Thursday, September 18, 2014

MOJO363...Miles Traveled

I put together this very masculine card for my first Mojo Monday in several months!!! 

Mojo363.  I needed a card for my Father's Birthday. It's already in the mail for tomorrow!

I saw the sketch and instantly thought of a round map...so I headed out to make the card. I have a few round map stamps but the design muse took me in a completely different direction.

This isn't all CTMH, but I did use an image from the
30 yrs of Happy on the directional arrow, which is also CTMH, so it qualifies, right? 

The arrow is from one of the Stamp Sets in the Cricut Artbooking bundle, My Life.

I think it's a great illustration how CTMH products can be used with other products and take your art to a new level!

CTMH Artbooking bundle - My Life stamp set on the left.
The papers are DCWV from The Guy Stack. Several of the papers are raised embossed with enamel-like accents. The dial stamp is Tim Holtz Road Trip and the car is Tim Holtz Here and There.

 The gear is from my stash. I think I picked it up at a stamping convention...but I can't remember...LOL. (I've been to a few)





The Mojo363 sketch used flowers, but in using it for inspiration, I selected a gear embellishment instead.  I think it worked out well. Some additional details:




If you haven't checked out the MojoMonday blog, do so!  The wonderful artists on the blog hop make some gorgeous cards!!!

Princess Wishes

Princess Cards

   I posted this on my non-CTMH page, Dawn's Cards and Crafts Garden, but it does use a retired CTMH stamp set, Princess Wishes, the Artiste cartridge and Gypsy Exclusive Ink, so I will double-up and share here.  I see a lot of people selling older stamps, but I don't know  if I could do that -- I just repurpose them. I think that over the past 7 or so years, I have gathered enough coordinating supplies that allow me to do just that!
 
I made these butterfly beauties just for our "adopted" nieces!

   The (non-CTMH) paper is Butterfly Kisses by Paper Studio. The stack includes matching cardstock which is handy. I used my Cricut and the CTMH Artiste cartridge to cut the butterflies.  

On the first one, I heat-embossed the princess crown, tag, and wings with (non-CTMH) Amethyst embossing powder. I over-stamped the word Princess in black after it dried sufficiently. 

On the other card I stamped the oval tag with CTMH Gypsy ink and heat-embossed the word Princess in black. That is 2 different looks with one stamp.
 
 A little ribbon and bows are the finishing touches,  along with a dab of iridescent glitter on the little butterflies - also cut on my Cricut.

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

WOYWW276 - Cloud Nine Birthdays

Hi! At last I'm joining What's on Your Work Desk Wednesday again! It's been a long time, but I was sitting here making cards and realized it was Wednesday, so I wanted to post. I started these lovely cards the other day hoping to get them out for birthdays tomorrow but ran out of time (darn job). So here I am and they're going to be belated birthday cards. :)

These cards are based on the Cloud Nine Card Making Workshop from Close to My Heart. They are really going together well and I must say that following the cardmaking workshop instructions is a lot of fun!

I hope you enjoy looking and thanks for stopping by! Check out everyone else's Workdesks, too!  Happy Wednesday!

Monday, September 15, 2014

Fast and Furious Baby Shower

The final design...drum roll please...

The invitation that Grandma and I selected uses CTMH cardstock in Outdoor Denim, White Daisy,  and Pear, as well as some DCWV "Baby Boy" patterned paper. 

We stamped the truck (Fast and Furious set) in Outdoor Denim ink, heat-embossed them with clear powder, and I fussy-cut them. Then Grandma stamped the tire tread in Outdoor Denim ink on the patterned paper. We heat-embossed "shower" in Outdoor Denim also using clear embossing powder. In the meantime, I dry-embossed the pear cardstock with a steel plate embossing folder and trimmed them to size. We cut the baby boy from Outdoor Denim cardstock on the Cricut. 

To get 50 cards made, Aunt & Gma also joined our assembly line! Auntie started the layers with Outdoor Denim. We cut the White Daisy and Pear gears using the Artiste cartridge. The Outdoor Denim 2"circle was hand-punched and G-G assembled them with the gears and a brad as an accent!

We are a great team! The invitations came out great!

Saturday, September 6, 2014

Baby Shower Samples

Little Boy Baby Shower Invitations!


This past couple of weeks I designed and created baby shower invitations with one of my friends for her daughter-in-law's baby shower. Everyone shares their adorable projects, but this time, I'd like to share with you a little bit of my process of developing a card. Despite how easy it looks, there is often quite a bit of playing with products to develop a final pleasing design. I told my friends if its not "OMG that's cute!" then I'm not happy with it.

The thinking...
  • they are expecting a boy, so I was thinking trucks and cars.
  • for 40 cards, having enough paper is important. I had a pack of Outdoor Denim and Pear cardstock, and a lot of the  Later Sk8r B&T paper. I decided that the Later Sk8r design is too old-ish for a newborn, so I combined it with Die Cuts with a View (DCWV) papers in the Baby Boy Stack. 
  • I checked with the mom-to-be and she wanted the colors to be Navy and almost Lime Green and she was thinking cars and trucks. So we started out on the same wavelength. 
  • perusing Pinterest for a couple of designs helped in my design concepts

First Sample


I had such a great time using the Later Sk8r papers and stamps last year that I thought I would start with die-cut gears using the Artiste Cricut cartridge. My first attempt used Outdoor Denim for the card enclosure and Later Sk8r paper as a pullout with a gear on top (Artiste).

I cut the Baby Boy lettering using Plantin Schoolbook, using patterned paper and backed it with White Daisy cardstock. I heat embossed a farm truck from the Fast and Furious stamp set and fussycut it.  And I used a gear cut using the Artiste cartridge.

Because I was just playing with examples, I wasn't putting the elements down especially carefully, but even if they were perfect, turns out that I didn't care for the results at all. The pullout card was not wide enough for the enclosure and if I made it any wider, it would be too tall to fit in a standard envelope. 


For my second attempt, I stamped and heat embossed the farm truck. You can see that I lightly stamped the Fast and Furious tire track under the ribbon. I used a non-CTMH sentiment,  which I am embossed with white embossing powder.  

The gears were cut from Outdoor Denim and Later Sk8r on my Cricut with the Artiste cartridge.

Again, I was not satisfied with the result.

On my third attempt, I tried to isolate another Fast and Furious truck and the tire tread in a frame by stamping on White Daisy, which I layered on Outdoor Denim. 

I cut an arrow from the Artbooking Cricut cartridge and used a steel tread dry-embossing folder on Pear backed on Outdoor Denim.  Even with the cute little gears again, I still did not like this card.  It was a "No go!"

Why was this so difficult? I needed some mojo!

Design #4 - I layered the background with the same DCWV paper. I tried stacking the cars and trucks. 

They looked pretty good with heat-embossing, but the left side of the card didn't work out. I didn't have any stamps that would fit, and the shower invitation wording was on the inside.





Try #5 - I did like the steelplate tread look. So I tried it vertically. 

I made a little tag using the Artiste Cartridge and the gear tag. The sentiment was stamped with Outdoor Denim ink and heat-embossed with detailed Clear embossing powder.

I stamped the truck and then fussy-cut it and laid it on top of large gear in Later Sk8r B&T.

Better, but still not great...maybe too frilly for a boy card.





6th Attempt
Moving along - at last I was starting to get into it. I mixed 2 of the papers from the Baby Boy Stack, and used large white ric-rack where the edges met. A large gear cut from Outdoor Denim using Artiste made a good layer.  The truck was heat-embossed on White Daisy and fussy cut.  I used Versamark ink and a non-CTMH powder.

The 7th attempt was closest....it uses a lot of the same elements, layered on Outdoor Denim, and the Boy stack paper, along with the steeltread. I finally got the tire tread in there. But I didn't like the truck embossed in that color of blue, and it didn't go well with the lime green on the bottom.

Thanks for looking at my "failures".  I hope it helps in understanding that an adorable card doesn't happen the first time.  For me, the development of the design is half the fun.  The non-perfect examples were part of getting to a really cute invitation design, and we made 40+ invitations shortly after.

THE NEXT POST WILL REVEAL THE FINAL DESIGN!