I love to make use of items that I’d normally throw out and
the main components of this project contain exactly that.
Hopefully you saw my two previous projects using the
Globecraft & Piccolo Bejeweled Snowflakes accents set, if you need a
refresher you can find them here (Snowflake Votive) & here (Happy Winter Card). For this project, I used the little
snowflakes that are in the set and my "stencil" that I made and used for the Happy Winter Card. There
are 6 adorable snowflakes, measuring about 3/4", that I had left in the set, so I used them up!
Before I get into the tutorial, let me tell you about the
products I used:
Small Snowflakes from Bejeweled Snowflakes
Stencil I used in making the Happy Winter Card (from Bejeweled Snowflakes)
Frame, 7” x 7” square
White Gesso
Distress Paint in Stormy Sky
Dylusions Spray Ink in London
Blue
Ranger Archival Ink in Jet Black
Fishing Line (or other clear string material)
Oval Word Charms
Piece of White cardstock
Sentiment “Warm Winter Wishes” by Quietfire Design
I know it seems like a daunting amount of stuff but most of
it you use only once. First thing I did
was work on the snowflakes. I had
originally wanted to have one side glitter and one side embossing enamel but
that didn’t work out very well.
The
detail in the flakes was a wee bit too defined for the glitter I had so I
switched to embossing both sides.
I embossed both sides about 3 times (don’t forget to roll your jar of
embossing enamel – it blends all the granules and colors perfectly!), which was
tricky because each time I embossed a side the other side grew hot as well and
would end up either slipping off or making a finish that I didn’t like. My solution was to go slower and use a
lighter touch with my heat gun; I also wonder if the fact that I have a Weller
Heat Gun which is actually made for industrial applications may have caused the
powder on the other side to keep reheating so much. When I find my regular
crafty heat gun, I will do an experiment and see if the heat was too hot.
I know I could of made this work, but I didn't really like the glitter |
These are only embossed once - like my fingerprint? |
Once the flakes were embossed to my liking I set them aside
to completely cool. At this point, I
wasn’t sure how I was going to hang them but I had a very vivid picture in my
mind of how I wanted the assemblage to look – I thought about threading fishing
line through each flake, of tying each flake to cord, using fibers, and a few
other ideas. The more I thought about it
the more I liked the idea of having the flakes hang invisibly – so I used
fishing line!
In the picture, you can barely see the fishing line
stretched across one of my homemade art boards (cardboard covered with wax
paper) and held in place with painters tape.
I then glued each snowflake to the line with E6000. I made sure I used plenty of line and I
matched up the snowflakes so they would all be in about the same place. I let them dry overnight.Way too dark! |
I went to work on what I think is the focal point of the
assemblage, the “stencil” I made from the Bejeweled Snowflakes set – the stencil
is actually made out of the waste leftover after all the items are punched out. This is the third project I am getting out of
just one set. When I made the Happy Winter Card,
I had spritzed the stencil with Dylusions Spray Ink in London Blue to make the
image on the card. The stencil was
really saturated with the spray ink and much darker than what I wanted for this
project so I painted some gesso over the London Blue and got the perfect, icy baby
blue color I wanted. Then to give the
stencil a bit more stability I painted over it with Glasstique Gloss FinishingGlaze.
Perfect!!! |
The frame that I used came from a picture bought at the
Dollar Store and had gotten ruined – and the frame was originally black. So I
gessoed over the black, twice to be sure it was covered completely and then
colored it with Distress Paint in Stormy Sky using a paint brush dipped right
into the bottle. I finished it off with
a few light spritz of Dylusions Spray Ink in London Blue, let it dry a few seconds
and swiped it very lightly with a baby wipe.
I had already stamped the sentiment on a piece of white
cardstock using Ranger Archival Ink in Jet Black; all I need to do was trim it
up a bit and it was ready to go!
All the pieces ready to be assembled! |
Now that all the pieces were done the fun part – putting it
together! This is when I discovered my
fishing line refused to stay straight and kept curling up on me. No fear! I dug into my charms stash and decided
that these oval word charms would fit the bill nicely. I attached one to the bottom of each
snowflake line and they worked like a charm (pun intended), in addition to
tying the fishing line, I also added a dab of E6000 to each knot. Now that my curling issue was fixed, I moved
on to getting the stencil ready to be attached to the frame. First thing I did was poke 3 holes into the
stencil and thread the fishing line with the snowflakes through the holes,
being careful to make sure all the lines were even with each other, then I flipped
the stencil over and used E6000 to glue to fishing line to the back so the rows
of flakes would stay put. I let that dry
overnight.
The finishing touches are easy – I glued the stencil to the
inside of the frame & then attached the sentiment. It took a bit of thinking and problem solving
but I think this is an awesome winter decoration. I hope you had as much fun reading about it
as I had making it!
Another view |
Next week I officially start spring, regardless if the weather cooperates or not.
Thanks for reading and I hope you & yours have a
fabulous week!
1 comment:
What a wonderful idea to use your left over pieces for your project. Just goes to show you how crafty crafty people can be.
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