How can I stamp thee?

Let me count the ways!

I think Branch Out is one of the most versatile stamp sets Stampin’ Up! has produced.  I have used it for all four seasons, multiple holidays, and a variety of “just because” occasions.  It’s not currently in the catalog, but it’s on the dormant list (113200, $22.95)  and you can order it.  Matter of fact, I wish you would – I would be thrilled if  Stampin’ Up! would choose to take it off the dormant list and return it to the Idea Book and Catalog next July.

I saw a beautiful card – and I confess I cannot remember the location – where the crafter used another tree set with the In Colors to create a vibrant autumn card.  I’ve made a few changes but I’m pleased with the results.

Autumn_Branch_Out_crop

  • Branch Out Stamp Set
  • Soft Suede, Rich Razzleberry , Crushed Curry and Rose Red Classic ink pads
  • Very Vanilla, Pumpkin Pie, RIch Razzleberry, and Apricot Appeal cardstock; Thoroughly Modern Designer Series Paper
  • Big Shot and Stampin’ Up! Perfect Details Texture plate
  • Soft Suede Polka Dot Ribbon
  • Stamp-a-ma-jig

This is as close to Autumn Colors as we’ll see here on Maui.  It’s nowhere near the same as seeing the colors change in real life, but it makes me think of Autumn all the same.

Branch_Out_stamps

Branch Out 113200 $22.95

A generous soul

My wonderful friend and upline Crystal is one of the most generous people I know.  I think “Give” is her middle name.  If that isn’t enough, she’s also more fun than a case of wine, a full box of chocolates, and the entire Stampin’ Up! catalog rolled into one! (OK, maybe not the entire catalog.)  When we get together to stamp, we always laugh more than anything else.

This card is one of a number of samples she made for me when the Idea Book and Catalog preview came out.  That’s how she is – if she makes a card for herself, she’ll make one for me too.  She makes the cutest cards and I’m always thrilled when I show up at her door and she holds out a little stack just for me.

Little Fat Owl Just for You

Little Fat Owl Just for You

  • Animal Stories and Teeny Tiny Wishes stamp sets
  • Melon Mambo, So Saffron, and Whisper White cardstock; Tall Tales Designer Series Paper
  • Chocolate Chip Classic Ink pad
  • 1 3/8″ and Scallop Square punches, Soft Suede polka dot ribbon
  • Big Shot and Stampin’ Up! Backgrounds I

Can I tell you a secret?  It’s her birthday today.  Happy Birthday, Crystal!

Make a card, send a card

Today is World Card Making Day.   I would hasten to add that I don’t need a designated day to make a card.  It’s something I enjoy doing (I know, News Flash!) and it’s something that I especially enjoy teaching others to do.

If we’re brutally frank about the matter, World Card Making Day is  a marketing idea.  It’s a great idea, but in my opinion, there should be more to making a card than selling cardstock, ink and paper.  Everyone makes cards for different reasons and with different motivations.  Some make cards for their own pleasure, satisfied with participating in the creative process.  Others make a card with a recipient in mind, carefully selecting colors and images that are designed to bring happiness, comfort or inspiration to a special person.  Some people may even choose to make a card simply because it’s more economical, although if you were to inventory my card making supplies you might question that premise.

In the end,  it doesn’t matter why you make a card.  The important thing is that the process satisfies you.  It’s a very forgiving craft, with near-infinite options.  The basic materials are inexpensive enough that if you finish your card and you really don’t like it, you can let go of it.  It’s just paper.

Your hand made card, whether simple or complex, holds the potential to bring you to someone else.  Make a card – and send it.  A card is really just paper and embellishment until it is given away.  Then it becomes a message of love and caring straight from your heart to another.

Inspired_by_Nature_cc238_crop

  • Inspired by Nature and Teeny Tiny Wishes stamp sets
  • Sage Shadow, Basic Gray, Pretty in Pink and Whisper White card stock
  • Sage Shadow, Basic Gray, Pretty in Pink and Rose Red Classic Ink pads
  • Sponge daubers, Gray Taffeta Ribbon, Champagne Mist shimmer paint, and Stamp-a-ma-jig

Happy World Card Making Day.

How do you choose?

I love this bird from the Always set.  It caught my eye the first time I saw it.  The other images in the set complement it well, and are especially useful when you need to give some texture or design to a solid piece of cardstock.

Plant your feet firmly and let your heart have wings

Plant your feet firmly and let your heart have wings

  • Soft Suede, Bermuda Bay, Old Olive and Naturals Ivory cardstock; Retired Designer Series Paper
  • Always and Hope Happens stamp sets
  • Soft Suede and Bermuda Bay Classic Stamp pads
  • Embossing powder and heat tool

Over the years, I’ve learned to be more critical when I select a set for myself.  If it’s for me, of course I have to love the images, but I also look for versatility.  I’ve bought my share of “one hit wonders” and to be honest, I begrudge the room they occupy in my little bitty stamping space (known to the rest of the family as the laundry room…sigh).  As my style develops, I have to watch that I don’t select the same thing again and again- natural images like birds, flowers, and trees.  Sure, I have some holiday stamps, and a few that would work as baby or wedding items in a pinch, but maybe it’s time to branch out to something new.  Ha.  Maybe I’ll get Season of Friendship.  I’ve been looking at that tree for the longest time.

It’s Breast Cancer Awareness Month

Look familiar?  I wanted to take the same images and do a simpler layout.  I love these flowers, whatever they are.  They have to be wildflowers – they just have that La Dee Dah look about them.  Bloom where you’re planted and all that.  Clearly for the First of October they had to be pink.

Pink Wildflowers for October

Pink Wildflowers for October

  • Pretty in Pink, Regal Rose, Whisper White, and Kraft cardstock
  • Soft Suede, Always Artichoke, Pretty in Pink, Regal Rose and Summer Sun Classic ink
  • Wonderful Watercolors stamp set
  • Big Shot and Texturz plate
  • Stampin’ Dimensionals, Aquapainter, and Dazzling Diamonds

I love to watercolor.  It’s relaxing to me and for some odd reason I can let go of my otherwise obsessive need for perfection.  Perhaps that’s because I really don’t know anything about the technique, and so I just dive in with my aquapainter and my ink refills and play.  We should all play more.

One more thing: it’s National Breast Cancer Awareness Month.   Check your breasts.  Do it once a month.  Don’t make excuses.

Happy Watercolors

Have I mentioned that I don’t understand the Dormant List?

This is a happy card.  It’s a happy birthday card.  It’s a sunny yellow card.  And it’s a Dazzling-Diamonds-sparkle-your-heart-out card.  How could it not be happy?

Working with the various shades of Stampin’ Up! yellows – Barely Banana, So Saffron, Summer Sun, even (once in a great while) Yo Yo Yellow always lifts my heart.  This year we even have Crushed Curry, an intense, saturated, Smell The Spices kind of yellow!  A card like this shouldn’t wait to be sent.  It needs to be on its way in a hurry.

Sunny Banana Watercolors

Sunny Banana Watercolors

  • Naturals White, Summer Sun, Old Olive, Soft Suede and Barely Banana cardstock
  • Soft Suede, Old Olive, Pumpkin Pie, Summer Sun, and Barely Banana Classic ink
  • Wonderful Watercolors, Teeny Tiny Wishes and En Francais stamps; Textures Wheel
  • Aquapainter, Dazzling Diamonds, Stampin’ Dimensionals, and Stamp-a-ma-jig

I fought this layout for a while – it’s a Splitcoast Stampers Sketch Challenge.  I couldn’t figure out what to use for the back panel – everything was too dark or too light – nothing was Just Right.  The Texture wheel by itself was too light, but when I grabbed the paper and sponged the dickens out of it I decided it would work.  The cardfront also has the Texture wheel, but you may have to trust me on that.

Why don’t you pick up some yellow and brighten your day?

Maybe I’m not cut out for Mojo…

I dunno…I’m finding these Mojo sketches really challenging.  I guess that’s the idea, but sometimes it’s a little tough on my ego.

I confess, that’s Wild Wasasbi Designer Series Paper from a couple of years ago.  It’s true:  I hoard paper.  Scraps, sheets, even the odd package or two.  I’m trying to use it up, so when you see it, think creatively!

Mojo 106

Mojo 106

  • Barely Banana, Summer Sun, Very Vanilla, and Chocolate Chip cardstock; retired Wild Wasabi Designer Series Paper
  • Summer Sun, Wild Wasabi, and Chocolate Chip Classic Stampin’ Pads and Stampin’ Write Markers
  • Wings of Friendship and Teeny Tiny Wishes Stamp sets
  • Champagne Mist shimmer paint
  • Clear Embossing powder, heat tool, Fire Rhinestone Circle brads, double rectangle punch
  • Big Shot and Scallop Circle #2 Bigz

Maybe I’ll give the Mojo another week.  Can’t hurt.

Stretching in new directions

Trying something new is almost always a good thing.  (Let’s be reasonable here – some things should never be attempted – like the stuff with the caption “professional driver on closed course”.)  Sometimes the result isn’t what I expected, but in the process I invariably learn something.  It’s easy for me to continue doing the same thing – another time I’ll torment you with the trials and tribulations of growing out the haircut I’ve worn for oh, 30 years – but you shouldn’t have to do something the same way for 30 years before you try something new.

I’ve seen these Tri-fold (or shutter, or whatever-you-want-to-call-it) cards in a number of galleries and went looking for a starting point.  Bonnie at the Craftiblog posted a beautiful tutorial with a number of adaptations, and though I’m not sure she was the first to do so she has certainly done an outstanding job.  This format has infinite variations and goes together much more easily than you would imagine by looking at it.

Thoroughly Modern Tri Fold

Thoroughly Modern Tri Fold

I prepared this card for my hostess club last week.  When I showed them the sample of our project, I got the reaction I expected – half  “oooh, ahhh” and half  “you’ve-got-to-be-kidding-me!”  The cardstock was cut and scored and they all had a little package of pieces.  By the end of the evening, the cards were all finished and everyone headed out to solicit their own “oooh, ahhh” reactions.

  • Sahara Sand 12×12 Textured cardstock; Whisper White, Soft Suede, Bermuda Bay and Rose Red cardstock; Thoroughly Modern Designer Series Paper (and yes, a teeny scrap of Cool Caribbean – my precious stash)
  • Bermuda Bay Classic Ink pad; Rose Red, Bermuda Bay, and Soft Suede Stampin’ Write Markers
  • All Holidays, Oval All, Wings of Friendship, and Teeny Tiny Wishes Stamp Sets
  • Big Shot, Daisies #2 Bigz Die, SU Little Leaves Sizzlet
  • Butterfly, Large Oval, 3/4″ circle (base for daisy), 1/2″ circle, Word Window and Modern Label punches
  • Build-a-brad, Aquapainter, Stampin’ Sponges, Pop-Up Glue dots, Bone folder

Try something new today!

I think I can…

I love this little train.  Must be in my blood.  My dad has been a model railroader since he was a teenager.  Growing up, we never had a garage like all the other families in the neighborhood.  We had an HO scale model railroad.  The garage was enclosed and carpeted complete with stereo, phone service, and a workbench.  And we were NEVER allowed to call it cute.  It was True To Scale.  Lifelike.  Authentic.  On vacations, we would visit the places my dad’s layout represented in true-to-scale, lifelike authenticity.  One year, I noticed that the station on the layout at home didn’t look exactly like the real thing.  Not the first time I should have learned to keep my thoughts and observations to myself.

Anyway, I love trains.  This one seems like a little boy train and would be perfect for a baby card, but I was actually thinking more along the line of Little Engine That Could.  Not exactly true-to-scale and lifelike but absolutely authentic.

Happy Choo Choo

Happiness Train

  • Choo Choo and Hope Happens stamp sets; Right on Track wheel
  • Real Red, Old Olive, Brocade Blue and Basic Black Classic Ink pads and Stampin’ Write Markers
  • Real Red, Old Olive, Kraft, Whisper White and Naturals White cardstock
  • Brocade Blue 5/8″ grosgrain ribbon, Natural twine, and Playground Designer Buttons
  • Stampin’ Dimensionals and Pop-Up glue dots

And yes, my dad still runs trains.  The garage is still home to the HO layout, but there’s now a Garden Railway winding it’s way in and out of my mom’s beautiful flower beds.  Everyone in the family has a business along the railway, too.  You’ll know which one is mine.  Yep.  Anne’s Stampin’ Up!  Only brick and mortar  Stampin’ Up! business outside of Kanab, Utah.

I don’t get it.

Who makes up the Dormant List?  Some of the stamps that are on the dormant list break my heart.  How about Wonderful Watercolors?

Wonderful Watercolors 113688

Wonderful Watercolors 113688

This set has such a soft, soothing style that caused me to move towards a more vintage look.  I had a “dyed with tea” sort of theme going on in my head as I stamped and moved things around.  The card started looking a little dark, but when I created a background out of the stem image I was satisfied with the color balance.

Vintage Watercolors

Vintage Watercolors

  • Rich Razzleberry, Soft Suede and Naturals Ivory cardstock
  • Rich Razzleberry, Soft Suede, and Mellow Moss Classic Ink
  • Wonderful Watercolors and Sincere Salutations Stamp sets
  • Wide Oval and handheld rectangle (ret) punches, Very Vanilla Taffeta Ribbon
  • Aquapainter, Stamp-a-ma-jig and Stampin’ Sponges

You can link to the Dormant List from the sidebar of the blog or by just clicking here.  A word of warning though – the link to the Dormant List is a link to the general Stampin’ Up! customer website and not my Demonstrator Website.  They’re two different places.