I'm travelling into a new way of working, a new country, a new language, and a new hobby which I'm passionate about. Come with me for some of the journey...

Showing posts with label CAS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CAS. Show all posts

Tuesday, 11 September 2012

A New Leaf

Hello all, lovely to have your company today - however briefly!  I've got to post and run again - let's see if I can get it done before I have to catch my train...

A hop out of kin today - that's to say, a card which is not in my usual style, but rather aims at being Clean and Simple (CAS).  


I really, really wanted to find time to join in with the Artful Times challenge this fortnight which is Inchies, and was waiting for inspiration to strike... but it wasn't until I spotted the Less Is More Foliage challenge, looking for one-layer cards, that an idea started to form.  As usual, it formed in the middle of the night, so there I was at 6am this morning at the craft table, and here it is...



I cut five one-inch squares of paper, and used them to mask off spaces across the centre of the card, and then two further strips to mask the top and bottom, and then stamped away with the gorgeous Artistic Outpost leaf stamp from the Old Grist Mill set.

 








It's there in Frayed Burlap, Vintage Photo, Walnut Stain and Tea Dye.

Once done, I peeled the papers away and added the sentiment using my £1 alphabet set in Vintage Photo. 

I then put a tiny edging of Vintage Photo around it to define the white space which is so vital in the CAS style.  



Since the challenge is One Layer, everything has to stamped direct onto the card, with minimal embellishing.  I remain in two minds about the twine and whether it should be there or not...!


And that's pretty much that... Hope you'll find some time for crafting today - as I've just discovered, you only need ten minutes sometimes!!

I'm entering this for the following:
The Artful Times challenge which is Inchies
Less Is More are having a One Layer challenge with the theme of Foliage
Artistic Outpost's September challenge which is Anything Goes using an AO stamp
And I'd like to join in with the Bloggers' Challenge this week: Bring On Fall, hosted by Lisa Somerville over at Splendiferous Creations, so you'll find the hop below the quotation if you'd like to join in the fun!


The chief beauty about time is that you cannot waste it in advance.
The next year, the next day, the next hour are lying ready for you, as perfect, as unspoiled,
as if you had never wasted or misapplied a single moment in all your life.
You can turn over a new leaf every hour if you choose.
Arnold Bennett




Tuesday, 17 July 2012

Simplicity is complicated

Hello all, and a big welcome to new followers to go with the big thank you to all those already signed up.  It really makes a difference to have you on board for the journey.

An experiment today...  Yesterday, as I was trawling the amazing, enthralling and occasionally overwhelming numbers of crafty blogs out there, one of my clicks led me to Less Is More, a blog devoted to CAS - that's Clean And Simple - card creation.  I'd encountered the term in my travels, but hadn't really spent any time exploring it, but I was so impressed by the work I saw there and clicking onwards from there.

They've got a challenge on this week which is a One Layer challenge... (The added theme for this One Layer challenge is the number 3.)  You can only have one layer, stamping directly onto the card stock, minimal embellishments, and then you're done.  Pretty much the opposite of the shabby chic I've been playing with recently!  But I thought, well, you're a newbie to all this stuff, you should give it a go, so I set out on a whole new kind of challenge...


I can tell you one thing, despite the glorious stamp from Artistic Outpost, the last thing I was feeling while making this card was serene!  Looking at the work on Less is More, it was clear that execution is everything with cardmaking like this - when it's this Clear and Simple, it has to be done with a perfectionist streak of the strongest kind... this was actually the THIRD go at the idea I had!  The plan was to have this beautiful image stamped three times over, each time getting paler, as the background behind it got darker.

When you're doing shabby chic or grungy or layered stuff and something goes a bit wrong, you can add something or tweak something.  With this, if you go wrong, it's over!

At the bottom of the card, the stamp is stamped with the Versamark Watermark pad, and embossed with Stampendous Clear Detail powder (for very fine embossing work).

On the right I've tried to get pictures which show the glossy and raised embossing.

The middle image is stamped in Faded Jeans + Stormy Weather (and there was a bit of Versamark left on the stamp, which after the first two attempts, I hoped would help to get a good emboss on it).

The image at the top of the card is stamped in Cobalt Archival with some Chipped Sapphire Distress Ink added to the stamp.  All three are done with the Detail Clear Embossing powder.

The inked background starts with Chipped Sapphire at the bottom, and moves through Stormy Sky, paling to the pure white of the cardstock itself at the top.

  


I do like how it's turned out to resemble a photograph and its negative, with the strange ghostly darkroom version somewhere in the middle.  Finally, the two upright edges of the card are inked with Chipped Sapphire using a blending tool.

(I'm interested that it seems to have made me make this post very symmetrical too for a change... normal service about to be restored!)

There were several inspirations and ideas swirling around in my head already at the point when I found the Less is More site, and gradually they began to coalesce into one project.

For starters, there was a challenge afoot at The Cheerful Stamp Pad to play with Silhouettes, and the colour Blue is the inspiration at Addicted to Stamps.  I'm also still exploring my lovely new Artistic Outpost stamps, so if a project turns out well, there's always the possibility of offering it up for their July Anything Goes challenge.

 I'd been playing with this superb Serenity stamp just to see what would come up.  



It will come as no surprise to long-term followers that the colours I was playing with were blue and brown!  

(I'd made an inky background by swooshing the paper through puddles of Stormy Sky + Weathered Wood DIs and Picket Fence Distress Stain on my craft mat, and then tried out the stamp in various colours of Distress and Archival Inks.)

It's pretty clear to see where the kernel of the card idea arrived from!  I even toyed with the idea of sticking three of these onto the card, but that would have been more than one layer - so no good!  What it did allow me to do was to have a little play around - I discovered that three images one above the other would fit perfectly on A5, so a folded piece of PaperArtsy's A4 Smoothy card would be ideal.


One of the main tenets of the CAS style is not to be afraid of white space.  So I decided to mask the sides of the card while I did the stamping and inking to keep it beautifully pristine.


It was all going very well, until I tried to peel the masking tape off... disaster!




So, here we go then, right back to the start...

Second go round, the middle image simply didn't emboss well enough with just the inks.  I tried to do an overstamp (always a risky proposition!) using the embossing ink, but I didn't get it placed perfectly, so ended up with a white shadow where the embossing resisted the background ink colours... Back to the start again!  (And hence my addition of the Versamark to the stamp the next time around.)



Well, appropriately for a challenge about the number 3, it was third time lucky (or, rather than lucky, in fact simply ridiculously cautious!).  I made it through the inking of the central column by holding a piece of paper very firmly in place as I blended the ink up one side, and then again at the other side, filling in the middle at the end.

I did the same to get the sharp edges up each side.

I'll tell you something else - it ain't that easy to get a good photograph of a CAS card!  And for once the sun refused to do its usual half hour of shining at about 4 o'clock, so I'm a bit disappointed in the pictures.





Still, despite all the hiccups, I did enjoy working with my favourite colour in such depth.

I love the glossy, dimensional embossing...

...and I do really like the graduated background ink going up the card.

And I'm happy to say the finished card does make me feel quite serene!

But I am more than ever full of admiration for those who work the CAS way... the patience and precision requires a really Zen-like calm, I think - which is not quite where I am just now.  

On the other hand, obsessive perfectionism is definitely part of my make-up, so I suspect there's a journey for me somewhere down the line into the minimalism of Less Is More.

Thanks so much for examining the results of my experiment.  If you've time to leave a comment, I'd love to know what you make of it, and whether you've CAS'd in your crafting time.  Do drop in again soon, and enjoy your time until then however you're spending it.

I'm entering this for:
Less Is More's One Layer challenge, Three
Artistic Outpost's July challenge Anything Goes (with AO stamps, naturally)

LEJ Designs are also having an Anything Goes challenge 
The Cheerful Stamp Pad's challenge this fortnight - Silhouettes
Addicted to Stamps challenge for this week which is to be Addicted to Blue - yup, that would be me!

Stamp N Plus who are having an Anything Goes challenge, free for any stamps this time
Crafty Creations, who are having a Free For All this week, so this goes there too, with grateful thanks for the win for Only you!

It seems appropriate to have three quotes today:

Boredom is the feeling that everything is a waste of time; serenity, that nothing is.
Thomas Szasz

They say a person needs just three things in this world: someone to love, something to do, and something to hope for.
Tom Bodett

I have just three things to teach: simplicity, patience, compassion.  These three are your greatest treasures.
Lao-Tzu