Saturday, April 21, 2018

Small Trio Layout

Eight whole years have passed since I last posted something here — thank goodness for Blogger’s “revert to draft” feature, or I’d have to delete this blog and start afresh. As things are, I have a nook already prepared where I can publish a little something if I have a mind to share it with the internet. I don’t expect to publish with any regularity, but posting here will, I believe, be easier than trying to use photo site links, so here I shall be.

The reason for this resuscitation? Susan recently posted a lovely card with a color scheme and layout that appealed to me so much that I wanted to mimic it immediately. That was not to be, however: freelance work comes in either a trickle or a deluge, and that week I had more work than I usually see in a month. Card-making was sidelined to such an extent that I forgot about my desire to CASE Susan’s card. When she replied to my comment on Monday, I was just catching my breath after the deluge, and the impulse to craft struck so hard that I sat down immediately and pulled out my stamps and ink.

"Thinking of You" in Nautical Blue, Vanilla, and Peanut Brittle

Another deluge week is falling about my ears now (April was this busy last year, too — something in the air, maybe?), but in the six intervening days I’ve produced five cards, which is a pretty high average for me. Perfectionist that I am, I usually spend about three days on a single card, working on a couple elements each day (planning the layout, testing and selecting colors, stamping and coloring the focal element, creating the base, and assembling the components). But why make only one card if you can make two at once?

"Sending Springtime Smiles" in Soft Cantaloupe, Celadon, and Cyan

Although I don’t have any of the exact stamps that Susan used, I do happen to have a set that contains a bird, a dragonfly, and a butterfly, which made emulating easy. The text background — the main theme of her card — I had to improvise, since I don’t yet have a script background stamp. The larger and more legible words required a more subtle ink, and I realized early on that I couldn’t just stamp whole sentiments across the squares. Figuring out how to stamp selectively inked words around the focal images in a way that looked halfway decent took me longer than I’d care to admit, and I still goofed a few times on the final product. The vanilla ink was forgiving; the cyan, less so. While inking the edges of the cantaloupe dragonfly panel, I dropped it onto my ink pad. There wasn’t any way to salvage the panel without starting over, so I’m just considering it a little extra distressed.

Verdict: This was my first time truly CASEing anything, and it was a good learning experience. For the most part, I enjoyed the process, but I won’t be doing text backgrounds again until I get a background stamp! The selective inking is too time-consuming to employ frequently.

Supplies
Stamps:  Papertrey Ink “Happy Trails” (images and background words), “Spring Hills” (“sending springtime smiles”);  Hero Arts “Many Everyday Messages” (“thinking of you”)
Ink:  Memento Nautical Blue, Peanut Brittle;  VersaColor Vanilla, Celadon, Cyan;  Hero Arts Soft Cantaloupe
Paper:  Papertrey Ink Stamper’s Select White
Miscellanea:  Scotch Permanent Double-Sided Tape

Dimensions
Cards:  6.75” x 4.5”
Squares:  1.5” x 1.5”

2 comments:

  1. Cacia, I'm so sorry it took so long for me to comment on your beautiful cards! I love how you used the images from Papertrey's set and can't imagine how tedious it must have been to create the text backgrounds without a single stamp. Go, you! The results are lovely and speak for themselves...very worth the effort!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you so much for taking the time to look, Susan!

      Delete

Thanks for taking the time to share your thoughts.