Showing posts with label Golden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Golden. Show all posts

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Grungy Tall Houses Tutorial

Hi and welcome! I have another tutorial for you today, for two grungy 3-D tall houses, made with dies, mat board, fun mediums and metal embellishments. This month's Eileen Hull Art With Heart challenge is April Showers. There is a fun prize to be won, so join us!
 
Ever since I first saw the 3-D Blocks dies, I wanted to use them to make houses. Last year, I made an Easter House with the largest block die (you can find a tutorial here), and now I was planning to make two tall apartment type buildings. The plan was to make these in spring colours and add some flowers, but the project got its own life and wanted to be something different, quite grungy and not at all springy. You can use bright colours instead and get a totally different look. 
 
I love to make houses, you can find more houses here: Where the Heart Is Tutorial, Yellow 3-D Brick House Tutorial, and Winder Wonderland. Let's start!
 
Die cut six of each of the two smaller blocks on the 3-D Blocks/Cubes die. The die has three different sizes and the quickest thing is to die cut all the sizes six times and then use the larger boxes for a later project (I used one of them here). On the photo, you just see the medium-sized die cuts.

A house needs windows and a door, and I used the Windows and the Mini Openings Movers & Shapers dies for this. Hold them in place with masking tape and die cut using the base tray. Remember that one of the windows will be facing the other direction, because of the way the blocks are assembled.

On the smaller size blocks, I used a window and the door from Mini Openings.

I like to add 'real' windows to my houses and my favourite material to use for that is mica. You can also use a transparency, vellum or Frosted Film.

As curtains, I used different pieces of ribbons, one type for each floor in the buildings.

Use a strong adhesive to assemble the blocks, I used Ranger's Wonder Tape.

I glued the houses together with multi-medium, placing them under a heavy book for a little while, one floor at a time.
 
And now the fun really begins! Smear the smaller house with Wendy Vecchi's Crackled Texture Paste. I did two sides at a time. Cover the joints too.

Press small metallic embellishments into the paste. When the two sides dried, you can do the remaining two sides.

When it dries, the crackles appear like magic, such cool stuff. You might find that some of the embellishments fall off when the paste is dry, simply glue them back with Glossy Accents. Since there is an impression, they stick easily.

I wanted a different texture on the big house and used Coarse Molding Paste, which has a great gritty and rough texture. Smear the house with a palette knife, two sides at a time, same as with the smaller house. The metallic embellishments will stay stuck on this one. You can also use Wendy Vecchi's White Embossing Paste.

Leave to dry overnight and paint with watered down Pumice Stone Distress Paint, using a paint brush. This is where my houses turned from spring themed to grungy.

When the Pumice Stone paint is dry, dry-brush the house here and there with Black Soot, to increase the texture.

To paint the crackled house, water down Iced Spruce and Black Soot paint. Work one section at a time, and first paint with Iced Spruce, using a paint brush. Then drop in the Black Soot, and because there is already watery paint on the paste, the black paint will seep into the cracks and emphasise them. Wipe off with a moist cloth.
 
Rub white paint into the words on the metallic embellishments to make them more visible. I also dabbed a little bit of Broken China here and there on the metal pieces, using my finger, just to add a touch of colour.

Paint two doors black and give them a tiny screw brad as a handle. Attach a strip of cardstock at the back and adhere the remaining strip to the inside of the house, so that the doors are slightly ajar.

It is a little tricky getting the door stuck, I used a plastic palette knife to press the cardstock strip on the inside. The houses needed numbers of course, these are from Prima.

Love the curtains peeking through the mica windows. The blue paint adds a distressed look to the metal embellishments. You could also use black paint.

Even though you covered the joints between the floors, they will still be visible when it is dry. I liked that extra detail.

Let's look at the other sides of the buildings. All the metallic embellishments are from Tim Holtz or Prima.

The flower looks nice with the blue paint. The Coarse Molding Paste has a great texture and it made the larger house pretty heavy.
 
The crackle texture is so cool. The thicker you apply the paste, the larger the cracks will be.

The small house is 4 1/4 x 1 1/2 in (12 x 4 cm) and the large one is 6 1/4 x 2 in (16 x 5.5 cm).

I love that you can see straight through the houses and into the rooms. I was even tempted to place a little Lego figurine inside one of the apartments, but he would have been stuck in there and that would not have been popular.
 
And the last two sides. If you paint the houses in different colours and use flowers or buttons instead of gears and screws and you will get a completely different look.

You could also add tiny photos to the houses and more sentiments and words than I did.

At the top of the houses, I used two round metal pieces. A clock Idea-ology piece would have looked great too, but I couldn't find the package.


All done, ready to be displayed or given as a gift.

Thank you for looking at this tutorial!

Happy crafting!

Anna-Karin

Supplies:
Surfaces: Sizzix Little Sizzles White Mat Board 6 x 13
Dies: Sizzix: 3-D Blocks/Cubes, Windows, Mini Openings
Medium: Wendy Vecchi Stampers Anonymous Crackled Texture Paste; Golden Artist Paint: Coarse Molding Paste
Paint: Distress Paint: Black Soot, Pumice Stone, Broken China, Picket Fence, Iced Spruce
Embellishments: Tim Holtz Idea-ology: Game Spinners, Sprocket Gears, Mini Gears, Word Bands, Mini Fasteners, Pen Nibs, Word Sticks, Clothes Hangers; Prima: Sunrise Sunset: Mini Numbers, Mini Flowers, Flowers, Washers, Junkyard Findings: Clock Parts, Jeans Buttons, Screw Heads, Special Screws; 7 Gypsies mini keys; US ArtQuest Mica Sheets; ribbons and trim

Saturday, March 1, 2014

CSI case file #112 - Top of the World

Hello everyone! A new CSI:Color, Stories, Inspiration challenge is up, and the case file is gorgeous:
 
 
I did a mixed-media layout:
 
From the evidence I used: something puffy, flowers, something sheer and floral pattern. And from the testimony, I journaled about a travel memory and dream vacation. These photos were taken a few years ago on top of a mountain in Norway, after having walked up. It was fun and quite an adventure. The journaling is written on stamped journaling cards, tucked into a vellum envelope behind the right-hand photo. For the background I used watercolour paper, first coated with gesso and then painted with watered-down acrylic paints. The background was stamped with a map stamp.

Light molding paste was smeared with a palette knife through a Tim Holtz stencil. When dry, I painted them yellow.

The vellum envelope was made with Eileen Hull's Sizzix Seed Packet Envelope die. All the stamps are from Hero Arts.

I used sentiment stamps to add more journaling to the page.

I also stamped the background repeatedly with a flower background stamp, using green and blue Archival Inks, to mimic the texture in the photos.These blocks are from a Hero Arts stencil, also made with Light Molding Paste.

Some of the blocks were painted yellow. Since the paste was applied thinly in places, you can spot the stamped flowers through it.

There is also texture from the gesso on the background, since it wasn't applied evenly.

Thank you for looking!! I hope you will join us this week.

Anna-Karin

Supplies:
Surfaces: Daler & Rowney Watercolour paper; Neenah Smooth Solar White Cardstock; vellum
Dies: Sizzix: Seed Packet Envelope
Stamps: Hero Arts: Travel AC031, Time AC029, Collage Postcard AC023, My Favorite AC030, Delicate Flower CG476, Cherish Yesterday AC032
Ink: Archival Ink: Jet Black, French Ultramarine, Sap Green
Paint: Distress Paint: Bundled Sage, Mustard Seed, Pine Needles; Claudine Hellmuth: Classic Teal
Stencils: Tim Holtz Stampers Anonymous: Rays; Hero Arts: Irregular Checkerboard Background
Medium: Golden Artist Paint: Light Molding Paste

Saturday, February 1, 2014

CSI case file #108 - Art

Hello and welcome! A new CSI:Color, Stories, Inspiration case file is up, and it is a gorgeous one:
 
 
 I had fun making a mixed-media background.
 
From the evidence items I used: mixed-media background, newsprint, flowers, rub-ons, stamps, bird, hearts, musical elements and pen work. From the testimony I did a layout about art and some of the many positive effects of doing art. The base is watercolour paper which was coated with gesso. I pressed a lid into the gesso to create circles. When the gesso was dry, I added some printed tissue paper and then painted on top with Distress Paints.
 

When the background was dry, I stamped it with two text stamps, one of which is about art. The hearts were done with embossing paste, through a Wendy Vecchi stencil.
 
The big heart is on the same stencil. When the paste was dry, I painted the hearts and when the paint was dry, they were dry brushed with some brown paint. I gave this heart a shadow to make it look even more dimensional. The title was die cut, being the first part of the word 'artist' on the Stacked Artful Words die. It was stamped with an art definition stamp.
 
I mixed green paint into some paste and stenciled dots on the background. The background was also stamped with a bunch of other stamps, fitting the theme.
 
This is one of my favourite quotes about art. I stamped a Darkroom Door bike, because of the cycle in the photo, and there are some rub-on words.

The photo was layered on two pieces of text paper and I also used a doily, stamped with the same stamp as the title. The flowers had already been die cut for a different project, but ended up on this layout instead. There is also a grid die cut layered behind the photo.

Behind the bird you can see the outline of one of the lids that were pressed into the wet gesso. I also splattered the background with a little bit of Walnut Stain paint.

Thank you for looking! I hope you will join us this week!

Anna-Karin

Supplies:
Surfaces: Daler & Rowney watercolour paper; Bazzill Antique 6 x 6 papers; Tim Holtz Idea-ology Melangeri Tissue Wrap
Dies: Sizzix: Tattered Flower Garland, Stacked Artful Words, Gridworks 1 3/8 Squares
Stamps: Stampers Anonymous Tim Holtz: Classics #4, Classics #20, Mini Classics, Mini Muse, Nature's Moments; Stampers Anonymous: Art Defintion; Darkroom Door: Enjoy the Ride
Ink: Ranger Archival Ink: Jet Black, Potting Soil; Distress Ink: Gathered Twigs; Tsukineko: Stazon Jet Black
Paint: Distress Paint: Victorian Velvet, Evergreen Bough, Broken China, Antique Linen, Walnut Stain, Peeled Paint
Stencils: Stampers Anonymous Tim Holtz: Bubble, Cargo; Wendy Vecchi: Never Enough Hearts
Medium: Stampers Anonymus Wendy Vecchi: White Embossing Paste; Golden Artist Paint Gesso
Embellishments: Tim Holtz Idea-ology: Chit Chat stickers, Words Remnant Rubs; doily

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Gelli Print Packaging

Hi and welcome! Today I have a quick gift packaging project to share using new Sizzix dies and some gelli printed papers.
 
Every time I use my gelli plate, I make a whole bunch of prints, because it is so much fun. I love having these papers ready for projects and I thought they would work great for gift packaging. Here I used the new Sizzix Where Women Cook Bag w/Flap and Fancy Pillow Box dies. The dies both cuts and scores the paper and it is easy to assemble both the bag and the pillow box. You can use patterned papers instead of the gelli printed paper, or stamp and ink some papers.
 
The Bag w/Flap is an XL die, so you need the extended cutting pads. My printed paper was slightly too short, but I fixed that by die cutting the lid a second time and gluing it to the partial lid on the first die cut. The bird was die cut from a darker green printed paper and embossed in the coordinating embossing folder, which comes with the die. 
 
Here you can see the side pieces on the bag, which I adhered with Wonder Tape, but any strong adhesive will work.

For a sentiment, I used the Sizzix/Doodlebug Tag Framelits and Stamp set, which has eight tag stamps and coordinating tag dies. I like that the tags are so small, which makes them perfect for sentiments. 

The gelli prints were created by pressing papers embossed in different embossing folders into the paint on the plate. Check out my Gel Printing with Dies and Embossing Folders tutorial, for more ideas on this. Here you can spot the Checkerboard and Swirls folders. The blue paint was remaining on the plate from a previous print.

The pillow box was made in the same way, die cut from the same green print as used for the bird. The sentiment tag also comes from the same Tag set.
 
On this print you can spot the Clocks and the Harlequin embossing folders.

Thank you for looking!

Happy Crafting!

Anna-Karin

Supplies:
Surfaces: Neenah Smooth Solar White paper
Dies: Sizzix: Bag w/Flap, Fancy Pillow Box, Heart Crown & Bird Tags w/Bonus Textured Impressions
Embossing folders: Sizzix: Checkerboard & Cracked, Harlequin & Stripes, Burlap & Swirls, Clocks & Print Blocks
Stamps: Sizzix/Doodlebug: Tags Framelits Die Set w/Stamps
Ink: Ranger Archival Jet Black ink
Paint: Golden Artist Paint Fluid Acrylics
Embellishments: twine
Tools: Sizzix Big Shot; Gelli Arts: Gel Printing Plate 8 x 10