Friday, February 22, 2013

Another Flip-Its Card and a New Tip-In

My daughter just finished her last round of chemotherapy, and she is all done with radiation, so here is a card I made to send her and let her know I am proud of her courage and strength through this past year of fighting breast cancer.  If you know someone who is fighting this disease, don't hesitate to send them cards of encouragement all along the way.  Ultimately, the cancer patient spends most of the fighting time in treatment, surgery, and doctor visits--many hours just waiting alone or with other newly-made friends undergoing similar treatment.


Here is the front of the card cut from the Flip-Its cards from Sizzix.  I used some wonderful coordinating papers and epoxy stickers from S.E.I.  They were in a great collection of fall-themed papers offered in a bargain packet at Creating Keepsakes Convention held at Opryland Hotel in Nashville this past fall.  If you get a chance to pick up a $20 bag full of S.E.I products at a convention, do not hesitate!  It was more than worth the money.  Big bang for a 20-spot!

The bird in the center was cut from some of my stash of old NRN Design papers left from some of the convention classes I used to teach for the company.  I embossed the vertical "Blessings" stamp and added a Memory Box die cut leaf and tendril to the edge of the "flip" part of the card so the tendril will show when the card is opened.



Inside, the stamped sentiment "May life always allow you to fly high" is surrounded by more leafy-looking flourish die cuts.  More epoxy stickers that go with this paper collection are seen on the flip circle and on the edge of the card, visible both on the closed card and also when it is opened.  The stamped sentiment and embellishments are mounted on a Nestabilities Circle die cut with inverted scallops.  A scalloped trim from the coordinating paper trims the sides of the card.

This card is a square card, like the last Flip-Its I published, but I didn't mail it in a half sheet size envelope with my fun technique.  Instead I sprung for the required extra postage of 20 cents and made a square envelope with the Martha Stewart Scoring Board and envelope triangle that goes with it.  Although I love this way to make envelopes, I personally am excited to be waiting on the new Envelope Punch Board from We R Memory Keepers--just ordered it from Marco's Paper at a great price with free shipping if one orders before they get their first order.  Here is a link to their site.


Valentine Card Tip-In for Swap


And now to the tip-in two-page spread.  This is the tip-in swap I am hosting on the Tennessee Stampers' Yahoo group board.  We have two groups of participants, nine in each group.  That should give us all nine nice tip-ins for our books.  I love the fact that everyone has a different theme.  It makes it challenging and fun to work in another person's book without actually having to handle it with care, worry about buckling the delicate book paper with too much wet glue or paint, spending priority mail prices to mail the book to the next person, praying that it won't be lost in the mail or damaged somehow.  Mailing an altered book is a scary thing!  AND costly, especially if your book is large or thick and heavy.


This friend's theme is the "Hallmark of Caring".  She is re-purposing a book that was all about Hallmark Cards, so she is using the book's subject matter as stimulus for her theme.  I chose to use Valentines' Day cards for my tip-in.  I made two actual Valentines, one from Artistic Outpost's Cutie Pie plate for the "Then" card and one for the "Now" card from the humorous collection of funny old ladies made by Art Impressions.  Both images are colored with Copic markers.

These are on facing pages, heart doilies behind the cards.  The doily behind the AE stamped card is tinted with Ranger's Distress inks.  Tim Holtz's new embossed Kraft-backed Core'dinations Seasonal Impressions papers--Valentine's Day red one--is cut up and placed on the page in various spots.  The "By Definition" (now retired) typewritten background stamp on love is from Stampin' Up.  Wooden hearts painted pink and red are palettes for little sayings found on conversation hearts.  Inside the "Then" card is a history of the Valentine Card.  Click here for a video by Tim Holtz showing his collection of Core'dinations Seasonal Impressions

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

A Contest From Ranger!

Ranger Color Palette Inspiration 

Time to enter a contest.  Range is sponsoring a February Color Palette Inspiration & Contest for a great giveaway of the colors they have chosen.  To enter, you must create something using colors from the chosen palette.  Not all the colors have to be used, so I chose ones that work with this Valentine card.  The stamped image is from Tim Holtz's new Blueprint Mini stamp collection.  It is colored in and then enhanced with Ranger's Stickles Glitter Glue.  The background uses one of Tim's embossing folders with the harlequin pattern and Co'ordination cardstock sanded to emphasize the pattern.  Then Ranger Distress inks in Festive Berries and Black Soot are applied with Tim's foam application tool.  The sentiment is done with a label maker and glitter heart accents are from EKSuccess.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Winter Cards for Snowy Weather!

Winter is still raging in America, and with the northeast digging out from under the recent storm, it is time to show a "Welcome to Winter" card!  Using Stephanie Barnard's Circle Flip-Its card, I want to begin by showing how to mail a square card without the extra postage required by a square envelope.  Simply use a larger rectangular envelope (6" x 9") that will go with one stamp--the size for mailing an 8 1/2" x 11" sheet folded in half .  Punch some small shapes out of the envelope on the left side so it will not interfere with the stamped side, leaving some room for your return address.  Then cut a piece of cardstock (good to have it coordinate with your card) to fill in the holes left by the punches and to take up extra room in the card.   Adhere this to the inside of the card by tape runner or glue stick.  If you run the insertion piece through a Xyron, making the front side the sticky side, it will leave a sticky area where the punched shapes are if you want to add some glitter, pearlescent powders, or gold or silver leaf for a little pizazz on the mail art.  Just be certain to glue the edges of your punched shapes down well so they will not catch on the mail equipment.  If you prefer to NOT punch holes in your envelope, just glue a piece of cardstock into that end of the card so the square card will not be floating around inside a huge envelope, but will occupy its own space inside.


Card Front
Now for the card.  Using the round Flip-Its Sizzix die, cut the card from a heavy printed cardstock--the one I used was foiled, so the silver areas are reflecting other colors in the photos.  The back was stamped with a variety of blues and a couple of Stampin' Up stamps that look like snow.  If you have a two-sided cardstock, the stamping will not be necessary.  The large snowflake is cut from silver-glittered cardstock and with the Sizzix Basic Grey Snowflake #3, trimmed to fit the circle in the Flip-Its card.  The center is punched from a recycled Christmas card because of its foiled snowy looking pattern.  A little bling is added to the center of the punched snowflake.  Magenta's self adhesive peel-offs in silver grace the outside edges of the card and help to reinforce the folded area.

The inside of the card shows the stamped sentiment trimmed with the same Magenta trim and another punched snowflake from the recycled card.
Card Inside


 Here is another view of the envelope ready to deliver this fun wintry card to one of my friends for a Card of the Month swap on the Tennessee Stampers' Yahoo Group.

Front view of envelope and card

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Mostly Blue Twinchie Swap

The holidays have ended, winter has set in, and besides dealing with the traditional five pound weight gain from all the sweets I have consumed, I am continuing to make some cards for next Christmas.  When our notable moderator on Tennessee Stampers decided we needed a swap to break us from the doldrums and get us creating without using red and green, it was a breath of fresh air!  She chose "Mostly Blue" as the theme for her diminutive "twinchie" swap.  For those of you scratching your heads now, or if you are new to stamping and paper arts, a "twinchie" is twice the size of an "inchie," so it is 2 inches square.  It was hard NOT to make snow the center of this theme, since winter + blue=snow.  At least in my book.  

So trying hard not to just cover the little art piece with snowflakes, I opted for a snowflake cardstock with some silver accents.  This was an "after Christmas" sale find at Michael's for $5.99--a whole book of blue glossy printed cardstock, accented with shiny silver.  Perfect for this swap...and for my card of the month assignment, too!  So I managed to get 10 twinchies and two cards from only one of those sheets of cardstock.  The card will be shown another day.  I wanted to mail it to my assigned person and let her see it in person before showing it here.  

Four Little Twinchies



So instead of just snow, snow globes are the objects on my mostly blue twinchies.  I stamped a miniature Eiffel tower on white card stock, added a little snow flurry stamp from Inkadinkado's Flourishes for Inchies.  Then some Ranger Snowcap dabber was added to a piece of clear plastic packaging punched out the same size as the circle with the stamping.  (How many of you are saving your plastic packaging now?  I am finding so many uses for it, after watching Tim Holtz start using it a few years ago.)  

 After that dried, I added some Ice Stickles to the very bottom of the white circle, around the tower, and also to the bottom of the snow flurry on the clear circle.  It wasn't until a little bleeding started at the base of the tower, that I realized I hadn't used Ranger Archival Ink to stamp.  Sigh.  So I had to spray the circles with acrylic sealer, which did NOT work!  

I was up late, and decided it was too late to stamp them all over again and wait on the Stickles to dry again.  So I grabbed some clear nail polish and brushed on a heavy coat.  Without waiting on it to dry, I plopped the clear "globe" on top and began working out the bubbles.  It was perfect, but a little bit messy when some of the excess polish worked its way out of the sandwich.  The effect I was seeking was actually accomplished.  I wanted the little globes to look like someone had shaken them, and the snow was moving back towards the bottom.  The glitter in the bottom of the globe doesn't show up in the scan--sorry!  But it does when you see it in person!

The base was punched from that elusive tab punch that Stampin' Up decided to retire.  Now everyone wants it!  It made a perfect base for my little globe.  I punched one, trimmed the edge from one end, cut it at the fold line, glued that little edge on the bottom of the other end so it gives the base some dimension.  Then I made 2013 labels with my Dymo label maker and affixed them on the base.  The little silver accents are made by Magenta.  They are those wonderful accents you just peel off, trim and use.  I love these, because everything on the sheet can be used for accenting.

I have been inspired by Jennifer McGuire and her winter thank you cards, (click this link for the first batch she did) using the more wintry stamps instead of hiding them away until next Christmas.  I will share some I have been making in the next blog!


Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Recycle Christmas Cards Now!

Samples of Recycled Card Scenes


In this day of recycling and reusing, we all try to do our part to save the trees by recycling our paper trash.  Why not reuse your Christmas cards from this year?  While you are still in the spirit of card-making, make a few from some of the scenic card fronts you got from friends.  Afraid you might mail back one of the cards to the person who sent it?  Fear not.  If you do, they will either forget what their card from this year looked like a year later, or they will be impressed that you have taken their store-bought card and made it your own!



Since it is obviously impossible to use the entire card front, it is possible to get one or two new cards from the scenic ones.  I have scanned in eight cards I made two days ago from card fronts I cut off and saved last year and just got around to using them for next year’s cards or for late cards that have New Year’s wishes inside.  Receiving a couple of very great scenic cards this year inspired me to remember the ones I had saved last year, too.



Using a window die, and there are several manufacturers making great windows now,  cut a window out of the framing color you want to use and move it around the front of a scenic card to find the best spot to use for this purpose.  Draw lines on the scene to indicate the outer edge of the window and cut the dimensions inside the lines.   

Prepare a card so the front looks like the inside of a room looking out the window into the scene.  I like to either make my own “walls” or to use paper that harmonizes with the scene.  Small stripes work well for a room’s “wallpaper.”  Then mount the window with the scene secured behind it on the "wall" you created. I used Poppystamps’ Grand Madison window for most scenes, and their new Gothic window with the Stained Glass Gothic insert for one of them. 

Bear in mind that once you have cut out the scene, you may have to adjust it more for the crossbar that will obscure parts of the scene.  I try to never have it cross a face or something that needs to be shown to indicate Christmas decorations or other important elements in the scene.  

Another fun idea is to look for a scene that may work for an interior room of a house.  Then the card front can be the outside of the house looking in to the homey scene, complete with shutters, window box, wall siding like brick or boards, using Distress inks to color and shade the house wall.

More Samples





These cards' greetings were stamped with a Stampin' Up Christmas stamp set that contains some nice greetings. The "Happy Christmas" greeting will be great to send to my friends in England, since they tend to say that more than  they say "Merry Christmas."  The greeting is punched out with Stampin' Up's Modern Label punch and a small oval punch.  

The "Peace" greeting on the Gothic window card was actually cut from the original card front.  Make use of some of the words that are already there!  Turn them into tags or labels with your punches.

Enjoy your holidays and be sure to check out those cards before putting them into the recycle bin!  You may have some treasured scene awaiting your creativity.  One more thing worth noting:  the stock used in manufactured Christmas cards is usually thicker than the card stock we buy, so use some of the white parts for stamping your own images.  You will be pleased with the results!

Now back to the studio to create more for this blog.  I have an altered book in the wings awaiting my contribution to its pages.  If I think it worthy of sharing, it will be the subject of my next post.

HAPPY NEW YEAR!