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You are a rebellion

Of course, one of the best things about a happy ending is a new beginning. And if you needed inspiration for one this week, there is plenty about. AEZine discusses a word for the new year. The funky effer girls will dare you to declare your intentions for 2007 and the UK dare girls are resolving too. This site inspires you to get creative with a daily inspirational quote (great for keeping a daily journal). Nichol’s done a tutorial for a fab resolutions book and Rebecca’s made this glittery piece to celebrate the new year. Just tons of cool stuff to see this week. I could hibernate in my studio and make stuff all week. Or rather, I certainly would if I could.

I would like to start the crafty new year by thanking Making Memories for bringing something to the market that is affordable and sticks to the wall yet won’t get me in trouble with the landlord. These just come off the wall when I’m done with them. I won’t tell you how many I have at the moment. Enough for every room to have a saying. I’m going to let each room tell me what that should be. But this one I knew straight away. {Plus omg, I think I fall a little more in love with that big print every time I see it. It’s always the talking point of the room. Well, that or the chair.}

So when the first LifeArt challenge of the year dealt with finding a single word for 2007, I cheated. I’m command oriented, and I chose two words. Get there. And yes, I know where there is. And it’s a very, very good place. A particular vista that will unfold little by little this year.

And thinking of birdies made me think of Woodstock. And sparkles and guitar chords and a festival of life. It’s totally silly. And that’s totally fine. And with that, I’ve decided I’ll try to keep up with the Dares this year. I will try! {Those super tiny script letters are rub-ons by American Crafts and the scripty font in the middle is a stamp from FontWerks. Love both of these right now. I also wish the sparkle of the green glittery letters came through on your screen, but alas, no!}

It’s just one more little step in getting there.

xlovesx

A Manifesto.

Manifesto: Noun. A declaration of one’s intentions.

Starting December first, I will keep a Christmas journal. In it, I will write something every day to reflect on the holidays of my past, enjoy the holidays of the present and dream about the holidays of my future. To some, this will be a stack of papers and trivial scribbles, but not to me. I am taking back my Christmas, I am letting it be something I relish and, most importantly, I am giving at least fifteen minutes every day to myself no matter how crazy this season becomes. I hope you will share, encourage and understand as I make something with my own hands, my own words and my own memories.

I may post some of my entries here. Other artists are doing this with me, and you can see their work here. Or you may join us.

Above all: enjoy the season. I will.

xlovesx

Is just a choice

It makes me giggle to see everyone who has signed up for the Christmas Journal class getting anxiety about choosing a book. I can only giggle because I am exactly the same. I have several blanks and I can never make up my mind. With some projects I can just pick one thing and go with it…but for this one I never want to choose just one.

This is a possible. I might keep it. Or I might gift it to someone else so they have a place to journal this Christmas. But I’m sharing it here because I have a hunch there are others like me out there reading: others who refuse to throw away pretty magazines.

This particular book is made from the 2003 Christmas issue of Ideal Home. For whatever reason, I’ve kept it all this time and I still love the images in this one. {No, it is not the only ancient Christmas mag in my collection. Nor is it the oldest. But I’m working on it.} The truth is, I don’t want to keep the entire magazine really. There are whole sections that I don’t care about at all. But there are a few things I do, and so I keep the whole darned thing. Until now.

I ripped out the pages I liked and cut them down to 8×8. I had 17 images, but you can use more pages to make a longer book.
I trimmed 20 sheets of white cardstock to 8.25×8.25.
I put the extra 3 sheets aside and used a good gluestick to adhere the magazine pages to just one side of each cardstock square.
On the reverse of the cardstock, I used two star shaped masks by Heidi Swapp. With a cotton ball, I sponged green dye ink over the stars, then removed the masks to leave the white design behind.
To make the covers, I cut two pieces of chipboard to 8×8 and four pieces of red cardstock to 8.5×8.5. I sandwiched the papers together so the chipboard was in the centre, then a layer of red on each side, then a layer of white on the outside. Inside the front cover should be one of the sheets with a magazine page; inside the back cover should have the star design—that’ll be the third of your sheets you set aside.
To bind the book, punch holes if you have a sturdy hole punch and lace with ribbons, or take it to a copy shop and have it spiral bound.

Then decorate the front and back covers as you like, and you’ll have a journal that’s ready to go with just a nice pen or two. I love this stamp so much for the back of books—it’s by River City Rubber Works and I got mine on a little shopping spree alongside CKU-New England way back in 2002, so it’s even older than that magazine. I’ve been using it on the back of cards and little books ever since, but it’s not normally something I would show. But when Kristina sent in her images for her minibook, it was on the back of hers too. Giddy.

Two more days until we start Christmas Journaling!

xlovesx

The Magic in the Middle

Legend has it that Hogwarts has a little-spoken-about secret wing devoted to the dark paper arts. There, young witches and wizards take classes that allow them to put together scrapbooks, cards and crafty art with nothing but their wits and their wands to help them.

Today, the dark paper arts are a secret no more. In fact, they may be dark no more…depending on the papers you choose.

{Right, if you are already confused and don’t know why it’s Harry Potter day at shimelle.com, check out this post for an explanation.}

As your lecturer today, I’ve been asked to speak about a secret of the dark paper arts alumni that we like to call The Magic in the Middle. It’s a composition trick that will help you create a contemporary look quicker than you can say ‘Hermione’.

We call it the magic in the middle because it’s all about working from the middle of the page. Let’s start simply, with a beginner’s layout.

For this trick you will need two colours of cardstock—one for the background and one for everything else, two patterned papers, round letter tiles from Basic Grey (or a circle punch to make them from your own patterned paper), letter stamps or your printer for the title and a black pen. You’ll also need one 4×6 photo.

The trick is to start in the middle of the page and work out, building and sticking accents as you go. So you can start with the 8×8 square of patterned paper – place it in the middle, move it just a smidge in any directin and stick it down. Your photo is the next thing—place it in the middle of the page, move it to one direction and stick it down. Now you’ll want something to balance that photo, so cut a block of cardstock, place it in the middle of the page, move it in the other direction—leaving a little overlap—and stick it down. That’s the hard part done. Now you just build with little things on top of that basic construction…add title letters that start in the middle of the page and work their way right. Add journalling strips to fill the gap left near your photo. Everything works out from the centre of the page, and as long as you follow that rule you should be fine. It’s finished when you like it…add as much or as little as suits you.

Once you’ve studied the basics, you can put your own spin on each page. This page was completed by a student in the second year in our programme. She started with the same concepts but changed the elements to make something a bit more personalised. She added a journaling box printed from a digital kit…although she is not a digital scrapper in the slightest, she loved this set of tools for its usefulness on paper. Current students can find it here if you prefer to spend your pocket money on things useful to your studies rather than Bertie Bott’s silly sweets. To balance her expenditure, this student also put something recycled to use: two magazine clippings add further description to her layout. If you can not manage the Archivally Safe spell just yet, you can spray magazine clippings with Archival Mist, or scan them and print them onto your own paper. She also added a mysterious disappearing title, something taught only to the keenest students in the second year. Can you see it?

Here it is magnified to be seen by even the Muggle eye. This student used stickers that were similar in colour to her background paper for a title that makes you look closely…something that is very useful in keeping the dark paper arts a secret to those outsiders who do not believe in the power of our works.

Now that you’ve seen some work by other students, let’s get to the details of this branch of magic.


Assemble your supplies. Cardstock, patterned paper, journaling box, letters, trims. And photos! You can use one or several. This project uses 4 wallet sized prints.


Choose one patterned paper to make up a big piece of the background. Cut to size, place in the middle of the page, then move in one direction and stick down. Students in the upper school may opt for inked edges, but beware this makes this process slower and more messy.


Arrange photo(s) near the middle of the page, overlapping what you placed in the last step.


Begin to create a title. Here the felt was cut into a circle by tracing a coffee cup on the reverse. The letter is a monogram by Basic Grey. You can create similar with your printer if your wand does not produce this. But here there is a mistake. See the gap left in the middle of the page? This spell will not work if gaps are left in the middle. We must correct this placement before we stick anything down.


Here the placement is correct, and no gaps mean the spell will be successful.


Now we start to fill the spaces that remain. A little magic meant the letter and the patterned paper match, but this is optional.


Texture and dimension from a bit of trim. Some above the centre and some below creates balance.


To finish the title, letter stamps and the second patterned paper are enlisted.


A common mistake made by young witches: the stamped word will not fit on the page. Never mind, a quick fix will help.


Letter stickers can be placed with line breaks yet the word can still be read. This shortcut has helped many students in a pinch.


The journaling box was also too big, so the student shrank it to just small lines. Muggles might do this with a stamp or a ruler and pen.


Journaling and the date finish this side of the page. As the sticker sheet did not include two 0 stickers, the lowercase o was magically transformed.


A last sweep of the wand added a clipping from a magazine and some stitches to the felt circle.


The finished spell.

Students have also used their own supplies to practise in their spare time. You can see some of their techniques here:

And here, over a two page spread:

Today students will be marked on their effort. All completed projects receive house points and some randomly selected entries will receive prizes sent by owl, including free online classes. To be eligible, you must post your work online and comment here with a link to your work.

Homework is due at 5pm Sunday, and winners will be announced Sunday evening. There will be prizes for students of UKS houses as well as students at other schools of magic throughout the world, so feel free to pass the word.

Questions to the professor may also be posted in the comments, but only those linking to a finished project will be entered.

A short audio message for students with the kit is available for download here.

Now, get on with your work!

xvanishesx

His own Christmas dinner

Our Christmas issue came out last week and I’ve been waiting to share this little project with you…just in case you find yourself with more time and the overcoming urge to create a handmade Christmas present. Presents for yourself included, of course.

Of course there are lots of Christmas projects for you to make in this issue, but with this one I’ll even get you started.

Holiday Recipe Box
{Of course there is no reason this has to be a Christmas project. Just sayin’.}

Supplies:
Cigar box, pencil box or other box with a hinged lid.
Patterned papers to cover. (I used Flair and Making Memories papers.)
Several sheets of a two colours of cardstock — I used a cream colour for writing on and a brick red for the background.
A sheet of stickers or other Christmas accents to spread throughout the project. (I used the postage stamps from Pebbles Inc, word strips from Colorbok and a label from Making Memories.)
Letter stamps and ink or your printer for the title. (Totally stamps for me. I love these. They are by Teesha Moore.
This template to print and make your recipe cards.

Download the template and print onto light coloured cardstock to make a stack of recipe card blanks. I used my corner rounder on the edges, then glued each recipe to the red background. The background was cut to fit just inside the box without making it impossible to get to the cards.
Fill in each recipe with all the dishes from your family.
Cover your box with papers using a permanent glue stick. Don’t worry about getting things to fold perfectly over the edges…that’s nigh on impossible. Instead, cut each piece slightly smaller than the panel it needs to cover, and leave all the edges of the box showing.
Once it’s covered in paper, unleash your embellishments. You’ll need to spread them through all the cards you’ve made too, so look for something that will go a long way. A little does a lot to make something coordinate. I used the Christmas postage stamps along with a tiny piece of green dotted paper.

Through Christmas, take pictures as you make each dish and add the photo to the back of each recipe card.

Further reading: get your own copy of this issue or check out the ScrapBook Inspirations Blog.

Have a happy day, whether it’s a holiday or not.

xlovesx

Avada Kedavra

Every so often, the amazing team at UK Scrappers hold a weekend long online party known as a cyber crop. Seriously, the work they put into these is crazy, and they’ve been doing them for years and they just put in more each time. The first one was probably fifty or sixty people? There are hundreds upon hundreds now. It’s a great unifying moment for scrappers in the UK. Almost makes you want to sing Jerusalem or Rule Brittania or something.

That ‘every so often’ is this coming weekend. And each event has a theme. This time it’s the Harry Potter cyber crop. When you register to participate, the sorting hat puts you into your proper house and so forth. {I’m in Hufflepuff, by the way. Am yet to decide what this says about me, really.} The weekend is filled with challenges, games and project-based classes. So in theory, you can get lots scrapped, use up lots of your existing stash because you’re cropping at home and still have the social interaction of a crop, because you’re guaranteed to find active threads on the boards and people in the chatroom. I have trouble keeping up with all that because the conversation goes by so quickly and when I am in the making-stuff zone, it can be hard for me to comprehend much, but it’s one of those things that really does have something for everyone…as long as ‘everyone’ is referring to scrapbookers, of course.

As a lecturer at Hogwarts Scrap&Magic Academy, I’m teaching a class there this weekend. It’s all about a composition trick and called The Magic in the Middle. This has been the first time I offered a real kit to play along with the project and I have been bowled over by the response. I had prepared a lot of kits. They sold out in three hours and I spent a week tracking down stuff to make more. Definitely learned something there. Today all those envelopes you see above went in the post. Finally I can walk through my flat without falling over kits. It took me five trips from flat to car with those giant Ikea bags full of envelopes just to transport them to the post office. So thank you all so much for your enthusiasm for wanting to play along.

Here’s the other new thing: you can play along in my class this weekend without a kit and without being in the UK. My class projects will be posted here, with instructions and photos and all sorts of good stuff. Like prizes. Did I mention there will be prizes? Just stop by here at the weekend to take part—it’ll all make sense when you get here. No need to sign up or buy anything…just something to get you crafty this weekend. Harry Potter fandom optional, but I do expect to see Rosemary in fully scarf-and-radish-earrings get up, at the very least.

And an obligatory moment of everyday humour: when I arrived at the post office with my five giant Ikea bags of envelopes, I fully expected them to hate me. They got me back: the franking machine wasn’t working. Every single one of those envelopes had to have three different old-fashioned, lick and stick postage stamps. I have certainly answered the age-old question, If you lick enough postage stamps, will you glue your tongue to the roof of your mouth? I was totally wishing I had brought my house elf along.

And a special message for Nick, who requested more cupcakes for his English class at school: I am happy to bake for you provided you remember that English teachers like proper spellings, and have a particular fondness for the ‘ch’ in ‘school’. Or really, I promised already: high grades on the Wuthering Heights presentations and they’ll be Heathcliff & Cathy cupcakes galore. See you in class.

xlovesx

Remember, remember

I think the biggest reason I am loving Ali’s lifeart challenges is because I’m using relatively current photos that I want to scrap…not the several-months-in-advance calendar that we use whenever we are preparing things for print, workshops or display. Well, that and clicking on all the links that get left in Ali’s comments to see how so many different crafters interpreted one idea. There is much good in all that.

This time everybody’s using a minimum of three stamps: one geometric, one text and one organic. I used the circle of dots stamp by Fontwerks for my geometric, the ornate crown by Autumn Leaves for my organic, and a few with text: two postage style stamps from Blade Rubber and a Heidi Swapp rolling word stamp for ‘people’, ‘place’ and ‘things’.

I love layering stamps but it can get a bit messy if things don’t want to sit right. So sometimes I use masks to keep things from overlapping too much – especially if I stamping more than one stamp in the same colour ink. I stamped the circle of dots first and wrote the text inside.

Then I stamped the same thing on a post-it note {and I am in love with these post-it notes, yes!} and cut it out to cover what has already been stamped. Then I stamped on top of that to make another layer. I originally wanted the big crown to be subtle, so I used a shadow ink.

But it was too pale and although it could be seen on the left background, it faded away on the brighter colour of the other side of the layout. So it ended up in black after all. A few more masks and stamps and it looked like this, and I called it quits there. Masking can also be super cool if you use a dye based ink with a background image then pigment inks and embossing powders on images on top.

It wasn’t that we just decided to burn a bunch of stuff, and it wasn’t homecoming during football season or anything. We had a bonfire night party last weekend with fireworks and a bonfire and a Guy and everything. Plus three Americans and a pumpkin pie. We had a barbecue in the dark which was priceless. Good, good times.

And happy time making this…after I packed the first sixty kits for the UKS crop. More about that soon. Still need to pick up the envelopes to start posting those this week.

xlovesx

Chase all {my} cares away

So I’m totally giddy about this. Getting to design stuff for Banana Frog Stamps. Love that they are British (it’s nice to have just a few things that aren’t imported in my stash). Love that they are easiest stamps to store IN THE WORLD. They are so low maintenance…that’s just what I need to keep with my clean space love. Thank you so much Bev for this opportunity to get my fingers inky.

This page was part of what I submitted and it is a hilariously whack project to make, so you should try it too: write a personal ad for yourself that takes up an entire page. Mine says SWF, 29, love live music, literature, paper crafts and cupcakes. Seeks more time to appreciate her fabulous life. Don’t worry: the boy is still here. It’s just an exercise. An exercise in using beautiful letter stamps from Banana Frog. eeee.

My love for other stamps lives on too. Stamps = happy.

xlovesx