Wednesday, November 24, 2021

SSS Concentric Joy Cards

 *This post contains affiliate links to Simon Says Stamp


I thought it would be fun to pull out a 'non-Christmas' stamp to create some Christmas cards.

These cards feature my Concentric Doodle background for Simon Says Stamp.  For each card, I stamped the image once with Antique Linen Distress Oxide, and once with Versamark which was then embossed with a Gold Sparkle embossing powder from Wow.

Each of these panels was trimmed down.  I then fussy cut the center of the Concentric Doodle image to create a window, as well as around the outside of the image.  This entire piece was then popped up with foam tape over the Antique Linen panel.


I created one card from cream cardstock and one from white.

I used the Large Joy die for the sentiments, cutting the base piece from cream/white, and then the sentiment itself from Matte Gold cardstock.


This was centered over the fussy cut opening.

For the white cardstock card I also added a secondary sentiment from the From All of Us Sentiment Strips which was gold foiled.


These were really quite easy to create, and I just love how bold and sparkly they are.

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

SSS Handmade Holiday First Night

*This post contains affiliate links to Simon Says Stamp

I absolutely love the First Night die that is part of Simon's Handmade Holiday release.

These cards were a two-fer.  I was able to mix and match the negative and positive cuts to create two cards, which is just what you need when you're a little low on Christmas cards.

I started by inking up a panel of cardstock with Distress inks.  I used a combination of Tumbled Glass, Salty Ocean, Chipped Sapphire, Dusty Concord, and Black Soot for the sky, and then added a bit of Antique Linen and Mustard seed for the bottom areas.

The panel was then die cut as was a piece of white cardstock.

This die is one where the negative pieces come out, but then the die cut portion is part of the panel that you die cut.  It's great for making shakers or simply popping the panel up, but I wanted to create a discrete circle piece.  So, using a circle die slightly larger than the First Night die, I die cut around the images creating a thin frame.

I then die cut two additional plain circles, adding adhesive to them to use as the base of my inlaid die cut piece.

Then, the frame piece was added, and all the negative pieces were inlaid.  I also die cut the First Night die from Matte Gold cardstock for the stars and added them to complete the piece.

The finished nativity die cut piece was popped up over a panel of navy cardstock with a gold embossed sentiment from a retired Neat & Tangled set.  I also added two strips of Matte Gold cardstock along the navy panel to complete the look.

For my second card, the technique was the same, except this time the positive image was from the die cut inked panel, and the negative pieces were from the white die cut.  I again used Gold Matte cardstock for the stars, and this time popped the finished die cut piece up over a panel of striped patterned paper.  The sentiment is from a Hello Bluebird set.

I love the simplicity of this silhouette, and that I was able to get two cards from the same die cuts.

Thanks for stopping by and have a great Thanksgiving!

Thursday, November 18, 2021

SSS Handmade Holiday Night Before Christmas

*This post contains affiliate links to Simon Says Stamp

Today's card features the new Night Before Christmas Background from the Handmade Holiday release.  This is another of those backgrounds where the pieces come apart so you can stamp them separately.

For this card, I started by die cutting a circle from a panel of cardstock.  The circle and the negative cut were used as masks for the card.  I started by placing the die cut circle over a second panel of cardstock, and then inked the panel up with Broken China and Chipped Sapphire Distress Ink.

Then I placed the negative cut/frame over the panel, removed the circle, and inked up the moon using Antique Linen and just a bit of Mustard Seed Distress Ink.


After heat setting the ink, I replaced the circle and then stamped the entire panel with the Magic Stars Background in Versamark and clear embossed the stars.  This was a little more subtle than I wanted, so I went back and added a bit more Chipped Sapphire to help them stand out a bit more.

Next, I stamped Santa and his sleigh with Versafine and clear embossed.

My original plan was to just have the moon and sleigh, but I decided that it really needed to be grounded, so I added the skyline image at the bottom, again stamping with Versafine and clear embossing.


Finally, I added the sentiment, from the Holiday Greetings Mix 1 set, stamped with Versafine and clear embossed as well.

That's all for me today, thanks for visiting!

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

SSS Handmade Holiday, Stretching Your Embossing Folders

*This post contains affiliate links to Simon Says Stamp


Hi all!  I'm really excited to share today's cards.  My last two posts featured some of the new embossing folders from the Handmade Holiday release, and today I have a new technique that shows off these folders in a different way.

I recently picked up a package of Simon Hurley Stamping Foam, and thought it would be really fun to use it in conjunction with my embossing folders to create a block print look.

The foam is so easy to use.  You just heat it up with your heat gun, and press it into something dimensional for about 10 seconds.  I've seen people use rubber stamps, clear stamps, a piece of lace, a placemat, really there are so many possibilities.  Then you apply ink and stamp.  So easy.  It's reusable, when you reheat it, the design disappears and you can stamp it into something else.  If you don't reheat it, you can continue to use that impressed image for quite a while.   You'll see in the photos that you can still see the design, and these photos were taken several days after I created the cards.

This is so addictive!  You could spend hours making these prints.  For this first set, I used the Christmas Floral Embossing Folder.  I used the latest release of Simon Says Stamp Pawsitively Saturated Inks for all of these backgrounds.  


I started by stamping a panel with Latte, and then created another using Field.  


I really loved that bold green color, but thought the Latte wasn't quite Christmasy enough.  

Solution: I went back and stamped over top the Latte with the ink that was left on the Stamping Foam from the Field stamping.  


The sentiment is from the XL Christmas Greetings set. 

Next up I created a couple of cards using the Snowflake Visions Embossing Folder.  Again, I used a sentiment from the XL Christmas Greetings set.


For these cards I first stamped with Cadette.  Then, leaving the remaining ink on the stamping foam, I swiped around the edges with Royal ink and stamped again.  

I created two versions of this card because 1) it is such a quick and easy process - perfect for mass producing, and 2) I wanted to show how this is not a perfect science.  Each stamping is unique and has its own variations.



Next up, one of my very favorite embossing folders, Delicate Pine Branches.


Similar to the last two cards, I started by stamping with a lighter color, swiped the edges with a darker color (this time I went a little bolder with my swiping), and then stamped again.  

I used Cadette and Royal for the blue version and Fairway and Field for the green.


The joy sentiment is an older retired die which was adhered directly to the stamped panel, and I added a foiled secondary sentiment from the From All of Us Sentiment Strips.


The other thing that I really love about this technique that you can see in these joy cards is that it's a pretty forgiving technique.  Neither of these was lined up perfectly on the second inking when I added the darker ink around the border, but it really doesn't matter.  It even plays up that block printed feel.

This final set of cards features the Winter Trees Embossing Folder.


This time I used three ink colors for the stamped print.  I started with Marine, the lightest of the new blue inks.  Then I added Cadette around the bottom and sides and over maybe the top fifth of the image.  Finally, I finished off with a bit of Royal at the very top.

Again you can see that  the inking doesn't have to be perfect and each 'print' will be unique.


The sentiment for this first card is from the Snowflake Edges set, and on the second card it's an older sentiment from a retired Neat & Tangled set.


It was so much fun creating these panels.  I really enjoyed working with the Stamping Foam.  I loved that you get four foam blocks in a package, and not only can you press a different design into each side of the foam, you can also reheat the foam and use it on a different design.  And, of course, it is great to have another way to use all these amazing new embossing folders.

Tuesday, November 16, 2021

SSS Handmade Holiday Metallic Watercolored Embossing Folders

*This post contains affiliate links to Simon Says Stamp


Hi all!  There is a whole passel of new embossing folders in the Simon Says Stamp Handmade Holiday release.  I shared a couple cards last Friday using two and today I'm focusing on a couple others.  

For today's cards I decided to use some metallic watercolors to add some sparkle and shine to my embossed panels.  I used the Kuretake Gansai Starry Colors set, and simply added the metallic watercolor to the embossing folder by painting it onto the folder, immediately adding the cardstock, and then running it through the die cutting machine.

I started with the gold paint on white cardstock, using the River Damask embossing folder and really loved the effect.


For the sentiment I used the Merry & Bright dies.  For the base/shadow piece I added a soft wash of the gold watercolor so it blended in with the background a little better.  I also die cut the sentiment itself from both Matte Gold and red cardstock offsetting them just a hair so you get just a peek of the red.  A few gold sequins finished things off.

I liked this look so much I figured I would see how it worked with kraft.  This time I used a metallic white watercolor with the Snowflake Visions embossing folder.


This time I used the Large Rejoice dies, again adding that soft wash of watercolor to the kraft shadow piece.  The sentiment itself was cut from Matte Silver cardstock.


Again I added a sprinkle of sequins, this time using the Midnight Sparkle mix.

That's all for me today.  Come back tomorrow for some more Handmade Holiday inspiration.

Friday, November 12, 2021

SSS Handmade Holiday Blog Hop

*This post contains affiliate links to Simon Says Stamp


Hi folks!  Today I'm happy to be participating in a blog hop celebrating the Handmade Holiday release from Simon Says Stamp.  

This is the second day of a two day blog hop.  If you haven't participated in the first day, head over here to check out yesterday's posts.  It's definitely worth a look especially since there's a $25 credit to Simon Says Stamp being given away at every stop over the two days.  To be entered to win, just leave a comment.  Winners will be announced on the Simon Says Stamp blog on November 17th.

There's also a special offer available through this weekend.  Use HDMADE4U to get a free Salvaged Patina Distress Oxide pad free with any purchase!

My cards feature a couple of the new embossing folders from the release.  I started off both of these cards by adding inking with a Tim Holtz blending tool, and then enhancing the images with Copics.




After embossing a panel of white cardstock, I used Chipped Sapphire Distress Ink to enhance the panel, inking more heavily along the edges and more lightly towards the center of the card.  

What I love about this technique is that it takes a bit of the guesswork out of coloring the image.  Once I was done with the inking, I basically had a blueprint for how to color as some of the pine needles naturally inked up darker and others lighter.

I used three blue Copics to enhance the inking:  B95, B97, and B37.


Not every pine needle was colored, I tried to keep the darker blues to the outside edges, and mimicked the inking with the lighter colors leaving some of the pine needles uncolored to enhance the depth of the panel.

The sentiment is from the XL Christmas Greetings set.

Next, I pulled out the Holly Branch Embossing Folder.


This time I used Hickory Smoke to ink up the panel.  This helps to define the images, including adding the details in the leaves.

Then I went in with Copics to add some very simple coloring.  My goal was basically to define the images, but to add veyr light color so that you can still see all the details/veining in the leaves that the inking brought out.

For the leaves I used BG70, BG93, and BG96, I used RV11, R39, and F89 for the berries, and E70, E74, and E95 for the branches.

I added a simple mat and a sentiment from the From All of Us sentiment strips which was gold foiled.


Thanks so much for stopping by.  The next stop on the hop is Tina Smith, but I've included the full list below.  Happy Hopping!



Thursday, November 11, 2021

SSS Handmade Holiday Release Negative Cut Cards

*This post contains affiliate links to Simon Says Stamp


Hi all!  I have the quickest cards to share today.  They were created using the negative cuts from the Etched Delicate Frond tags that I shared yesterday.

I just love the lines of the frond, and was looking at my negative cut pieces and didn't want them to go to waste.

The panels were trimmed down, and then popped up over green cardstock.  

The sentiments are from the Sunshine and Rainbows and From All of Us sentiment strips and were foiled in gold.  It's kind of hard to see the sentiment on the left from the photo, but it says 'Don't Lose Hope.'

This is such a versatile die.  Although it's part of the holiday release, it can be used for any occasion.

I'll be back tomorrow with more Handmade Holiday cards!

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

SSS Handmade Holiday Release Tags

*This post contains affiliate links to Simon Says Stamp


It's release day at Simon Says Stamp!  There are all sorts of fantastic new things in the store, as part of the Handmade Holiday release, including the new dies that I'm showing off today.

I really love making tags, and as soon as I saw these dies I thought they would make perfect, elegant tags.

First I die cut the tags from both white cardstock and a dark green paper.  If you like these tags there are two options for purchase.  The solid tags shown in the picture above are part of the Suzy's Holiday Tags and Dies set which includes the dies as well as 12 sheets of Suzy Plantamura's illustrations printed on TH watercolor paper.  The other option is to purchase the tags separately - the Large Rounded and Large Standard dies which are an open rather than solid tag.  

Anyway, the next step was to cut the Etched Delicate Frond and Etched Berry Branch dies twice from white cardstock.  The two die cuts were layered on top of each other for some extra dimension, and then adhered to the tag die cut.  Once dry, the excess portions of the die were trimmed off.


I thought about adding sentiments to the tags, but I really love the CAS look, and leaving them 'blank' allows me to use them for any occasion.  

These were really very easy to put together.  I'll be back tomorrow with more inspiration, but in the meantime be sure to head over to Simon to check out the entire release.

Tuesday, November 2, 2021

October 2021 in Books

Can't believe that we are already into November!  October's reading list a little shorter.  It's been a busy month, and several of these books were slower reads that just kind of dragged.  Favorites this month were Yours Cheerfully, Two Old Men and a Baby, and Let Them Lead.  Here are the recaps:

Impostor Syndrome - Kathy Wang - fiction - three stars - This was just not a great book, probably closer to 2 1/2 stars rounded up.  It's about Julia, a Russian spy who is placed in a top tech company, somewhat facebook like, in the U.S>  After becoming established in her position as the #2 exec in the company, the Russians now want her to start stealing information/data for them.  The idea has a lot of promise, but honestly the book was boring, there were way too many things going on.  I've read lots of spy/thriller books and sometimes this is fine, there are all these threads that come together in the end and I like that.  The too many things going on was really just too much random character development that just didn't really translate to anything having to do with the plot itself.  Julie is particularly unlikeable and honestly so are the other characters.  Just a very meh book.

Apples Never Fall - Liane Moriarty - fiction - three stars - I love Moriarty, so was excited to read this one, but was disappointed.  It's about the Delany family.  The kids are all grown and out of the house, and the parents recently retired.  When the mother goes missing, the father is the prime suspect.  The first 50 pages of the book were good and had me pretty hooked, but then things just started to drag.  Moriarty always does a really good job with her characters, and in this book I thought they were still pretty well developed, but the storyline just failed.  I thought the resolution of the mystery was just not particularly believable and almost too pat.  Not my favorite.

The Big Finish - Brooke Fossey - fiction - four stars - I thought this was a cute book.  There seem to be a lot of 'old people' books written these days.  You know, crotchety old man/woman who doesn't have much family left and is old and grumpy meets younger person(s) who breathe new life into them creating a relationship that becomes important to both the old and the young person.  It's a common plot line these days, but one that I enjoy.  In this book Duffy and his best friend/roommate Carl are happily existing in a retirement community when Carl's grand daughter Josie (who he doesn't know about) suddenly appears on the scene.  The book explores the backstory about their relationship, but is also about how the retirement community comes together to help Josie out of the difficult situation she is in and grows tighter as a result.  I loved the characters and despite the fact that it's a familiar tale, it's an enjoyable one. 

Yours Cheerfully (The Emmy Lake Chronicles, #2) - A.J. Pearce - historical fiction - five stars - I really loved Dear Mrs. Bird, so I was thrilled that there was a sequel coming.  This book focuses on Emmy's work at Woman's Friend following the last book. She's still on probation, but starting to pick up new duties.  In particular, Woman's Friend has been tasked, along with the other women's magazines, to help recruit female workers for the war effort.  Emmy starts writing a series about women working at a munitions plant, and in the process makes many new friends.  In the meantime, she is continue to date Charles and their relationship is progressing.  Emmy is such a great character and you are just rooting for her.  I loved the new characters that were introduced too.  Love this one.

The Plum Trees - Victoria Shorr - historical fiction - four stars - I randomly pulled this one from the new shelf at the library.  It's about a woman, Consie, who finds an old family letter from 1945 which suggests that her uncle Hermann who was sent to Auschwitz may have escape.  This leads Consie to start researching her family history, looking for older family members who might have information.  I thought the story of Hermann and his daughters was really interesting, and very well written.  It really drew me in.  My criticism about the book is that that story was just fine on it's own.  You really didn't need the whole construct with Consie, in fact I thought it actually detracted from the story itself.  The only place where it perhaps made a difference was when she was researching escapes from Auschwitz, so you heard several different stories of how people were able to escape, but I'm guessing you could have worked some of those stories in either way.

Unleashed (Swindle, #7) - Gordon Korman - juvenile fiction - four stars - This one wasn't my favorite of the Swindle series, but I do love the characters and always enjoy the books.  In this book, Griffen and Darren Vader are competing against one another in an invention contest.  But then another member of the team also wants to enter an invention, and this splits the gang into two, girls vs. guys.  Meanwhile Luthor has has been having a violent reaction to the local exterminator's truck - he goes nuts whenever he drives by, and there's a new, weird, neighbor who refuses to let the team use his yard as a cut-through to school.  This was another where the plot was just a little too crazy, but the characters still amuse.

Two Old Men and a Baby: Or, How Hendrik and Evert Get Themselves into a Jam (Hendrik Groen, #3) - Hendrik Groen - fiction - five stars - I was a big fan of the first two Hendrik Groen books, so couldn't wait to start this one.  I will say I was a bit confused as I dived right in and missed the part about how this story occurred well before the other two books.  It took me a couple chapters before I went back and figured that out.  Still, it was fun to see a bit of Hendrik and Evert before they got into the nursing home and the Old But Not Dead Club.  The story made me laugh, and I loved the little plot twist, and how they got out of the mess they created.  A very fun read.

Harlem Shuffle - Colson Whitehead - historical fiction - three stars - This was a letdown for me.  I've really enjoyed Whiteheads previous books and this one fell short.  It's about Carney, whose legitimate furniture business sometimes dabbles in the illegitimate, he has been known to fence goods whose whereabouts are unclear, but he's trying to stay mostly on the up and up.  Trying to move the family to a nicer area.  Meanwhile, his cousin Freddie, who is continually in trouble, manages to draw him into the trouble time and again.  This was just OK.  I did not feel any particular affinity with Carney, and it really seemed to drag.  I also found some of the scenarios a bit of a stretch.  Just OK.

Linked - Gordon Korman - juvenile fiction - five stars - This is Korman's newest book, so of course I had to get it from the library for Carina.  She LOVED it.  She read it at least three times.  I really enjoyed it too.  It's a bit of a departure for Korman, it's much less silly and light that most of his books.  Link lives in a small town called Chokecherry.  The town is thrown into an uproar when someone paints a swastika on the wall at school.  The school and community, are shocked, but even more so when the swastikas continue to appear.  Link and his classmates decide they need to do something to counter this, and challenge themselves to create a paper link chain with six million links, representing each of the individuals who died in the holocaust.  Meanwhile a well known TikTok personality has latched onto the town and the chain bringing even more scrutiny.  I thought this was a great way to start a discussion about tolerance, peer pressure, telling the truth, the holocaust, etc.  All in a very approachable way.  Really good book.

The Stolen Lady - Laura Morelli - historical fiction - four stars - This book was OK.  It's probably more 3 1/2 stars rounded up.  It's one of those dual timeline books.  One timeline tells the story of Bellina, the nurse/servant of Lisa, a.k.a. Mona Lisa, describing her life a well as how the painting came to be.  The second timeline is from WWII, and the journey of the Mona Lisa and Louvre archivist Ann, as well as many of the other works from the Louvre, as the travel about France trying to avoid confiscation by the Nazis, bombing, and conditions that will cause the works to deteriorate.  This was a slower read for sure.  The Bellina story I thought was a little extraneous, there was a lot that was more about her vs. the painting which I found the more compelling part of her story.  I never knw that the family that commissioned the painting never actually received it or saw the finished work.  The WWII storyline moved a little more quickly.  I thought it was pretty fascinating how the were continually moving the artwork from different locations/depots and managed to keep them safe and in French hands.  

Let Them Lead: Unexpected Lessons in Leadership from America’s Worst High School Hockey Team - John U. Bacon - nonfiction - five stars - I love hockey books, and this one sounded really interesting.  Depending on your point of view, it's a hockey story masquerading as a leadership book, or a leadership book with an inordinate amount of hockey in it.  In either case, I really enjoyed it a lot.  I kind of skimmed over the leadership parts, but those were kind of minimal.  I just loved the story of the team, how they turned it around by basically creating a new culture/ethic.  I love that the author/coach is still involved in the lives of the players and that he sprinkles in where they are now, how they are doing, etc.  Strongly recommend.

I'm currently reading A Most Clever Girl.  Next up are The Auschwitz Photographer and How Lucky.  Would love to hear what you guys have been reading!