This week’s challenge from
Hels Sheridan is to make something pink. PINK?
Pink?
I am decidedly not a pink girl. It’s probably down to my mother’s habit of
dressing my sister and me alike, but me in pink and my sister in blue, so as
soon as I was allowed to choose, it was anything but pink for me. In fact, the
first thing I chose for myself was in a very vivid tartan – and my mother
admitted that it suited me better than any other dress I had.
When I was a child, the trend for having everything-for-a-little-girl-in-pink
wasn’t as universal as it is these days. I don’t know what happened. I blame
Barbie. Whatever the reason, pink has become THE feminine colour.
“But did you know that pink hasn’t always been a colour for girls, or
blue for boys?….It started out with boys wearing pink or red because
the colours were seen to indicate strength, while girls wore blue because they
were “flighty” like the sky. From a 1918 editorial called “Pink or Blue” :
“There has been a great diversity of opinion on the subject, but the
generally accepted rule is pink for the boy and blue for the girl. The reason is
that pink being a more decided and stronger color is more suitable for the boy;
while blue, which is more delicate and dainty, is prettier for the
girl.””
So now you know more than you ever wanted.
Anyway, a challenge is a challenge. SOOOOO….
Crafty Austerity measures still in place, so I went digging through the
haunted wing of my stash and found my Opalite inkpads, a reflective interference
ink. I never really made much use of Opalite; it was one of those products
that seemed like a good idea at the time but I never found a use for. However,
one of the inkpads was in pink (Crystal Blush) so I hauled it out to play
with.
While I was digging, I found some black die-cut coiled flowers, part of a
Kanban kit that I’d bought because I liked the Steampunk-y elements. Now,
Opalite works best on black so I stamped over them with a script stamp, coiled
them up and then pressed the finished item into the ink pad to get a nice pink
Opalite edge.
OK, so next I hunted out a Swiss dots embossing folder and embossed a bit of
black card. While I had the Vagabond fired up, I die-cut the label shape and
also cut some leaves and a small label , after stamping a sentiment– all from
dies I’ve had for lo, these many years. (The leaves and small label are from
Spellbinders. The label shape is from Go Kreate – I love that they sell dies
that are bigger than the ordinary but not as big as the Grand Calibur dies;
they fit very nicely into the Vagabond and I don’t have to pay for sizes I can’t
use!)
A quick swipe with the Crystal Blush to highlight the dots and to edge the
small label and it’s beginning to take shape. The leaves I did in a combination
of the Crystal Blush and Cypress Frost. The. sentiment just wasn’t very visible
in Opalite so I used silver Brilliance. A little bit of velvet ric-rac ribbon
and there you have it. It’s pink – but not as we know it!