Close to My Heart

I’m still here

I’m still here, just trying to make hay.  This requires me to be on a tractor, and although the technology is there, it would be very difficult to update a blog while baling hay!

I thought I would share some older scrapbook layouts as inspiration to us. (And to re-visit some of the old techniques and embellishments I use to love and use all the time!)frenchi 1a

This outfit was one of my Mom’s favorites on our daughter.  Funny to think in a few short days my “little baby girl” will be 12!  yikes.  When did that happen?   Looking at this layout shows me how far I’ve coming in scrapbooking and paper crafting in general.

frenchi 1

 

I remember trying and taking the photos in this next layout for our Christmas cards.  It turned out I needed to wait until my husband could help as the girl and I just couldn’t work it out on our own.  I was so excited to be random stamp my background as I got to use so many of my new cool toys!

Christmas 1a Christmas 1

autumn day

I was so proud of this last page.  I remember how exited I was tearing the paper for the “Falling leaves” and wadding it up to make the leaves look more life like.  It’s funny to look back!  Did you notice the “negative” leaves at the top.  I struggled with how to use those.  The punch set was one my Mom got me for my birthday.  It had the snowflake from the red and black LO as well as the small leaf in “Autumn Day.”    I still use that set from time to time.  It’s funny looking back at these pages and experiencing all the joys I remember when I created them!  What do your old pages bring to mind?

Happy Crafting!

Fun, Fast, Fall Project – Wine Glass Shade

I really enjoy the ambiance of candlelight.  For whatever the reason, I relax and slow down.

In the summer, especially up  here in the north where it stays light so much longer, candles just don’t work well.   We’ve had such a cool summer that it has felt like October weather.  I’m starting to think of hot soup simmering on the stove, candles lit around the living room and a good book, all while I’m wrapped in an afghan.

wineshade-schoolWhere is this leading you may ask?  Each year I look forward to pulling out my wine glass candle shades, and  I typically make one or two new shades each fall.  As I was on a tractor this afternoon I started planning my fall design and decided that I would share my pattern and instructions with my blog followers.

If you have the Art Philosophy cartridge, you will have an easy time putting these together.

I scored a whole box of wine glasses at a flea market for $3, so I’ve been creating many of these for hostess gifts, thank you, or just because.  Like I said quick and easy.

One tip if you stamp on your vellum and emboss it, it is better to go slow and take a little longer to “melt” the embossing powder than to burn the vellum and have to cut it all over again.  (Not that I have ever done that!)

Here are the written instructions as well as the printable cut out pattern if you don’t have a cricut. Happy Crafting!

wineshadeinstructionswineshadetemplate

Calendar of Events – Sept & Oct

Hi Everyone,

I don’t know about you, but as a visual learner I like seeing dates visually, so I have put together the calendar with my upcoming events and workshops.  Click on the calendar to see.Sept 2013 Calendar

Sept 3rd – Order deadline for Laughing Lola

Sept 12th – Workshop – Laughing Lola

Sept 16th – Order deadline for ProPlayer

Sept 19th – Free Crop and Club Night

Sept 26th – Workshop – ProPlayer

Oct 2013 CalendarOct 1st – Order deadline Sarita Workshop

Oct 10th – Workshop – Sarita

Oct 15th Holiday Gift Guide

Oct 17th – Free Crop and Club Night

Oct 18th-20th – Weekend Crop – Cedarville

You might want to bookmark this particular blog so you can keep on top of these dates for the next couple of months.

Happy Crafting!

 

Third Laughing Lola Layout, Finally

Well,  here it is the last of the Laughing Lola LOs.  These photos are from our wedding reception almost 18 years ago.  I didn’t start scrapbooking until 2007 and as I mentioned in an earlier blog I am running out of printed photos so I’m being forced to use the older ones.

LLLO3leftfina

LLLO3rightfina

(It’s probably a good thing really!)

 

 

I used an overlay from Artbooking on the far left and also used the “together” banner for my title. The overlay was cut at 16″ (no real dial size) and ended up being approximatelyl 5.25″ x 11.25″) and the banner was cut at 11″, again, real dial size off.  I didn’t have journaling per say for this layout as I have TONS of photos from the reception, but I didn’t want to lose the names over time.   I punched out file folder tabs and cut them in half.  I wrote the names of the attendees on the tabs and placed them next to the photos.  Journaling, done.

dryembo2adryembo1aIt took several tries to get the correct size for the overlay, so I had many oval “petal” shaped pieces lying around my craft table.  Being the creative maven that I am, I thought, I’ll make a flower, so I did.  I first embossed  all the petals using the rub on tool.

 

dryembo3aI then attached them to one of the diamond shaped pieces from the overlay.  I would attach them like a compass (one at north, then south, then east, followed by west).  Once I had those one, I would attach more in between each of those and continued to attach petals in this fashion until I had a full flower.

dryembo4a

I had a flower from the dimensional elements that was just the right size.  Popped it in the middle and then had to figure out where to place it on my page.

This layout challenged me for some reason.  I tried many different embellishments and layouts until I was happy this the results.  (Having too many, yes, shocking I know, I have too many embellishments, anyhow having too many embellishments can sometimes hamper my creative juices.  Too many choices and all.)

LLLo3bothThis layout stayed on my crafting table for 3 full days until I ended up with this.  I have done other pages for our wedding album, and they all have pearls, so I think I will incorporate pearls as my thread to continuity in my album.  I might post some of the those pages later.

Wanted to remind you about the Be and Alpha contest and my paper giveaway.  Be sure to enter to win both of these!

 

Happy Crafting!

Techniques used on Laughing Lola Pages

Well,  here they are.  Most of these are probably familiar to you, but there are always new scrapbookers every day so maybe this will help someone.  Also, as my friend once said.  “When you do more, you can do more and you’ll have more.”  What she meant is the more techniques you use on a regular basis, the more techniques you will do without even thinking about it, then with the basics masters you’ll be able to learn more techniques,  expanding upon what you already have in your bag of tricks!  cuttingframes

First Tip/Trick is a paper saver.

Some of the new CTMH paper packs have colors that are exclusive to that paper.  This is great in that we can stay trendy with our colors, but this can also pose a challenge as we might run out of a particular color and don’t want to purchase another paper pack for that one sheet.  To help stretch my exclusive cardstock colors from a kit,  if I’m using it for photo matting, I’ll cut the size I want, then remove the center to be used later.  In this example I cut a 1/2″ frame for my photo to be placed, then kept the center to use later.  punch from DE ScrapsYou don’t have to be exact on your cutting, just make sure your photo will overlap all sides.

Another paper saver is using the left over scraps from dimensional elements and punching out shapes to use later.  These were punched from the edge of the Laughing Lola Dimensional Elements.cuttingribbonends

Do you know how to cut ribbon ends on paper so they end up being centered?   Here’s what I do.

First, as I often use scraps for my little do dads, they are rarely an even inch measurement.  To work around that, I center the paper on my cutting mat grid.  This allows me to clip a line up the center of the paper.  cuttingribbonends2It doesn’t matter how far you clip as you will becuttingribbonends3 cutting from the corners to the top of that line.

So, pick up your paper so you can see it and starting from the bottom corner angle your scissors to end at the top of the line you just clipped.  Do that for both sides.

inkingribbonends

 

I often like to ink the edges of my paper to give it some depth.  Sponges can’t reach all the way into the corner, and I can’t be bothered to get out a cotton swap, so I use the corner of my ink pad.  you might need to push your paper in at an angle (unlike this photo where it just worked out perfectly).

 

 

 

LLFeatureRightDry

When I do a scrapbook workshop, I strongly encourage people to dry fit their layouts.  This will save many embellishment opportunities as well as give you a chance to “tweak” it to make it your own.    This is my layout not glued down.  I then decided I want to ink all the edges of the papers and the base page, cut the ribbon ends for my cluster in the top right corner, and rounded the corners of the strips poking out from the left of the photos.  I will also point out that the original pattern called for 2 x 2 photos on the left and I just couldn’t cut mine down that much so I used 2.5 x 2.5.  It meant I had to adjust the mat size for under them, but I don’t cut any of the photo mats until I’m doing the dry fit, so it was fine.  I’ve cut so many photo mats and not used them as my photos didn’t match exactly, that I now mark in my books which pieces are mats and I don’t cut them when I am cutting the rest of the papers.  The pattern used on this was the workshop brochure from the Laughing Lola workshop on the go scrapbooking kit.

LLFeatureRightDryfitThe right side is also dry fit together.  See the mat that has the center cut out of it?  I have recently started double and triple matting and I love the look.  Soon I hope to shake things up and double and triple mat and twist them too!   Might be a little adventurous for me, but when I find the right photos watch out!

See my list of what products I used? (on the right)  I had an old desk from my Grandmother that had this on it and when we moved the desk out of the house I didn’t want the glass to break so we put it on my crafting table.  It’s actually been a great addition.  My four year old will come and draw with dry erase markers while I work and I can make a list of my products.  If I use a permanent maker, I snap a photo, then clean it off with rubbing alcohol.  By using a permanent marker I don’t have to worry about it rubbing off on my layouts.

Here’s the finished layout.

LLFeatureleftFinish3aLLFeatureRightFinish

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The next Layout uses two single pages. The right side is from the Artbooking cartridge (p87) and the left used pattern #17 from the Make it from your Heart Vol2 book.    I choose the Artbooking one because I was excited to do a Layout using the cartridge, and I choose the other because I had 2 photos left and it seemed like it would be a good fit.  I didn’t ink the edges, just punched out different size circles, cut the word “Epcot” on the cricut out of the bronze glitter paper.  I used the bronze glitter paper to balance the bronze strip on the left page.  I embellished with the punched circles, sequence ribbon from the black mini medley and also used the glitter buttons and single sequence from the medley as well.    Tips for getting your photos to fit just right in the overlay can be found here.LLFeatureleftFinish2 LLFeatureRightFinish2ahttp://www.craftingwithamanda.com/2013/08/09/laughing-lola-artbooking-layout/

Happy Crafting!