Monday, 29 April 2013
Time for a little road trip...
The theme over on the Simon Says Stamp and Show Challenge is "passport", bascially travel. I
figured that everyone would be making pieces travelling to all corners of the globe so I thought I'd stick closer to home and take a little road trip! When I was a kid and we emigrated from the USA back to the UK we came on the QE1, which sailed from New York. We were living in Chicago at the time and the vintage road trip images on these stamps really take me back to our cross-country drive to board the ship. I guess it must have taken us a few days because I remember being in a hotel room and watching an episode of Mission Impossible (remember that old black and white show?) It was also Easter and I remember having an Easter egg hunt in the hotel room.
I started with a cheap wooden frame from that Swedish furniture store, you know the one I mean :) I gave it 3 or 4 thin layers of white gesso and then sanded it to give a smooth surface for stamping. The tire tracks were stamped with Coffee Archival ink and I used a blending tool to add some touches of Fired Brick and Chipped Sapphire in places. I know it's easy for me to say but the photo really doesn't do it justice, it looks much better in real life!
I spritzed the background of the main piece with water and added Gathered Twigs distress stain and then dried it with my heat gun before adding the tyre tracks with Archival black. I then added finger prints and splatters with more Gathered Twigs. I stamped the petrol pump and the snazzily-dressed pump jockey with Archival black and coloured it with Promarkers, distressing it with a Tonic scratchy thing (I forget the name of that tool right now, but it will be in my supplies list!).
I stamped the gas guage separately and cut it out and distressed it with more Gathered Twigs and splatters. I fixed it to the corner of the piece and cut off the excess parts, adding them to other sides of the panel. The Route 66 marker was stamped separately, coloured with Promarkers and distressed before fixing it in place. Finally I gave the whole piece a light sanding to distress it further.
That's about it - this piece was certainly a trip down memory lane for me, even if it wasn't for you! :)
Supplies I used included:
Our ever-generous sponsor Simon Says Stamp is offering a $50 gift voucher as the prize again this week, just make something for the challenge and you could the winner! The winner will be chosen at random from those who enter the challenge, so why not give it a try? At the very least why not head over to the Challenge Blog to see how the other members of the design team have interpreted this weeks theme! :)
Don't forget, Simon Says Stamp have a great Facebook page too! Check them out here!
Monday, 22 April 2013
Inspiration is the sincerest form of flattery
The theme over on the Simon Says Stamp and Show Challenge is "Color Love". Those of you who visit my blog regularly will know that one of my favourite ways to add colour to my projects is with Letraset Promarkers. (For those of you not familar with them, they're alcohol-based markers, in hundreds of colours, very like Copics, though they have a nib tip at one end rather than the more brush-like Copic tip).
As regards colour inspiration, everything we've learned about colour, light and shade has come from the old masters and their classic paintings of the past, so I decided to pick 4 to use as my inspiration for this piece.
I got around this by inking up the stamp and then using a moist baby wipe and moist q-tip (cotton bud) to remove the ink from the hair area, still leaving some fragments of shading to attempt to echo the shading on Marilyn's hair. Here's what Mona looked like after I stamped her. You can compare this to her image in my supplies list at the bottom of the page.
The second panel is probably the most loosely inspired by the original of all of these 4. I've always been a fan of Paul Klee, and have one of his prints hanging in my house. This painting is called Red Balloon. I painted my background with white gesso and let it dry before scratching it with a Tonic scratchy-tool-thingy. I rubbed brown distress ink over it, which left dark marks where the surface had been scratched. I masked off triangles and squares and applied distress ink to add colour and shading in different places. Finally, I highlighted the edges of the blocks with a grey Promarker.
The 3 panel was inspired by the painting Autumn Rhythm Number 30 by Jackson Pollack. Splatter stamps by Darkroom Door and Tim Holtz made this one a piece of cake. I spritzed my white card with water and then applied frayed burlap distress stain to give a pale fawn colour for my background. The splatters were stamped with Coffee and Black Archival ink pads and white gesso.
The final panel is based on one of my favourite paintings by one of my favourite artists, Magritte. The painting is Son of Man from 1964. Those of you with extra long memories might remember back to the days when I used to make little animations for the side panel of my blog - one of them was inspired by this painting, here's a still I grabbed from it.
Anyway, here's the actual painting, I'm sure you're all familiar with it!
One of the problems using the winged man stamp for this is that his jacket has much too much detail and dark areas in it, so I used the same technique that I used on Mona to remove the ink from some areas before stamping. I coloured the apple using one of my favourite Promarker shading techniques, which produces a more "painterly" technique, perhaps a little like artist's pastels. I've explained the 5-step process I used to shade it below.
"Painterly" shading with Promarkers
I used 5 pens for this, from light to dark they were Soft Lime (1), Lime Zest (2), Meadow Green (3) and Bright Green (4). The 5th pen was the blender pen, which is colourless. Although I'm using greens here, obviously you can apply this technique to whatever colours you're using on your project.
A Colour the entire area with 1, leaving a white area where you want the highlight to be (top left area in the case of my apple) We will leave a larger and larger area around the highlight with each colour we add.
B Colour with 2, leaving an area of 1 showing around the highlight.
C Colour with 3, leaving an area of 2 showing around the highlight.
D Colour with 4 where you want any shadows or lowlights to be.
E Use pen 1 to colour over the whole piece in small circles (except the pure white area). This will blend the colours together and give a soft edge to your highlight area. Use the blender pen to soften the edge around the pure white area.
If you have Promarkers (or Copics for that matter) give it a try, it's a lot of fun and lets you make some of your own original elements for your project. I didn't have a stamp of an apple to use on my piece but by cutting out an apple-y shaped circle of white card and doctoring it with Promarkers, problem solved! :)
Tip 1: Most of you probably know this, but if you're colouring a stamped image with alcohol-based pens, the Memento ink pads (I used black Memento for Mona, for example) are probably the best choice, they seem much less prone to bleeding than oil or alcohol based ink pads!
Tip 2: After colouring a stamped image, if you add a thin line of very pale grey around the outer edge it will really make it "pop". If your background is dark, you may need to use a slightly darker grey to get the same effect.
Supplies I used included:
Our ever-generous sponsor Simon Says Stamp is offering a $50 gift voucher as the prize again this week, just make something for the challenge and you could the winner! The winner will be chosen at random from those who enter the challenge, so why not give it a try? At the very least why not head over to the Challenge Blog to see how the other members of the design team have interpreted this weeks theme! :)
Don't forget, Simon Says Stamp have a great Facebook page too! Check them out here!
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