Sunday, August 31, 2014

Clinging to images of summer here.  The weather is warm yet, humid even, but there is that feeling of fall that is in the air.  I'm not ready for pumpkins and football and Halloween-ie things yet so I'm just going to concentrate on scrapping summery moments for a little while longer. 

I don't know why, but I just love the back view of both of the little grandies in the one photo.  Something  about them sitting side by side, driving their jeep up the drive way.


I used paper from American Crafts XOXO collection.  At first glance, I wasn't sure about the papers (I had purchased a collection pack at Tuesday Morning mostly for the pack of Thickers it contained). But it turns out I really like the "B" side of most all of the papers, so I really am excited about my $3.99 find! 

Mercy Tiara inspired me to use what she calls a de-constructed layout for this page.  No layers under the photos, just arranged everything around the photos.  Embellishments are truly a mish mash of collections...buttons from a pack of American Crafts that I got on clearance, dimensional "Hello There" sticker is from Crate Paper, their On Trend collection.  Stickers are from Amy Tangerine and Heidi Swapp.  And finally, the two little arrows are die cut.  I spattered on some Heidi Swapp Velvet Black ink and then added some black Stickles to a few of the ink splatters.   Title letters are black glittered Thickers--the ones that enticed me to buy the collection pack to begin with. 

Funny how one thing leads to another, isn't it?! 

Saturday, August 30, 2014

This morning I was standing in my kitchen crying like I'd lost my best friend.  We are moving our boy, Jacob into his college dorm today.  Nana and Boppa are really along for the use of the truck (an excuse to see our boy in his new dorm digs).   I was up early to bake his favorite chocolate chip cookies and was having so many conflicted feelings; so proud of the young man he has become, but at the same time really just wanting him to still be that little boy whose eyes lit up when he'd run into my house.

But there you go, they grow up, as they should.  (I am taking deep breathes now to get over the crying thing, so as not to embarrass him this morning...) 

This page was done for his graduation albums.  I have larger school photos, but those will be in my albums... I wanted not to use up so many pages for each of his school pictures, so I used the wallet size to be able to combine the high school years on one page. 


Used two papers from an old Basic Grey line (I think it was called Recess) and some pieces of Echo Park (A Boy's Life). Also used some black and white text printed gaffer's tape from 7 Gypsies, stickers from a high school pack I had picked up years ago, black diagonal striped washi tape, and a decorative square paper clip.  I placed the photos in a four square pattern (was a little concerned about the senior photo, since it is finished differently than the others, but at least I didn't cut off the top of his head placing the "senior" sticker on there!). 

I do hope he looks back on his high school years with fond memories and I hope he makes new memories at college.  (Just still kinda wish he was running in my door with that big goofy smile, yelling "Nana, I'm here to see you!")

All for today.
Cheryl

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

One of my grandson's classes found he and his classmates designing and building an eco car.  This class and others like it in the area, design, build and then race (time trial fashion) their cars at the Road America race track. 

I really wanted all three of these photos on the page... Jacob was the driver and how often do you get to drive on a professional raceway!  (On a side note, he was the only one that actually fit into the car...but still)


I used a piece of blue-gray paper that looked kind of like numbers carved into stone (an old Paper Loft design--even after purging so much paper, I kept several from this company because they work so well on masculine layouts).  I also used a leftover piece of denim printed paper and layered both of these onto a warm gray cardstock.  The title letters are from Creative Imaginations and Lily Bee.  The tire tracks are from Little Yellow Bicycle;  it was a vellum border sticker that I tore in several pieces.  The other pieces like the "reduce speed" and the red dotted square are fussy cut from a Basic Grey patterned paper--umm--it was called Wander I think, a  travel line from several years ago. 

Outlined the page and did the journaling in a white gel pen and then added a series of white dots by the title. the cut outs and then at the lower corner.  I thought of the white dots almost as an embellishment--meant to help lead the eye down and across the page.  And there you have it, very simple, includes multiple photos and it's flat... and you now what?   I'm good with that!   I do really like looking through an album and seeing different types of pages, rather than one set style over and over again. 

Ahhh, Wednesday, we can start counting down to the weekend now. 

Have  a scrappy good day!
Cheryl

Monday, August 25, 2014

It seems like everyone is trying to squeeze in just a little bit more summer.  I wander outside for no real reason other than to sit for a few moments and listen to the breeze go through the leaves, because this will all change too, too soon. 

Jackson and Bella ride to the very edge of the driveway to take full advantage of the slight downward slope and then they pump those little legs for all they are worth to fly back down the driveway as fast as they can possibly go. 

This page of Jackson and his mini Big Wheel came together pretty quickly.  Papers, title, stars, and banners are all from the Heidi Swapp No Limits paper pad I picked up several weeks ago.  To define the edges of the page I used plain old white craft paint along all four sides. 


Truly love the Heidi Swapp layered banner stickers, but, didn't have one in the appropriate colors for this page so I decided to cut out and stack the banner pieces from one of the papers in the pad using pop dots between the layers for dimension, and adhered a wood veneer bike along the tope edge for detail.  The words Play, Best Smile, and the Journal tab were all cut outs from the pad as well. 

I added some orange striped washi tape and then repeated the washi and several little pieces of the banners in the cluster at the top of the page.  The larger stars are both cardstock and vellum and are also from a Heidi Swapp ephemera pack.   Last was to sprinkle on some little wood veneer stars.

Now I am going to take the dogs outside again, even though they don't seem too interested....  dogs are a wonderful excuse to wander outside for no apparent reason,

Cheryl

Friday, August 22, 2014

Lots of talk lately about the Heidi Swapp Project Life Kits that folks are finding at Michaels...

I did find them last week (but waited for this week to purchase with a 40% off coupon).  I was after the gold set and grabbed the last one at my local M's.  I don't even do Project Life!  But I so wanted all these golden bits and bobs to use on traditional 12x12 pages. 

A little change as well, in my subject matter...  yikes!  It's not about grandchildren AND, I included a photo of myself, double yikes!  I know, I know, we should be scrapping about ourselves just like we do about others of our family and friends.  We are so often behind the camera recording the memories and we are so often very critical of our own photos (I know I am--usually hate photos of myself). But one of my goals is to try and include more of myself in my scrapbooking, because I now wish I had more photos of my mom and my grandmothers, and (hopefully) my children and grandchildren will want these memories of me too.    

Working with the Project Life cards on a 12x12 page was relatively easy.  Lined 'em up and tucked a couple up and under... wham, bang, done with the basic page. 


Pulled out some of the gold chipboard pieces from the kit (the hearts and the triangles) and then I went gold hunting in my stash!  Used several of the gold stickers from of a Dear Lizzy sticker book, got out some gold metallic thread, my Gold Lame Heidi Swapp mist, and a little bunch of gold sequins (a few pearly white ones too).  Tucked a piece of a doily under the Time Flies card (title) and added a several pieces of gold plaid washi tape. 

I still felt the page needed definition (so much white!) so I outlined the page and the cards with a fine point black Micron pen. 

The photos are from the same year and were taken around Christmas, but from different events, so I did lots of cropping to get just me and my lady friends.  In order of appearance, that's Jan, me in the middle and Sandy.  I've known these two women for years.  We met via the paper, card-making, stamping hobby and became very good friends... and true friends are like gold...

Happy Friday! 
Cheryl

Thursday, August 21, 2014

Still blathering on about page titles... 

Sometimes not a lot of words are necessary to accurately convey the feeling of a page. 

There are other photos of my two youngest grandies "helping" their mommy with some baking.  But This one photo...

Well, here it is. 


And my brain immediately went to, "How much batter was left for the pan, honey?" Hence the title and subtitle. 

The blue and orange papers came from Heidi Swapp's No Limits collection.  Layering papers were scraps.  Most of the stickers came from Amy Tangerine and Dear Lizzy sticker books.  The silly, funny crazy piece is from a Heidi Swap ephemera pack, the little orange epoxy arrow was from a Heidi Swapp sticker set,  and the "Love Your Face" is a little stamp from Michaels.  Thanks to the tip from Allison (she is goodgriefyou on you tube), I picked up several of these little stamp sets at a whopping $1 each!  Stamped it in navy blue and then punched it with an appropriately sized circle punch.  Added a wood veneer camera, some navy and white bakers twine and some washi tape in a navy chevron and orange diagonal stripe.  Repeated one of the layering papers, the washi, and the twine in the cluster at the top of the page. 

Now the alphas used in the title--those are still from an old Little Yellow Bicycle set that I am just nursing along because I cannot find navy blue alphas.  Why are navy blue sticker letters so hard to find?  (Insert whining here---American Crafts, could you p.l.e.a.s.e. make some navy blue Thickers for us --without glitter?)   The little letters in the subtitle are Tiny Type from Cosmo Cricket. 

I punched some brown circles in a couple sizes and scattered those on the page in lieu of splatting paint or ink.  Which made me think of  an idea I saw on Lillith Eckel's blog a while back where she used a border punch from EK, I think it is called Swiss Cheese.  She punched it once or twice and had a whole array of little circle confetti to scatter on her page.  And I thought what a great idea!  That is not a punch I have because when it came out as a border punch I thought, eh, not crazy about it.  But using it to punch multi size confetti like circles is an awesome idea!  Now I may have to think again about purchasing this punch.  I just love blogs and you tube---you never can tell where a great idea is hiding! 

That's it for now! 
Cheryl

Monday, August 18, 2014

Our boy Jacob moves into his college dorm next week.  He was actually home yesterday when we were out at Kim's for dinner, since they had all been at a benefit all day for a friend of his that had been in a very serious motorcycle accident and it struck me again that how grown up he is. 

So today's page (page-s) just highlight the changes between freshmen year of high school to graduation day...


They were just skinny, gawky boys here at their very first high school function (homecoming dance, freshmen year).  Jacob cracked up over the page---and even commented , "Look how young we looked."  Then he whipped out his phone, snapped a pic of the page and sent it to his friend (in the photo).  Seemed they especially liked the "studly" part... 

Most of the papers I used are super old---the pale blue alpha print and the multi colored strip with the masculine phrases were a lighter text weight and they had a pearlized finish to them.  I had kept them for years, cuz I just loved the pattern, the colors and that pearl-y finish.  So glad they finally found a home on a page.  I still have a bit of each (I printed a couple of these photos, since Nana here wants one in her own album!).

Layered the photo with gold textured paper and vellum, added a bit of metallic washi tape, some paper and chipboard banners and epoxy dots and stars (along with some stamped stars).  Then drew in some sketchy lines with a blue pen, not quite a border, but kind of. 

The title letters came from a Cloud 9 pack and my very favorite set of Thickers--an Amy Tangerine set that is a pale gray with an off-white grid pattern on them.  (I so hope they re-release these or come up with something very similar, cuz I just love this alpha set.) 

And this is our Jacob on graduation day before he donned his cap and gown.  What a difference four years makes. 


This page was done with two partial sheets--one was from DCWV (the tapestry looking one) and the other is the backside of a Basic Grey travel related paper (I just wanted that deep turquoise color).  The layering papers are from Prima and Creative Imaginations.  (These were clipped together when I cleaned out the last of the scrap bin and made up my own mini page kits.)  I outlined the layering pieces and bent the edges up, made a little tear here and there.  Then added a few punched butterflies, tucked in a scalloped brown cardstock border, plus a piece of ivory lace.  Used a piece of sequin waste as a stencil and applied some beige pearl-y ink.  The alpha set is a wood grain print Thickers set, that I kind of snipped and overlapped so the letters would be more joined together.

The journaling piece was a punch out from a My Mind's Eye Christmas sheet, but the color was right, the size was right--and there you go.  Also stained the wood veneer chevron pieces and the little camera to balance out the dark brown and hand cut the large brown "photo corner" pieces at the right side of the page.  The "hello there" piece was from Basic Grey, but that was it for adding in ephemera, tabs or words.  Still wanted a touch more dark brown though, so I splattered some brown paint and added the coppery-brown pearls. Thought I better quit here, before it got over-worked.   

My goodness he really is ... all grown up. 

Cheryl



   

Friday, August 15, 2014

Page titles... I was talking the other day about how they can convey the feeling of a moment and I think I captured the feeling of this moment! 

Jackson loves his John Deere tractor riding toy.  He also likes to escape without his pants...  (He's a bit better now that potty training is well under way...really loves his Jake and the Pirates underpants!) 


But this was a moment in time...that just makes me crack up every time I see the page.  So, if the title and your finished page make you or the viewer "feel" the moment, then I think what you are doing as the family historian, the scrapbooker, the documenter, is so worth the time we all put into this hobby. 

I was still working from the scrap bin when I created this page, so I pulled a whole lotta green patterned paper to pick up the John Deere tractor color and a little bit of gray playing off the color of Jackson's shirt.  Once the papers were selected, I started layering them under the photo and when I was happy with the layers, outlined the pieces and glued them together. 

The title, the butterfly (both also outlined) and the arrow are from a Jillibean Soup ephemera pack, and the subtitle is made up of Tiny Type letters from Cosmo Cricket.  I didn't have a question mark in the Tiny Type pack, so I chose one from a lime green Thickers set and just arranged the words so the question mark lined up with the two lines of type stickers.  The file tabs are from Simple Stories, the "happy" wood veneer is from the Michaels $1 bins and the star sticker is from Recollections (I don't usually care for much in the Recollections stickers, but I did like these layered stars--bought several packs of them--on clearance for $.99 yeah!)   Last, I sprinkled on some green sequins from my stash. 

What are you doing this weekend?  We are getting right down to the wire getting this house ready for sale, so I will be cleaning woodwork (ugh).  But I will steal away to my scrap room at some point for some R&R and a sanity check! 

Happy Friday! 
Cheryl

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Page titles can be a pain, hard to think of something that fits appropriately on the page, uses the size and color of letters you have available,  something catchy? something profound?  Sometimes a title is just a title, an introduction to the page, to the photo(s).  But sometimes the title can be more, I think.  Sometimes the title can be part of the embellishment.  Sometimes it is a rather small part of the page, just a token to evoke a memory or a feeling. 

On  this page I wanted the title to be a message to Bella -- I guess it counts as being the journaling itself.  And I had a lot of these purple and hot pink glitter letters I felt I could use (those not being colors I reach for an awful lot). 


I did include a little bit of handwritten journaling.  But the primary message to my granddaughter is the title.

I used a piece of Lily Bee paper from the Emma's Closet line (several years old) and a leftover piece of the old, old Bohemia collection from My Mind's Eye, a piece of paper from one of the 8-1/2x11 Michael's sale packs, and Thickers letter stickers.  Border punched pieces are scraps and the hearts are fussy cut from another of the 8-1/2x 11 sale pack papers (I can never remember which paper is from the Dear Lizzy or the Maggie Holmes packs cuz there are no branding strips on them).  Stickers are from both Amy Tangerine and Dear Lizzy sticker books.  I did a little outlining and scattered some sequins on the page, thought about splattering a bit of ink, but decided against it.  Done! 

A friend asked me where I came up with my titles from and I really didn't have a good answer for her...  I had asked Bella to make some funny faces for me and she was only too happy to oblige.  The message (title) came to me when I was looking at the photos later and wondering how long her being happy to oblige me making faces and posing for the camera would last before she gets "too grown up". 

Well I'm off to work--got a late start time this morning, which only means a lot more to do in a shorter period of time.  I'm focusing on being able to get into my scrap room tonight to keep me going today! 

Cheryl

Monday, August 11, 2014

More stitched embellishments!

I am so enamored with already stitched embellishments so of course when I found a couple of packs of these stacked and stitched hearts from American Crafts at Tuesday Morning I had to snatch them right up! I thought they were a perfect addition to this layout.   

I found this Mother's Day card from 2012 in with a stack of other cards I have kept over the years and decided to scrapbook the card even though I have this photo all by itself.  The card has my daughter's scratchy scribbly printing on it (which I love) so I thought I'd scrapbook the card itself.  The photo is in a frame in my living room since it is my all time favorite of my grandies. 


Papers are from Echo Park, Maggie Holmes, and Prima.  The large scalloped pieces are from Bazzill (just wacked them off a partial sheet I had and used the remaining piece to mat the photo card).  The bow tie is from Basic Grey (I added a little punched piece in the center, and punched a few more little hearts from brown cardstock as well.)  Tucked a doily under the matted photo, then added sticker words and ampersand from Dear Lizzy and Amy Tangerine sticker books.   No paint, no mist, although I did do some outlining.  But it seemed done, so I stopped! 

Spent Sunday with the grandies.  They helped frost -- the bars -- and themselves! The best kind of Sunday afternoon. 

I will be on the lookout for more stitched embellishments (on the cheap of course) that I can incorporate on my layouts until I can get hold of a sewing machine again (soon, not going to seriously consider acquiring one until after we move). 

 have a good day
Cheryl

Saturday, August 9, 2014

Why do I not seem to like themed papers?  I dunno.  I don't have a lot of Christmas paper, or Halloween, or birthday, or zoo or travel papers (well, travel, we  don't really go anywhere).   I have a little bit of each, but not much. 

Anyway, I had zoo pictures that I wanted to scrap, so I dig out the few pieces of zoo paper I had and started cutting it into strips .  This is super old Reminisce paper.  But I paired it up with some new feathers (got 'em at Michaels--used a coupon; actually kind of impressed that they had theses). 


It's not a hugely embellished  layout,  but I like the simplicity and I especially like the feathers and the wood veneer butterflies against the black background paper. 

I did a secondary page to include the rest of the photos I had.  It almost looks like a pocket page--which (If I had any) would have been a good place to use one.  But, again, I'm liking the simple and straight lines and the pop that the feather and veneer butterfly gives it. 


I also used an Amy Tangerine Thickers set for the title.  I've had these for awhile and they just never seemed to fit or coordinate with what I was working on, but I gotta say I do love them against the black on this page!  I did the outlining and journaling with a white gel pen and said done! 

I'm still not ready to go out and buy up a whole big bunch of themed papers--but I am going to start to keep an eye out for a few more themed papers to use. 

Have a great weekend!
cheryl

Friday, August 8, 2014

My creative space Part 2. 

Since we are downsizing, I have been brutal about purging...  and I took these pictures as much for me to document my little room for myself as to blog about it.  So here we go... 

This is my desk, which is really just a hollow core door on top of two stacks of Crop-In-Style cubes. 


Under the desk  is a plain brown grocery bag inside a white plastic trash bag--I'm a simple person---it works.  On the other side on the floor sits my spray box and some page kits from Cropper Hopper that are loaded and ready to scrap.  Next to the desk on the floor is my rolling tote, also pretty much all packed and ready to go.   


 The white three-tiered dish holds a lot of little left-overs, my one and only date roller stamp, odd things.  The clear glass bowl (came from Goodwill for $1.49) and holds some of the smaller stamps that have been used recently on layouts, a couple of gift tags, some paper clips, sometimes a stray ink pad.  The white milk glass bowl holds some buttons, a couple of clothes pins, some odd punched pieces or die cuts that didn't make it onto a layout, some wood veneer pieces; mostly these dishes help me keep the desk top clear while I am working, as I just put the leftovers in them or toss the stamps in them, until I am at a point where I start putting them away...they are never all the way empty though. 


I used to use a lot of plastic bead containers, and boxes and had them in drawers... and never went and pulled them out to use the items they held.  I like having things out and within reach, but I am also just enough of a neat freak that I like things contained. 

On the left side of my desk is my Cricut (yep, still just got the original machine---when it kicks the bucket, I will probably look at a Cameo, but the old Cricut is still working for me for now). 



The drawers under my desk (or supporting my desk--whatever) have from top right down, ink pads and reinkers, ink applicators -- these take up two drawers, the third drawer has my watercolors, mists, water bottle, chalks, baby wipes, stamp cleaner.  The bottom drawer has punches in it. 

On the left side, the top drawer is for pages in progress, and photos I am currently working with.  Second drawer has extra sticky pads for the Cricut, my Gypsy, a Cricut tool kit and cords.  Third drawer down is chipboard alphas (not Thickers---these are all in my rolling tote until I find the right sized container for them).  The bottom drawer is punches again. 

On the wall to my left are a couple of wall shelves and several more Crop-In-Style cubes. 



On the shelves, I keep my Cricut cartridges--don't have a lot, never cared for a lot of the cutesy-patootsie stuff they came out with.  Just liked some of the basic fonts and some of the flourishes (although I did  pop for a Joys of the Season cartridge for Christmas stuff--do still love that one).  Then my washi tapes are in a wire egg basket, bakers twine in the aluminum pan, and Stickles in the milk glass bowl.  I got all of these containers from Goodwill over several visits.  Just had to keep looking--nothing cost over $2. 


Right above this on the top shelf  is another milk glass dish with my Tombow markers, a divided kind of container that hold binder clips, paper clips, and other office-y sundries, and a candy dish with buttons in it.  Next to this are several rectangular tin boxes with watch maker's round tins inside--those hold brads, lots of brads...


Then we have several jars with cut ribbon pieces in them, the first two wire baskets hold flowers and the third holds small dies for my Big Shot. Next to that basket is a stack of long dies and then directly above are the rest of my Big Shot dies and my old tick tock alarm clock.  Middle of the top shelf are several empty frames and a photo framed of my three grandchildren. 


The cubes and drawers below hold card blanks and envelopes, file drawer holds stencils, keepsakes like newspaper articles, and the original typed articles that I had published, greeting cards from my family to me... stuff like that.  The closest set of drawers to my desk holds embellishments, refills for my tape runner(s), craft blades, staples for the Tiny Attacher, a label maker and Dymo tapes.   One drawer is designated just for Tim Holtz Idealogy stuff (one day I will make 12 tags of Christmas--I know he isn't doing that anymore--I don't care.  I still want to make some of the old ones-- one day), some jewelry making stuff (that's another one day I will make a "junque" bracelet kind of thing), an open cube on this side holds Cropper Hopper paper storage things and that's for cardstock.  The spinning thing holds clear stamps and some embellishment packs that didn't fit in the drawer. 

Whew... almost done. 


The closet-- it holds stamps, finished pages ready to put into albums, photo boxes, a couple of totes and magazines I want to hold onto, some specialty paints and glazes that don't get used too often. 


And last my paper rack... I do love my paper rack.  Love having things out to see, yet orderly (I must have a weird right vs. left brain thing going on).  Before I started this purging of supplies, this thing was full top to bottom.  Not so much now.  But you know what, I'm still scrapping!  And I can find things! 

So that's my room.  And yeah, I think I will scrap some of these photos. 

Cheryl






Thursday, August 7, 2014

My creative space, Part 1.   

It is my happy place.  My escape.  It is the place where I can put away the other cares of the world and concentrate on those things in my world which are good and satisfying and fulfilling.  I mentioned a few days ago that I would post some pictures of the room,  so let's go on a little tour. 

This is what you see just as you enter the room. 


On the right side is a bank of white Crop-in-Style Cubes, two high.


Hanging above  the cubes is a framed bulletin board--a mood board of sorts.  Really it's just got stuff on it I like.  I used a thrift store frame and white washed it and just duct taped a cheapo bulletin board to the opening.  Covered the bulletin board with several sheets of scrapbook paper and smeared some gesso across here and there.  A Making Memories organizer sits over here instead of on my desk, because it contains things I do not use each and every time I scrap, like my gelatos, watercolor brushes, Teflon sheet, the few copic markers I have, etc.  Stuff I want out, so I will use them...just doesn't need to be right smack dab in front of me.  Then there is wire card display with some favorite cards (I try to make multiples,  just in case I need a card in a hurry).  The glass dish has thumbtacks and stick pins in it.  A little TV/VCR unit sits at one end (I like to play old movies sometimes when I scrap).  The little silver dish by the TV has a couple of old (antique-y) pens and nibs, an old ruler, again just stuff I like.  On the curved shelf unit sits a bunch of mini books from swaps and a couple of mini albums from classes I taught, and even an altered book or two. The three drawer units and the file drawers have actually all been cleaned out and sit empty right now waiting for a new home.  In one open cube is an old office In (or Out?) basket with rolls of ribbon in it.  Next to that are my sets of watercolor pencils, colored pencils and pastels.  And in the other two open cubes (below where you can't see in this shot) are albums and a wicker basket to hold my oldie-moldie movies. 

Next view is straight ahead as you are coming into the room. 



One of the two little shelves hold class samples from when I taught at the public art museum, some published project pieces, and a few tags I was gifted with from some artists I was fortunate to know through doing sample work for Stampington & Co.   The other shelf holds a bunch of what we used to call 4x4 books--I had participated in a bunch of those collaborative projects in years past. 

Next to the display shelves is a frame displaying my current favorite scrapbook page. 



I painted a thrift store frame white and distressed it a bit. Then there is a tack stuck in the middle of the frame, in the back.   Next, I took a cork tile, peeled the sticky backing off just enough to tuck the ends of a piece of cording in and then the cord hangs off the tack in the back of the frame.  The clothespins hold the page on top of the cork tile.  I saw a post over at the Crate Paper blog about decorating clothespins--I'm not sure what they were doing with theirs...but I am definitely gonna give this a go for this display! 

There is a lotta, lotta white in my room.  White walls, white cubes, white shelves, white frames, white sheers.  I figure there is enough color and pattern going on in my supplies, project samples, keepsakes, pages and cards.  I did add a splash of color in the window topper.  Kind of like a scrapbook page, I wanted something to lead the eye back up.  More on that later.     

This brings us to the end of Part 1.  Next up will be my desk and the storage units where I actually do keep stuff, fancy that! 

Cheryl





Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Creativity is often just giving yourself permission to try something and perhaps fail.  And sometimes we do fail.  And sometimes, we don't!  I feel like the failures make the successes all the sweeter! 

I've never been very adept at using watercolors.  I've painted before, but not a lot on my scrapbook pages.  I've painted landscapes with oils and used acrylics on mixed media pieces... but almost always stuck basically to paper on my scrapbook pages.  It's just that I've seen so many striking pages with watercolor backgrounds that I just had to try it for myself. 


I selected a couple of blues and greens and applied them to my watercolor paper with a light hand and a very wet brush.  Dried the paper with my heat gun (patience when scrapping is not one of my virtues) and then splattered some more green and blue paint on top of the dried background.  So far, so good.  Now, I wanted to be careful not to overwhelm the softness of the background with too many other colors or strong patterns, so I picked just a few papers that repeated the colors in the photo to do my layering with.  

Added a couple of buttons and a chipboard piece from a partial pack of My Mind's Eye embellishments, the "be amazing," "always,"  and "crazy good" stickers are from Heidi Swapp.  But what I really love, love, love are the sewn-embellishment-mini-banner things from Crate Paper (top right corner, then the layered banner at the left side, and the camera and the half-circle kind of in the middle of the page pointing toward the photo).  Maybe I'm  so smitten with them because I don't have a working sewing machine right now (and of course what do I want--to have sewing on my layouts; we always want what we think we cannot have, right?).  But whatever the reason, I do love them.  I hope they continue making them for upcoming collections, cuz I want more, please.   

Since I used watercolor paper and it's not 12x12, I adhered the page to a green print paper (Crate Paper Birthday collection), did my journaling and called it done. 

The photo was taken on Mother's Day this year--- and a larger version of it was part of my Mother's Day gift, framed.  That and some framed artwork from the little ones are  hung on the wall in my entry way.   Couldn't have gotten a better gift! 

And now I am even happy with my watercolor attempt.  Double good! 

have a scrappy good day,
Cheryl

P.S.  The patterned paper is still from the scrap bin---it was one of the several sorted and clipped little packets I saved before the rest went to the recycle bin. 

Monday, August 4, 2014

Being creative does not always take more time!  Sometimes, I think, it means keeping your eyes open to using what is right in front of you. 

The title on this page is the negative piece left from cutting the "Going, Going, Gone" title for Jackson's falling asleep page (posted a day or so ago).  But this time the title refers to the setting California sun behind Jacob and Jackson in the photo.  


The scrap was just lying out on my desk and when I paired it with an orange-y rust piece of cardstock, the colors did mimic the ones in the photo.  The pages will not be next to each other in an album (they may not even be in the same album).  The California Sun part of the title is cut from this same orange-y rust cardstock, using my favorite Cricut font on the Opposites Attract cartridge. 

Base for the page is a piece of paper from Heidi Swapp's No Limits  collection.  Layering papers are from Basic Grey and MME 6x6 pads (or what's left of them).  I also used a gold skeleton leaf, sprinkled on some gold sequins and pinched a couple of butterflies from gold paper.  The Take Note flair badge is from Studio Calico; gold stickers are from a Dear Lizzy pack and the little "wow" diecut is from a from Heidi Swapp  pack. 

I am hoping to get some photos taken of my work room today--and hopefully get those posted later this week.  The curtains are back up, the topper is up...I do need to vacumn--but who looks at the floor!!!??

have a happy Monday,
Cheryl

Sunday, August 3, 2014

A silly little bow and a bit about scrapping and other creative endeavors on a (t.i.g.h.t.) budget. 

I am beginning to think I am actually more creative with less to spend.  I use my paints, stamps, and inks more.  I think a bit more about how I want my project to look--and yes, the work-arounds  and solutions sometimes take a little longer, like cutting the title out several times and stacking the letters so they are more substantial, OR, like on this page...that silly little bow. 


I've seen bows popping up on pages on-line and noticed that both paper and ribbon bows have been included in several of the popular kit club offerings.  So bows are a "thing" right now.  OK, Bella had that bow headband thing going on in this photo...and I thought to myself, you can certainly make your own bow...  And I did...but boy, oh boy I tied and retied, and fluffed and adjusted, over and over, till it looked right to me.  I putzed about with the thing so long, I actually got a smidge of dirt or ink or something on it.  Of course I noticed this AFTER the bow was finished.  (Solution: a toothpick and a teeny spot of craft paint!).  So, this simple little bow took longer than putting the entire page together! 

I used Carta Bella papers from the Beautiful Moments collection (picked up last year at 50% off, of course).  I loved the colors on the background paper, but still a bit busy for me, so I added some gesso behind where the photo was going to be placed.  The title is one of my favorite Thickers fonts (also purchased at 40% off) and the stickers are from the Carta Bella pack and from an Amy Tangerine pack I got at Tuesday Morning for $1.99!  The doily paper and the ribbon are both from my stash, as are the little gold sequin stars. 

Journaling is on the back of this page and has to do with miscarriages, and waiting, being so very thankful for a healthy baby girl... just not something to hang out there for all the world to see. 

And then there is that bow... about 45 minutes to make the page  a .n. d.  an hour to make the bow...

have a great day today whatever and wherever your creativity takes you,
Cheryl

Friday, August 1, 2014

A minor scrappy obsession.  Really, just a tiny thing,.... I can't seem to just glue buttons onto pages without tying thread or floss through the button holes. 

I've tried!  I got some cute buttons in a package that already had adhesive on the back and didn't I have to peel off the adhesive so I could put floss through the button holes?  Well, of course I did. 

Which brings me to my page.... Still using scraps on this one.  Added some vellum tape strips (on clearance for a whopping $1.07 a pack at Hobby Lobby).  I added strips of the same papers and little pieces of the vellum strips for the cluster at the side of the page.  Sprinkled on some wood veneer stars.  Cut the title with my Cricut.  It cracked me up to watch Jackson falling asleep when he was tiny... going, going, gone....

Things were moving along fine and then I went to splatter my Heidi Swapp Citron mist and it kind of blurched out, not splattered.  Love that color... but the splots were a bit larger (a LOT larger) than I had intended.  So I added buttons over top of the largest paint blurches.  And put floss through all the button holes before adhering them to the page.   


Some things are just not worth fighting yourself over. 

best to all,
Cheryl