Showing posts with label tiny lights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tiny lights. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Easter Vignette Box Book - Spring Idea-ology

This Vignette Box Easter Book is the second project I'm sharing using the new Tim Holtz Spring release of Tiny Eggs and Salvaged Rabbits. I have links below to past tutorials for making the Vignette Box Books (you can also search my blog for Vignette Box Books and they should pop up.) I really had so much fun making with the new Spring release. I can't wait to share more ideas!

This is the video tutorial I made for this project.

This is another rendition of the Vignette Box Books that I love to make! This version, much like the Ode to Poe is a book with an opening that lights up. I made this a little differently than the Ode to Poe, so I hope the video shows that. 

Here are links to other makes where I have tutorials for making Vignette Box Books:

The sides of the Vignette Box get scratched to make them look like pages of a book. You have to layer some 1/8" strips of chipboard along the edges of the top, bottom and side of the book and wrap with Backdrops paper used for the cover. Dark brown Distress Crayon will hide any imperfections.
I love this piece from the retired Adornments Nature pack. It's just so perfect for adding some texture and interest across the top of an oval opening.

For Tim's tutorial on making the barrel Easter basket visit: 

Don't overlook the things you have in your stash that may have been there forever! Quote chips, Baseboard Frames, Adornments.....we buys so many things when they are new and then don't use them, or only use a few things. Take time to really search your stash before starting a project and you might find some really wonderful things you had forgotten and would fit perfectly in your makes.

Thank you very much for visiting my blog. I hope you were able to take time to watch the tutorial too. I appreciate your support!

Have a creative day, 

Tami

I am an affiliate with Simon Says Stamp and Scrapbook.com so the links below send you to one of those stores depending on which logo you choose.  If you wish to purchase something from either store and use one of my links below, I get a small percentage of your order, at no additional cost to youThis helps me to defray the costs of this blog, the time, the ideas and tutorials I post here. 

Your help is greatly appreciated! Thank you!

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

North Pole Paper Village

It's crazy busy up in the North Pole! Lights are burning 24/7 to get ready for the big flight. 

I've had this project in mind for a couple of months but didn't have time to finish it up until recently. I was imagining the paper village houses as different workshops uncharge of various holiday necessities, ornaments, trees, hats, cookies, stockings, cocoa, and so on. So I paired the Paper Village dies with an older die called Mini Christmas Things, but you could you so many others you might have. Let's get started! This is easier than it may look.
The idea started when I saw this package of retired Christmas Deco Sheets advertised from Ranger Ink. I couldn't believe they had them in stock, so I purchased them for this project. These sheets are adhesive backed and are very thin, so I adhered them to a piece of plain white cardstock before cutting the various Paper Village Houses.
Once I had the houses assembled, with vellum inside to cover the windows, I started to make them cold and North Pole worthy. I added Distress Collage Medium and Rock Candy Distress Glitter to the white cardstock roofs. Then I used my fine tip glue gun and made some icicles as best I could. I had imagined this would go a little better than it did, but I like the final result anyway. I was going to use my Drippy Candle method, but with nothing to attach the hot glue to, it just ends up being more difficult than you think it will be so be patient when you do this!
The hot glue isn't sparkly, so I did two steps here and I only showed one in my photos, so bear with me. First I quickly brushed on some Collage Medium and then dusted them with Rock Candy Distress Glitter in a Distress Glitter Duster. When they were dry, I put a tiny bit of Grit Pasteon my finger, and pounced teeny tiny bits of it here and there on the roof and the icicles to give it even more of an icy look.
To make the North Pole and some supports for a few of the porches, I adhered the striped deco paper to a straw and some toothpicks. 
Then I cut them to size and adhered them under the porch overhangs with Collage Medium and a bit of Distress Grit paste around the bottoms.
Next I needed a base for all the North Pole snow, so I covered the sides of a Vignette Divided Drawer with Distress Woodgrain Paper. Then I also cut some Holly 3D Impresslits and adhered them to the sides. When that was dry, I covered the top of the box with a layer of Distress Grit paste and some Distress Rock Candy Glitter.
I placed the houses where I wanted them and then pushed them into the Grit Paste to make a template. Once the Grit paste was dry, then I drilled into the center of each house area for some Tiny Lights.
I put about three Tiny Lights through each of the different house areas. then I adhered each house back in its place with Distress Collage Medium.
To make the signs for each workshop, I cut a bunch of Mini Christmas Things from Alcohol Ink Sparkle Cardstock. Then I colored each piece with Alcohol Ink and Blending Solution.
I also cut a wreath and some trees from the Festive Things dies set and trimmed some of the trees a bit shorter to go behind the workshops. When everything was colored, I sprayed them all with Distress Resist Spray and dusted them with Distress Glitter.
When they were dry, I added some grit paste on all of them to make it seem cooler, snowier and frostier.
As you can see, I added the shapes to the top front of the houses.
I added a bit of the dot deco paper, with a Christmas Adornment Quote Chip on the from of the drawer.
Another thing I added was the North Pole that I made earlier. It needed to go in the center with the wreath on it. 
I considered adding a sign that said North Pole on the wreath, but changed my mind in the end.
To make the ball on top of the straw pole, I rolled an Idea-ology Bauble in Grit Paste and then rolled it in Distress Glitter and let it dry before I adhered it to the top of the pole. I adhered it to the top with Collage Medium and added a Grit Paste snow drift around it.
This is the ornament workshop where they make ornaments.
This is the Christmas tree workshop with a little courtyard out in front.
Then the hat workshop.
The cookie workshop (also where the elves can take a break and have a cookie!)
The stocking workshop.
The cocoa workshop where they develop new flavors of cocoa and where the elves can get a cup to go with their cookies on their union regulated breaks.

There you have it, I hope you enjoyed the little portion of the North Pole workshops. This was such a fun make and it's one of those projects that I'm glad to have finally finished.

Merry Christmas!
Tami

I am an affiliate with Simon Says Stamp and Scrapbook.com so the links below send you to one of those stores depending on which logo you choose.  If you wish to purchase something from either store and use one of my links below, I get a small percentage of your order, at no additional cost to youThis helps me to defray the costs of this blog, the time, the ideas and tutorials I post here. Your help is greatly appreciated! Thank you!


Monday, July 27, 2020

Holiday Alpine Village Vignette - Sizzix Chapter 3 2020

I love this beautiful little Holiday Village die set from Tim Holtz and Sizzix. It makes me think about some of the delightful little villages I visited the few times I was in Europe. That's why I needed to pair it with the Alpine dies from last year's Chapter 4 release.


I was imagining what Halstatt, Austria, or Grindelwald, Switzerland (in these photos) would look like in the winter, rather than the summer when this hot weather California girl saw them. So that was my inspiration.
Let's start at the very beginning, it's a very good place to start.....(I couldn't help myself!) But really, cut several of the Holly Berries 3D Impresslits from some heavy kraft paper.  Remember when cutting Impresslits that you use the sandwich for embossing and then only one cutting plate. Lightly mist the paper with water and then run it through 3 times for 3D. Once they are all cut, adhere them along the outside edge of a small Vignette Tray. Fussy cut the ends of some so that they fit nicely along each side and the intersections aren't noticeable. If you look closely you can see the intersection just below the berries on the far left side.
In the same manner, cut several of the thinnest Lattice 3D Impresslits from heavy kraft stock. These go along the front edge of the Vignette Tray to cover the unfinished edge.
Next paint the Vignette Tray with Black Soot Distress Paint inside, outside and on the back.
I didn't take step out photos of this next part, but I painted over the Black Soot Distress Paint with Chipped Sapphire Distress Paint and blotted it off before it was dry so that the black showed through in spots. Then I painted the whole thing with Pumice Stone Distress Paint, sprayed it with a bit of water so it would go down in the crevices and then blotted it off as well. I also flicked Picket Fence Distress Paint onto the inside of the tray to mimic snow.
Once that is finished, using your finger, apply some Vintage Collage Medium over the entire tray. That should add just the right touch of age.
You need to drill a hole from the middle bottom of the back of the tray to thread the Tiny Lights through. I usually add a little box to hold the battery pack. Here is the tutorial for that.
On the inside of the tray, you an add some Opaque Grit Paste to look like snow, BUT, before you do that, seal the paint again just in the area where the snow will be going. Then once it is dry, apply the snow. Let it dry while you assemble the village. Once it is dry you can add the Alpine mountains. I colored some Distress Cracked Leather by lightly rubbing some Distress Paint on the raised areas and then spraying them with Distress Stain.
I wanted the mountains at different levels so I cut one set of the mountains in half. I also raised some up, and put some lower on the bottom of the tray with dimensional adhesive. The outside mountains need the dimensional adhesive so they stand out away from the back of the tray and make a little space for the tiny lights. Speaking of tiny lights, I wound them around a thin piece of chipboard and attached them to the tray between the two outside mountains.
I used the same paint technique on some Distress Woodgrain Cardstock as I did on the Cracked Leather Cardstock for the mountains. Put a bit of Distress Paint on the raised areas of the woodgrain and let it dry. Then color the paper with Distress Spray Stain. I made both gray and brown versions of the woodgrain.
Begin by cutting the Village base from the grey Woodgrain Cardstock. You will see that there are these boxy indentations on each of the buildings. Use an Tonic Craft Knife to cut out those indentations. It should look like the image above, I just put black behind it so you could see what the cut away area looks like. You also need to cut some yellow vellum from the window die set pictured to the left above.
Looking at the photo of the village will help you to determine which windows get vellum and and which stay dark. I attached the velum to the backside of the windows and the trees that fit over the openings.
Then attach the buildings with the windows already in place, onto the grey woodgrain background. If you flip it to the backside, you can see above how the windows are covered with vellum and will allow the light to shine through.
On the front side you will notice that I did not attach the tree yet. I did attach a separate star for the  tree that is cut from yellow paper. It won't matter later, but I did it anyway because I didn't realize that at the time.
When you apply the snow and the walkway pieces, you will need to trim the tree shape once again so that the light will shine through it, once you attach the tree. Then lay the completed village in the splat box and flick it with tiny specks of Picket Fence Distress Paint to mimic snow.
At this point the lights are in place, the tray with the mountains and snow are ready and it is time to attach the village. I gently bent the village so it would bow a bit and the ends would bend in toward the mountains, and bent the front of the snow at the bottom so it would slope into the Grit Paste on the bottom of the tray. I added a few pieces of chipboard to attach it to the back of the tray, and then added collage medium to the bottom, ends and the chipboard and held it in place until it stayed securely.
I love the way the light not only shines through the windows but also up onto the Alps. I was thinking that would naturally take place if light was shining out the back windows of the buildings. I love it!
You can kind of see some of the dimension in this photo. It really makes a lot of difference if you pop some of the items up. Also, I cut several more of the large tree (without the holes for the lights) and more the the small trees to scatter round on the snow around the village. I trimmed the bottom off some of the larger trees too so that there were different sizes.
I like it lit and unlit too. I may need to make a summer version of this Holiday Village so that it matches my memories.

I hope that wasn't too much detail all in one post, but I couldn't find a good place to break it up so I just went for it.

Thank you so much for stopping by, for reading this far, and for your encouragement support here and on my social media posts. It just means so much to me!
Thank you!
Tami

I am an affiliate with Simon Says Stamp and Scrapbook.com so the links below send you to one of those stores depending on which logo you choose.  If you wish to purchase something from either store and use one of my links below, I get a small percentage of your order, at no additional cost to youThis helps me to defray the costs of this blog, the time, the ideas and tutorials I post here. Your help is greatly appreciated! Thank you!