So off we all went to our rooms stamps in hand and lots of rats and skulls and flies swarming our brains. When the timer went off, we rushed to post them to each other and anxiously await the return mail to reach of our mailboxes outside of our rooms! Yes, we each have a mailbox, privacy you know! Especially with our sudden anxiety over CT Anne's involvement with Evil Froggy!
So here is what we each made and mailed to our teamies!
CT Anne
.. It was great to be introduced to Finnstamper.com.
Always interesting to see what is common or different between
countries by way of stamp catalogues. These are the clear polymer type.
My mail revealed a mouse, a fly, and a skull. The fly is a generous
life size. So is the mouse, as I had the opportunity to compare. It is
winter in Middle Earth, so mice come indoors looking for warmth
and goodies. They love chocolate wrappers, but one got caught out by a
trap, and I eventually found it. Now I'm not bothered by that, but
posting a photo of it freaked even my fellow Darklings, so I have
censored this post *sigh* The mouse is now buried in my garden, to be
exhumed for bones for future projects, I hope – sometimes chicken bones
are too big... but back to the stamps. Use them on a postcard.
The proverb, “Rats desert a sinking ship” came to mind, but I always remember writing out a sequence of proverbs at school, and the teacher had followed “Rats desert...” with, “Look before you leap”! What a combination! So I started throwing stamps onto a journal page with that story in mind. The Finn skull clearly had to be giving a warning from the depths of the ocean, about the dangers in the waters. I found the focal section of that page would adapt very easily to a 100x150mm postcard (4”x6”) to deliver the main message. At which point my camera refused to operate, so out with the cellphone and try to learn it... not as well as I'd like.
The proverb, “Rats desert a sinking ship” came to mind, but I always remember writing out a sequence of proverbs at school, and the teacher had followed “Rats desert...” with, “Look before you leap”! What a combination! So I started throwing stamps onto a journal page with that story in mind. The Finn skull clearly had to be giving a warning from the depths of the ocean, about the dangers in the waters. I found the focal section of that page would adapt very easily to a 100x150mm postcard (4”x6”) to deliver the main message. At which point my camera refused to operate, so out with the cellphone and try to learn it... not as well as I'd like.
For both page and
postcard, I stamped the “foreground” stamps with coloured dye inkpads
and heat-embossed with clear embossing powder. Lining up stamps with
the same position on the card when you've several to do for a swap is a
doddle with unmounteds – place it once, drop the block over it aligned
to the sides of the card, so when you lift the block up, the stamp is
aligned just where you want it for the next imprint. I masked them, and
stamped the sea – the one stamp was used at varying angles to fill the
water area, then heat embossed that. Again, another advantage of
unmounted stamps is that you can choose with your fingers how much to
press down to print or not, and bend the rest of the rubber out of the
way while you do so.
The beach stamp had some wee fossils in it, so it got used several times to expand the beach, though the beached ships were surrounded by inkpad daubing – a muddier sandbank!
The water was coloured in with a “custom” colour – several Golden acrylic paints in shades of blue mixed with iridescent medium, and watered down to a wash which was sponged over the stamped waves and some blotted off. Iridescent medium is a simple way to get the gleam into flat paints, instead of spending a fortune on twinkling H2Os or similar sparkles. Or it can be brushed over a finished project for full-on sparkle. On the postcard, the wash was diluted further before wiping very lightly over the sky area. On the journal page, a different colour mix, without any iridescent medium, was lightly dabbed with a dry sponge all over.
The fly didn't fit on the postcard, so it went on the backside, inked and heat-embossed, then a stencil over the top coloured with inkpad daubings. Hands up everyone that likes holding a fly in their
hand!!!
The beach stamp had some wee fossils in it, so it got used several times to expand the beach, though the beached ships were surrounded by inkpad daubing – a muddier sandbank!
The water was coloured in with a “custom” colour – several Golden acrylic paints in shades of blue mixed with iridescent medium, and watered down to a wash which was sponged over the stamped waves and some blotted off. Iridescent medium is a simple way to get the gleam into flat paints, instead of spending a fortune on twinkling H2Os or similar sparkles. Or it can be brushed over a finished project for full-on sparkle. On the postcard, the wash was diluted further before wiping very lightly over the sky area. On the journal page, a different colour mix, without any iridescent medium, was lightly dabbed with a dry sponge all over.
The fly didn't fit on the postcard, so it went on the backside, inked and heat-embossed, then a stencil over the top coloured with inkpad daubings. Hands up everyone that likes holding a fly in their
hand!!!
~~~Supply List~~~CT Anne~~~
Links to CT Anne's stamps used:
www.Finnstamper.com Mouse, Skull, Fly
thirdstoneshop newly revived Wave, Plunder Pirates, Dunes
Unknown, possibly Paperartsy: sea shell border
http:// www.alphastamps.com/ “Postcard”
http:// buttersidedownstamps.com/ Humongous Squid, Medusa jellyfish, Compass jellyfish, Triarthrus, Moray eel, Fossil beach
http:// www.silvercrowcreations.com / Please, Flying Crows, Flying Fish, Silly Bird, Beached craft, Boat silhouette, Tornado
thirdstoneshop newly revived Wave, Plunder Pirates, Dunes
Unknown, possibly Paperartsy: sea shell border
http://
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Stamps, rat, fly, skull by Finnstamper. Fence, Hampton Arts, Flower Celery. Colors various Americana Multi Surface Satin, Distress Paint, Distress Stain, Distress Ink. Ranger Embossing Powder. Stampendous Pink Ink. Cards made from Bristol board.
Junk mail decorated with stamped images by Finnstamper and VivaLasVegas Stamps on paper bought at a Hong Kong market for burning purposes? Very thin and fragile but awesome texture so I stamped and then helped it to tear into strips where it had started to tear. Then put another piece of junk mail, an envelope painted mixed media and copied and attached to original junk mail. Then gently glued the thin strips in place. Also used "Catacombs" stamp by Butterside Down.
Fun was had by all and even with No Good CT Nan's being very late due to her sudden......disappearance due to a certain Evil Froggy and his cohort CT Anne's disappointment with the number of entries! Yes, we haven't forgotten her and her plight but at least she is being allowed her crafting toys, even this deliciously evil duo couldn't be that bad as to deny her those things!
See you when you sneak in and remember, Evil Froggy won't hurt you....not if you are entering the challenge anyway.....Muwahahahaha!
No frogs were harmed during this creative activity. Though Nan's imagination may have become somewhat fevered
ReplyDeleteAll of the post cards are outlandishly marvellous!
ReplyDelete