usually not go on smoothly, but there is also very little you can do to make it lighter. You can always add colour, but not remove it. Since dye inks are transparent, the layers underneath show through, so if you ink a light colour on top of a dark one, it will usually not show much. A first layer of light coloured ink also lubricates the paper and makes it easier to apply the darker ink smoothly. I like to start with Adirondack Willow for green areas, making sure to leave some areas the white of the paper.

You can use the tool in a tapping or dragging motion, and turn it on its side for narrow places.

Next I added some Bundled Sage here and there.

Next Bamboo Leaves, don't cover all the previous ink. I added almost no ink to the areas just beyond the hills, to increase the sense of a hilly landscape. I didn't add any of the darker greens to the far off hills, if they are lighter, it looks like they are further away. It is important not to colour the scene in the same shade all over, but to have different values of each colour.

I added some Peeled Paint to the darker areas of the grass.

And finally I added Adirondack Oregano and Pesto for the dark areas of the grass. If the foreground is made darker, it jumps forward in the scene, adding perspective. Dark areas are also found around the edges of the scene, behind the castle, and underneath some of the trees. These inks are a brown-green shade and grass usually looks better if you add some brown to it.

Next, Antique Linen Distress Ink was used as the first layer of ink on the train and on the castle, it is so light that you hardly see it, but still important to add.

Adirondack Mushroom was used as the next layer ink on the train and castle, leaving quite large areas uncovered. I use a Ranger craft nib for the narrow places when colouring. There is a handle available now, but I couldn't find mine when doing this scene, so I only used the nibs. Before colouring, decide where the light is coming from, so that you know where to place shadows and highlights.

Finally, Adirondack Espresso was added to the shadow areas of the train and the castle. It is a dark brown ink.

Now, to the sky. I often colour the sky first, but this time I started with the grass, since there was so much of it. For blue areas (sky and water), Adirondack Aqua works great as a first layer. It is a very light shade of blue, you hardly see it in the photo. I left large areas of the sky the white of the paper.

The next blue added to the sky was Adirondack Stonewashed, one of my favorite shades of blue. The ink was applied in a streaky fashion, starting from the edges of the paper. This adds movement to the sky. I also added some of the ink to the shadow parts of the clouds.

A bit of Adirondack Denim was applied to the corners of the sky. I used a black pen and brown ink to extend the track of the train. It looked strange when it just disappeared into the grass.

When dye inks dry, they become lighter, much like watercolour paint. I often leave my scenes to dry overnight, and then add some more ink to them the next day, starting with a layer of the lightest ink and then adding some dark ink.

After the scene is coloured, I often add some more stamping. The Migrating Birds were stamped with Denim ink. I usually stamp birds to the sky after colouring it, because they can be used to cover up little mistakes if necessary. I wanted to add some more life in the scene and the horses and buck were stamped with Archival Ink Coffee. I use a stamp positioner for a lot of the last step stamping, because I don't want to mess up a scene that I have already coloured with crocked stamping. It is also helpful to test the placement of things by stamping them on the transparent sheet of the stamp positioner, and then moving it around, especially to check that they are not out of proportion, too large or too small relative to the other items in the scene.

The Sedge Filler stamped was stamped with a dark green ink here and there on the grassy areas, to add more texture. Trees were stamped in the foreground with Jet Black ink to frame the scene and to make the foreground darker.

Highlights were added with a white gel pen. I also used the pen to add little white flowers to the grass here and there. 

Here's a close-up of the highlights. I added extra flowers under the trees where I had forgotten to wipe of the ink at the base before stamping. The flowers made the trees look more anchored to the grass.

The final step is to add mist and some 'shine' with white pigment ink. Dry-brush the ink on to the scene, making sure not to add too much ink at a time. I placed the white ink in between the hills to increase a sense of distance, as well as in the sky and on the clouds.

Here's a close-up.

The finished scene. I sprayed it with a light coat of gloss fixative at the end.

Thank you so much for looking at this long tutorial. Let me know if you have any questions.

Anna-Karin

Supplies: Stampers Anonymous Tim Holtz On the Railroad, District Warehouse; Beeswax castle; Stampscapes: Buck 008A, Cloud Cumulus 018E, Foliage 035A, Migrating Birds 152D, Spotted Horse 155A, Horse 171A, Oak Tree Sm. 177B, Oak Branch 203G, Oak Row 223F, Oaks and mist 224F, Maple Pair 239D, Maple Trio 240B, Shagbark Hickory Sm. 241E, Shagbark Hickory 242G, Tree Cluster 244E, Sedge Filler 251C, Tal Grass Sm. 254B, Prickly Branches 272G, Soft Hill 278F.

Inks: Adirondack: Willow, Aqua, Stonewashed, Oregano, Pesto, Espresso, Mushroom, Denim; Distress Ink: Bundled Sage, Frayed Burlap, Peeled Paint, Antique Linen; Memento: Bamboo Leaves, Cottage Ivy, Pear Tart, Rich Cocoa (ink and markers); Archival Ink Jet Black and Coffee; Colorbox Frost White.

Other: white gel pen: Kromekote glossy cardstock; Colorbox Stylus Tool, Ranger craft nibs.