Showing posts with label Xcut. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Xcut. Show all posts

Saturday, 10 October 2015

Autumnal Forest Scene - How to Get the Most out of Your Dies and Stencils

Hi and servus and welcome back to another little scene I have created using dies and stencils and today I have decided to share a full and detailed how-to with you as sometimes the results don't show all the necessary steps there are to professional layering with masks and stencils.

You have already seen me recently use dies to create masks and stencils (or for drawings) for the projects over HERE and HERE but this time I have taken the technique a bit further to create this autumnal scenery in my art journal:


You know - the Vienna Woods really look like this in autumn...especially close to sundown and with all the red leaves lying on the ground.

The forest and the fox are both done using masks and stencils (created from the fabulous new Tim Holtz "Birch Trees" Thinlits die and part of an X-Cut Create a Scene die set).



Using two stencils in one go provides a lot of new opportunities for creating a lot of depth - on my art journal page I used the lovely Dreamweavers stencil alongside my self-cut "stencil" done with the Birch Trees die (using some heavier white card for more rigidity).


The image above shows the Birch Trees "paper stencil" to the right - after use together with the metal Dreamweavers forest stencil. The effect on the page already looks pretty cool, but I wanted to take this all even further and add more depth by adding colour.

But let's start with the start - the preparation of the journal page!



With a worn wide bristle brush I added some brush strokes in medium white and two different browns - making sure the paint was rather dry on the brush so the strokes from the bristles would be visible. I created horizontal brush stroke lines as these would later imitate the bark texture of the birch trees.

When that was dry I placed the die cut birch trees (paper) stencil underneath the forest stencil and fixed both to my journal page with masking tape so they would stay in place.


 Then I stippled on some dark grey acrylic paint with a stipple brush. After removing the stencils the page looked like this (with the wider trees in the foreground and the thin ones in the back - but still rather "flat"):


You could of course leave that forest as it is, as it already looks quite good, but I wanted to add more colour and create the illusion of depth.

So I placed the birch tree stencil (the one I cut from paper using the die) once more on my page - making sure the shapes of the birch trees all lined up again - and stippled on some transparent acrylic paint (in my case I used Quinacridone Burnt Orange). The transparency of the paint still lets some of the texture underneath show through.



 And this is how my page looked like afterwards:




You see that the stippled on orange paint also got into the spots where the bark of the birch trees was meant to have its typical dark spots...so I went in with a fine tip brush and "repainted" these with the dark grey I had used at the beginning.



That looked much better now:



Next I needed a bit of dimension....so I began shading in some light orange to one side of the trees' trunks. I did so by using a small flat brush and only little paint - most of which I first brushed on the other page of my journal to get an effect close to dry-brushing. It is important to always paint the same side of the trunks as the orange colour is meant to be the reflection of the sunlight (which emerges from one point mainly - so imagining the sun and her position as a lit light bulb often helps concentrate on where to add colour and where not)



Now I found that I needed a frame to help make clearer where the birch trees "ended". So I roughly painted one using black acrylic paint and a wide soft brush.



 Then I did some more shading - this time on the shady side of the tree trunks with some Burnt Sienna and my brush and for a finish with my "ground espresso" Distress marker (smudging the drawn lines with my fingertip as long as the ink was still wet).




At that point I had several ideas on what to do with my autumn forest painting so far:


I could have cut it out and used it on a card alongside some die cut sentiments for example, but I wanted to do some more painting...

...so I decided to add a fox to the scenery. I had a fox die from the lovely X-Cut Create a Scene "Woodland" die set (that I used HERE), so I used it to create another stencil.


And here's how to do the fox:
1. Stencil on some orange paint. Let dry.
2. Paint on the white spots (feet, tail, ears and mouth). Let dry.



3. Draw the nose, eyes and claws with a fine tip black china ink pen. 


Well, there it was...but the ground it stood on didn't fit at all - it simply wasn't a "ground" but only the end of the painting. So I took a very small fine tip brush and some black acrylic paint and painted some forest ground (like mushrooms, sticks, grass and such).



Now that looked so much better! 
And I was done. 




I hope you like my page and the how-to! AND I hope that you maybe even dare try this for yourselves! I would love you to share your sceneries done with this technique with me (maybe leave a link with the comments section?)! 

Dies are one of my favourite things to experiment with as they can be used in so many more ways than just the obvious ones (although I love the "obvious" ones too...lol).

Thanks for stopping by!
Hugs and happy crafting,
Claudia
xxx


Friday, 21 November 2014

Woodland Magic

I recently stumbled over the lovely X-cut Build-a-Scene dies from docrafts and the "Woodland" set instantly won my heart. They have various lovely scenes to build, but as I am a dedicated lover of the forest AND of toy theatres (and shadowboxes in general), I just had to have this one.




The fox is already one of the five dies of this set, but I wanted to have an owl too - so I made one myself. Oh, I can imagine various animals in this enchanted woodland! But for a start I decided to stick to the fox and just add the owl and put the main focus on drawing on the die cut shapes to create an illustration kind of look.




The owl was fussy cut freehand and then painted with acrylics, a white sharpie and a black Faber Castell PITT artist pen (as was the whole forest).




My fox was done the same way and then glued to the layer I wanted him on.





This morning (after I had taken pictures of this project in dizzy light) the sun came out for some minutes and I shot an image of my woodland scenery in full sunlight...which makes the layers and shades pop!



What I love with shadow boxes or little stages of toy theatres is that they reveal more detail when being looked at from various angles:



This creates a special depth that draws you right into this enchanted realm on its own, doesn't it?




I had a wonderful time drawing the bark and the leaves and layering my finished stages to create this tiny piece of woodland. I haven't drawn for ages and this reminded me to start drawing again. Well, we'll see.... :)




I hope you like this piece. This dies set is such a lovely design! Especially this scene stole my heart right away!  Can't wait to do a variation of it! ;)

Hugs and happy crafting,
Claudia xxx


I enter this project to the following challenge/s:

The Artistic Stamper - Christmas is Coming
(the "Joy" and "Happy Holidays" quotes are stamped)

Craft Room Challenge - Anything 3D 
(which is the perfect challenge theme for a shadow box lover like I am. Thank you! ;)

Dies R Us Challenge Blog - Anything Goes - Christmas

Moo Mania & More - Trees
(their challenges are open to other formats than Moos as well....yay! Thanks for the information, Susie ;)

Saturday, 15 November 2014

Steampunk Destinations

Servus and welcome to the mid-month reminder for our challenge over at SanDee&amelie's Steampunk Challenges!

This month the team travels to various


and we are eager to learn about your favourite places or sights you love(d) or would like to visit!

Just hop over to our challenge to find out about my teamies' "hot spots"! Team B have prepared another bundle of inspiration for you and if you haven't seen the makes of team A yet, I highly recommend you do so too!

I found some old photographs from my ancestors which show a group of people hiking a glacier. I don't know who they are (or if they show some great-grand-uncle or -aunt or great-great-grand-parents) but I love the adventurous feel there is to these wonderful pictures!

I decided to make them the focal pieces of a kind of scrapbook-lay-out-journal-thingie and had a joyful play with various media like acrylic paint, distress inks, DecoArt white gesso, DecoArt Metallic Lustres, die cut cogs and gears and stamped ephemera.









I also used a portrait of my great-great-grandfather (left bottom corner) and a colour copy of my great-great-grandmother's old passport.




She was the beautiful lady whose photograph I used on this tag. (the portrait on the charm is an ancestor of mine too...possibly her mother or her mother-in-law...sadly most of the photographs of my ancestors do not say who is who).


http://vonpappe2.blogspot.co.at/2012/06/vorfahren-ancestors.html


But back to my actual project and some more close ups:



I smudged on the white Gesso with a palette knife. It always helps bring a lot of different elements together and gives designs a great time worn and weathered look.



The cogs and gears were die cut from heavy black card and coloured with DecoArt Metallic Lustres and other guilding waxes.






Distressing the edges of the glued on ephemera and the copies of the old photographs added to the weathered look just perfectly. Stamped texture with script and label stamps helped create more depth.




I hope you like my project and leave my place inspired to create something steampunk-ish - maybe even for our challenge...;)
 Thank you very much for stopping by! Hope to see you over at SanDee&amelie's Steampunk Challenges!

Hugs and happy crafting,
Claudia
xxx




Saturday, 1 February 2014

Time Travel - The February Steampunk Challenge over at SanDee&amelie's

Servus and welcome back, dear Steampunk and crafting friends and followers!

Double challenge feature day today over at my tiny creative spot (as on every 1st of the month). An hour ago the new challenge over at Our Creative Corner went online (please, scroll to the previous post to learn more about it) and now it's time for the new challenge



over at

SanDee&amelie's Steampunk Challenges

and this time our theme is

Time Machine



We leave it up to you how you interpret the theme and if you decide to make a tag, a card, some art journal pages, altered or crafted 3D projects or "simply" a painting or drawing that fits the theme....there are so many possibilities to work your way towards and around time and its machinery or the machines you have in mind...

We also once again have  a wonderful Guest Designer whose project you will just LOVE! And of course our DT has prepared some more for your inspiration :)

I was inspired to create a "Time Machine" we all know....a pocket watch. Well, of course it is no ordinary pocket watch but actually a time machine.... by spinning the clock hand you can travel forward or back in time, save time...maybe even alter time...uh oh....those of you who read Science Fiction know that altering time isn't such a good idea...so maybe this shouldn't be an option ;)




I received this awesome clock house chipboard from one of my dear crafting friends (thank you so much! - sorry I can't recall anymore who it was exactly ) and it was perfect for this challenge!
I die cut several circle "frames" from thick card using my Sizzix Circle dies...so I built something a little like a pocket watch shaped shadow box with its opening becoming wider towards the front as I needed enough room for a lot of cogs and gears layers.




I created a lid from some of the circles I cut out and fixed it to my pocket watch...erm...time machine with a hinge I made from a scrap of brown paper and a short piece of wire bent to shape.



So my time machine can be closed and opened easily.


It isn't always easy to embrace time, isn't it? Sometimes time doesn't fit our own pace, sometimes we wish we could go back and do something differently, sometimes we want it to pass us by or run faster, .... those moments when time and I are in harmony feel special. At least they do to me. And often I find that these moments are those when I find that I haven't been looking at my watch for hours (or even a whole day)... with nothing rushing me (or myself having come to a halt and letting time take me along on its "journey").


Often I discover myself in a new (and much more relaxed) way when I stop letting time dictate my pace and/or my day's work.
I also love those time travels back to my/our ancestors's days... by looking at old photographs and images or reading auto biographies. Also paintings from old painters take us on the most marvellous time travels back to centuries ago.

I covered the back of my time machine watch with some packaging paper with printed clocks on it so the ends of the brads are no longer visible. I crumpled the paper while applying it to the surface as long as the glue was still wet.


Edges and raised areas from cutting and embossing were given some DecoArt Metallic Lustre "Iced Espresso" for a bit of metallic shine.








I used the X-cut cogs and gears dies and cut several from brown paper and an old book page.

Actually there are about six to seven layers of gears and cogs. I always glued two to three to one frame before I added the next frame and layer... by doing so I covered up a lot of the gears but that way I achieved a lot of depth and "body" for my pocket watch.



Materials used on this make:

X-cut cogs and gears die, Tim Holtz brads, chit chat stickers and clock spinners,
Distress ink "Walnut Stain" and blending tool,
DecoArt Metallic Lustre "Iced Espresso",
brown paper, an old book page,
Cuttlebug cogs and gears embossing folder, Sizzix, glue, scissors, punching needle, a piece of wire, tweezers


and a heavy chipboard pocket watch frame.



















I hope you will join in our challenge over at SanDee&amelie's Steampunk Challenges and have fun creating/drawing/stamping your own "Time Machines". See you there!

Hugs and happy crafting,
Claudia x

Saturday, 18 January 2014

Pachyteria ameliensis - a Paper Bug Tutorial

Servus my dear crafting friends and followers,

time for a new DecoArt tutorial, isn't it?
Maybe some of you have already spotted that I am a great fan of bugs and insects in general... creating a "faux beetle collection" has been on my to do list for quite some time now...only until now I did not have the perfect idea for the how-to.





As this is going to be a quite long and picture-heavy tutorial post, you might wanna grab a cuppa something before you continue reading...

http://decoart.com/andyskinner/


Actually my bug plate measures about 11x11" - so it's quite big...but as the bug's legs were the criteria for the size of the whole project it just turned out that big. How can a bug's legs become a criteria anyway I hear you ask....well.... I shopped at some sales shortly after X-mas and came across an awesome cutting die from X-cut with beautiful flourishes. I cut them from black card and laid them on a piece of white paper and then it hit my eyes: if I cut off some over here and there they would make perfect bugs' legs. (yep, that's me...having some strange thoughts from time to time...I just can't help it *lol).


So here comes the list of the materials you need and then a detailed stepXstep of course:

- a flourish die (plus die cutting machine of course)
- some embossing folders (to add some texture to the body, the wings and the wings'
covers)
- DecoArt Texture Fierro black
- DecoArt Decou-Page matte 
- DecoArt  Dazzling Metallics "Venetian Gold", "'Copper" and "Bronze"
- DecoArt Paper effects "Peacock Gold"
- DecoArt Metallic Lustre "Champagne Ice" and "Iced Espresso"



 as well as

- heavy black paper or card
- some corrugated card (from mail boxes e.g.)
- two short pieces of wire
- brown paper or Kraft Glasseine
- drawing paper, heavy card (for the template), scissors, a pencil, a rubber, some glue, a brush for applying the DecoArt media,  foam stick pads,
- a piece of paintboard or similar about 10 to 11" in square (to use as your plate)

- you also might want to have some close up images of beetles at hand for reference



Here we go:





Step 1


Die cut pairs of flourishes from heavy black card.




Step 2

Take a closer look at some beetles' legs (if you haven't already done so) - then search for possible legs' forms with the die cut flourishes:




The following images only show some of a lot of possibilities for getting bugs' legs by cutting off some pieces from your flourishes. 


See? We have our first bug's leg! Yay! Make a second of the same shape. Then go look for two more possible legs' shapes and cut these out (in pairs) too. 


This one might be perfect for a pair of forelegs for example!




Step 3

When you think you have three pairs of bugs' legs ready, lay them on some white drawing paper to find the perfect positions. 





Step 4

Get  a pencil and maybe a picture of your preferred bug and draw the bug's shape with the legs being incorporated:


It can be any shape of bug you want. Some bugs are long and thin, others are small and look like halves of ping pong balls with wings and legs (and more colourful of course ;).




Step 5

Once you are content with the shape you have drawn, make it symmetrical. 



The easiest way to get symmetrical shapes is by folding the paper in half at the center of your drawing and trace the lines through to the other side. Then cut out the shape before unfolding it again.


Trace your final lines with a marker or a felt tip pen - this is going to be your template for the single parts of your bug - so you need to define exact shapes for all the parts of the bug: the wings' covers, the lower body, the upper body and the head. 

As you can see I drew the wings' covers a bit shorter than the body. Mostly they do not cover the body's whole length. 




Step 6

Lay your paper template onto some piece of heavy card and trace it with your pencil. Do this twice. One of these is going to be the template you might want to use for some more bugs, the other one will become one of the body's layers. 





Step 7

Now you can cut the paper template into pieces along the marked lines:

That way you get the smaller templates for the single parts/layers of your bug.





Step 8

Cut several layers (you can make your bug as "thick" as you want) for the whole body - one of them has to be cut from corrugated card (so you can fix the tentacles later)! This is what you should at least come up with:



2 whole body plates (one being corrugated card), 2 lower body plates (one being from heavy black card to emboss later),2 to 3 upper body plates (the second and third should each be cut out a bit smaller than the one before so you get "steps" around the edges) and a pair of wings' covers from heavy black card.



Step 9 


Glue the legs onto the first layer of your bug. I use DecoArt Decou-Page matte for this as it dries incredibly fast and is perfect for glueing layers of card evenly.





Step 10

Glue the layer of corrugated card onto the first layer with the fixed legs. See to it that this layer dries evenly (maybe fix it with cloths' pins during drying time).





Step 11

Set the layers you cut from black card aside (!) and glue on the remaining layers. Once dry give these and the legs a thin coat of DecoArt black Texture Fierro . You will love the decent sparkle and texture this will add to your bug!
(sorry I forgot to do a picture of this step... all black honestly *lol)




Step 12

Dry emboss the lower and upper body layers and the wings' covers using embossing folders that add texture that helps defining the structure of the wings's covers and the body. I used some Sizzix harlequin and wood grain but you can use whatever you think looks good.






Step 13



Get yourself some Kraft Glasseine (or brown kraft paper), fold it and draw one wing shape. Cut out a pair of wings. As you can see I used the wings' covers for reference so the size of the wing would fit. Usually bugs' wings are much longer and thinner than the covers (once unfolded).


Dry emboss your pair of wings (I used a crackle texture embossing folder).






Step 14

Start painting the black wings' covers with DecoArt Dazzling Metallics of your choice (I used "Bronze"):


Then paint the upper body and the head of your bug with various tones of Dazzling Metallics too, once all the parts are glued on:


Add a pair of eyes by applying two droplets of "Peacock Gold" DecoArt paper effects in the right places.






Step 15

Rub some DecoArt Metallic Lustre "Iced Espresso" onto the lower body of your bug. 






Step 16

Give the wings a gentle rub with DecoArt Metallic Lustre "Champagne Ice":





Step 17

First glue on the wings, then glue the wings' covers onto these. You can gently bend them to give them some dimension before you do so.


 Apply two pieces of bent wire for the tentacles (use some drops of glue on the ends and stick them into the layer of corrugated card - then leave to dry). 



You're almost done! Yay!

Fix your finished bug onto your heavy paint board plate by using sticky foam pads in several layers (I used four layers).  Stamp a "scientific name plate" for your bug onto a piece of cut out card and  glue it in place. 

NOW your are really done! 



I so hope that you like my bug! I guess I will be doing some more in the future...with different legs and body shapes, different colours and textures... to have my very own bug collection XXL! I hope you will have a lot of fun creating one of your own!

Here come some more close ups as usual. Enjoy!










Hugs and happy crafting,
Claudia xx