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 Vintage Page Designs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vintage Page Designs. Show all posts

Monday, 17 September 2012

Full of Eastern Promise

Hello and welcome, and an especially big welcome to the new followers - I'm delighted and honoured that you've decided to join the gang.  Your first assignment, should you choose to accept it, is - I'm afraid - a very long post!

I'm sharing a sort of gift package with you today, small but beautiful I think... and I hope you'll agree.  It turned out to be a bedside set for a young girl (purely imaginary), who needs somewhere to keep her letters and memorabilia, and to record her ideas and impressions of the world, safe from curious eyes.



The main part of the project is really the altered mini chest of drawers.  It's only about 6cm tall and 10cm wide, so it's very cute, but it made some of the edges a bit fiddly!  Then there's a 'pillow book' (read on for more on that), kept under lock and key, some parchment scrolls of notepaper, and some oriental charms.

In altering the mini chest, I was inspired by one of the fabulous Trish Latimer's techniques.  She created an amazing collaged piece (the sneak peek is here, and so worth following up), and although I followed the first few stages, you'll see that things went in quite a different direction in the end for me...

WOYWW-ers may recognise the drawers - they were on my W last W.  I just about managed to grab a "before" picture, though I'd already started collaging before I remembered...





I used papers from the Prima Almanac 6x6 pad, and had great fun tearing and gluing them all over the outside of the chest.  Tricky folding them around the mouth of the drawers, but "if at first you don't succeed..."

Once the outside was fully covered, I gave the whole thing a wash of white acrylic (white paint very diluted with water) which is what gives it that lovely muted, whitewash (well - there's an accurate word!) effect.




Then it sort of sat there for a while, while I wondered what to do next.  I already loved how it looked, and you reach a point where there's a risk of wrecking something you like by doing something rash to it... so I decided to wait until inspiration struck.




One of my favourite blogs is Florence and Freddie, and whilst catching up on blog visiting (sorry, everyone, for my poor track record at the moment - juggling too many things), I saw Florence's DT piece for an Oriental Influences challenge at Out of a Hat Creations.

It's a beautiful piece - a little chest of drawers, as it happens, though hers is wooden - but I'm not much of a one for Orientalism, so I didn't plan on entering the challenge at all.







But as I sat looking at the box, it started to creep up on me.  What I do really love is Oriental calligraphy, and also cherry blossom... and those seemed to be what the box was looking for.







I've a spray of something like cherry blossom in a set of Tattered Angels texture stamps, and the calligraphy is taken from round the edge of what's really a wood-mounted Poppy stamp (an early crafty buy on ebay, that I'd started to think of as a mistake).  I just took care not to ink up the poppy!








The drawers themselves had to have slightly different treatment... it was already becoming a snug fit, and if I'd added any more bulk with papers then I think it would have made it impossible to get them in and out.

So I had to do a paint job.  I started with some mushroomy acrylic, then added the sprays of blossom, whitewashed, and then stamped the script.





I love both that it's got a real look of weathered wood or bamboo, and that it tones in so well with the papers around it.  Yup - pleased with myself on that as it really happened without any real planning... just following my fingers!!








While I was crafting, my mind was wandering around, and I remembered another facet of Japanese culture that always fascinated me - the Pillow Book.

Essentially, a pillow book is a book you keep by your bed to jot down thoughts, ideas, memories, quotation, poetry or anything else which might occur to you.  Not as pressurizing as keeping a diary on a daily basis!





The most well-known is probably the pillow book of Sei Shonagon who was a court lady to an Empress in 11th century Japan.  You may also remember the Peter Greenaway film The Pillow Book - a beautiful work, sadly now mostly known for Ewan McGregor's nude scenes!








And I've got a Pillow Book by Eleanor Bron, writer, actor, comedian, which she wrote rather than an autobiography, and which I've always loved as a record of a performer's life.








That's when the idea of this young girl, in a crowded household, with no real space to call her own, began to take hold... and I wanted to make her something of her very own... somewhere to keep letters and trinkets, and a pillow book so that she has somewhere to record her private thoughts, safe under lock and key.






The notebook was just a 10x10cm kraft notebook, that I got for about 30p in the Range, on sale.  I bought more than one, as you can see!

As well as whitewashing and stamping the covers, I aged the edges of the pages, to give it a lovely vintage glow.






The gorgeous pale blue seam binding is from Vintage Page Designs, and the lock and key are BoBunny trinkets, which I've doctored with some black alcohol ink, and then sanded, so that they would tone in better with the Oriental charms and the rest of the look of the piece.











Finally I created some notepaper (blank in this gift set for use, but in my head they are notes from a secret admirer - tucked in the drawer for safekeeping!)

I used some airmail 'Onion' finish, which is basically a gorgeously textured, very thin parchment, torn into small squares, about 8x8cm.  

I added some script down the sides, edged with Vintage Photo and rolled the sheets into scrolls tied with raffia.




So there you have it... from thinking I wasn't remotely interested in playing along with an Oriental challenge, to a project I got completely wrapped up in.  Part of me wants to go and find the girl I've imagined and give her this (okay... leaving the realms of acceptable now), but perhaps I'll have to settle for making this for sale to other journalling girls.

Can't do the drawers, but could do stationery sets along the lines of this one I made, as I've got many, many boxes, and add the Pillow Books as an extra... how's that as a sales line?  I know many people love Oriental themes, and I'm quite won over myself now, to be honest...   



Love to hear what you think - is it a possible sales piece? - if you've made it this far, of course!  Thank you so much for bearing with me and my romantic Oriental imaginings.  Hope you have some private time and space for pursuing your secret pleasures soon!!

I'm entering this for the following:
Out of a Hat Creations and their Oriental Influences challenge
The theme over at the Fashionable Stamping Challenge is Good Things Come in Small Packages - and this really is all very bijou...

Pleasing Things: 
Finding a large number of tales that one has not read before. Or acquiring the second volume of a tale whose first volume one has enjoyed. But often it is a disappointment.

Surprising and Distressing Things:
While one is cleaning a decorative comb, something catches in the teeth and the comb breaks.
A child or grown-up blurts out something that is bound to make people uncomfortable.
All night long one has been waiting for a man who one thought was sure to arrive. At dawn, just when one has forgotten about him for a moment and dozed off, a crow caws loudly. One wakes up with a start and sees that it is daytime -- most astonishing.

Rare Things:
A son-in-law who's praised by his wife's father. Likewise, a wife who's loved by her mother-in-law. 
A pair of silver tweezers that can actually pull out hairs properly.
Copying out a tale or a volume of poems without smearing any ink on the book you're copying from. If you're copying it from some beautiful bound book, you try to take immense care, but somehow you always manage to get ink on it.
Two women, let alone a man and a woman, who vow themselves to each other forever, and actually manage to remain on good terms to the end.

All from the Pillow Book of Sei Shonagon, completed in the year 1002


Sunday, 9 September 2012

What the Dickens?

Welcome all, and an especially big welcome to the new followers - fantastic to have you here.

I'm sharing an altered book today - inspired mainly by the House of Bears and their wonderful literature-inspired challenges.  This month it's Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, and themes of gentlemen, neglect/decay, or any other inspiration or characters that you find within the pages of the book.  That meant that it also fits really well with Simon Says Stamp and Show's current Read All About It challenge.  As someone for whom words are just as important as pictures, this was a really great project to work on...

I went in search of an old copy of Great Expectations (we're clearing out our large family house at the moment, including many thousand books), and found my mother's old school copy ready to be sold or donated.  I double-checked that she wouldn't mind it getting a new life, and then did this to it!





I wanted it to look as though it might be one of Miss Havisham's belongings, full of past grandeur but now neglected and decaying.  It was originally bound in red cloth (sorry, forgot to take a 'before' - I was in the zone!), but I soon altered that with some gesso and gold acrylic paint.  


I also added a cobwebby look using one of the texture stamps from Tim Holtz's Ultimate Grunge set, and generally laid into the pages (now stuck together) with Vintage Photo, craft scratcher, gesso and fingernails! 









The central pages also got their edges furled and inked, but I left them unglued so that I could play my fan game with them.  They were rolled and tucked, and then gently gesso'd and inked.  Finally the whole thing got a good spritz of Mushroom Color Wash and Heirloom Gold Perfect Pearls Mist for some more mildewy faded glamour...








The furled pages created a perfect place for characters and words from the book to 'pop-up' out of... I love that they are emerging from the pages to seize our attention.









I used other pages which I'd removed from the book before gluing - so everything is genuinely Great Expectations text, and then used TH stamps to form an image of Estella, and the skull -  as a reminder both of the graveyard where Magwich first appears, and of the theme of death and inheritance.  





Money is central to the book, so there are some receipts...












...and some Victorian book illustrations, all from the Vintage Gentleman Kit I was so thrilled to win recently from Vintage Page Designs.








From getting the book in my hands I just let the ideas lead me, and overall I"m pretty happy with the result... and I don't even feel that guilty about the book in the end!  





I like this new visual version of the themes of the story, tumbling out of the pages, and I certainly prefer the faded gold and brown to the original red!  And since it was only going to be disposed of, I'm happy to have given it a new life...









Thanks so much for spending some of your precious time here at Words and Pictures - I really appreciate every visitor, though I'd probably still be obsessively crafting even if you weren't here, to be honest!  Hope you find some time for whatever you're passionate about this week...










I'm entering this for the following:
The House of Bears challenge inspired by Great Expectations
Simon Says Stamp who are asking us to Put a Stamp On It
Recycle, Repurpose and Reinvent are having an Anything Goes challenge this month

Love her, love her, love her! If she favours you, love her. If she wounds you, love her. If she tears your heart to pieces – and as it gets older and stronger, it will tear deeper – love her, love her, love her!

There was a long hard time when I kept far from me the remembrance of what I had thrown away when I was quite ignorant of its worth.

Take nothing on its looks; take everything on evidence. There's no better rule.
All from Great Expectations by Charles Dickens


Wednesday, 22 August 2012

WOYWW 168 Leftovers and Winnings

No, no, no... it's not possible that it's Wednesday again!  Over at the Stamping Ground, our wonderful hostess Julia Dunnit is already amassing the linky list of workdesks from Craftyblogland.  After having a snoop around here, hop over there for a chance to snoop around workdesks from around the world.  

Here's What's On My Workdesk this Wednesday...  As I said in the title, it's a combination of leftovers and a lovely prize package.  There are some half-made projects lying around, off-camera, drying or waiting for the next stage - but they're not fit to be seen yet!



In the centre is the card I made yesterday with my first Stampsmith stamp, and which you can get a closer look at here, if you're interested.  
Lying around it are some of the trial backgrounds I'd had a play with in the planning stages, and discarded.  

Well, not discarded, because they'll stay in my scraps-stash awaiting some sort of life in a future project.  I'm thinking some die-cut flowers could be pretty... not that I like making flowers of course!









Then there's this package, which arrived yesterday and which I'm very excited about playing with!  I was lucky enough to win the Gentlemen challenge over at the Vintage Page Designs blog with my album A Proper Gent.  

The prize was a voucher for Ali Manning's wonderful Etsy shop, also called Vintage Page Designs, so I was able to take the plunge and order the Vintage Gentleman kit I'd been drooling over...

And Ali included some delicious extras: gorgeous pastel seam bindings, some embroidered ribbon, and yummy buttons of all sizes and colours.  Look out for them on a project coming to this space soon...




Thanks so much for stopping by, and if you're playing along at the Stamping Ground I'll do my best to see you very soon over at your Workdesk...

Far and away the best prize that life has to offer is the chance to work hard at work worth doing.
Theodore Roosevelt
But crafty goodies come a close second!!