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. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage. Show all posts

Saturday, 26 October 2013

Keeping time...

Hello everyone!  Hope you're all having a great weekend.  It's catch-up time here at Words and Pictures (and yes, I'm still trying to do some catching up with all of you too) with a piece I made as a Guest Design piece for the Calico Crafts blog in June.  At the time, I pretty much just showed the finished project, but promised some more process photos in due course... well, here they are.

If I remember rightly, I spent much of the making of this not being sure about it, and wondering where the heck it was going, but ended up fairly happy.  I hope you like it!


It grew into being a piece about what we hold on to, what we preserve in the face of time's onward march, how we keep hold of memories and mementos... with a play on the words "Keep Time" - about a clock keeping good time, and also how we try to keep hold of time, not letting it run away from us too quickly.





I started with one of the little specimen trays, but did away with the sliding lid...










... or rather, did away with the acetate and glued the extra bit of frame into place.















I layered up DecoArt paint and crackle glaze... 












... and more paint...













I lined the rear wall with one of Calico's large vintage collage sheets.  These are amazing - really huge and great quality.




Although I liked the weathered paint all over the frame, I decided to go for a papered exterior, to match the rear wall of the interior.  

And I've still got about 2/3 of the sheet left to use!






I added yet more paint, as well as ink and Treasure Gold white fire...














... to create my weathered look on the frame and within the compartments.









I stamped the Kaisercraft Tic Toc texture stamp onto the paper for some extra "time" texture.
















I also stamped it onto the large rusty heart using Coffee Archival ink.













I cut out part of the paper to use in the little round frame from my stash, covering it with Glossy Accents and leaving it to dry overnight.












All the embellishments and doodads have had a touch of Treasure Gold in White Fire so that they all tone in with one another.




I put some of the fabulous Steampunk Watch Parts into a tiny corked vial - how's that for another way of "keeping time".




And there's one of Artemio's Oldies Vintage clock faces, gilded with the Treasure Gold.  I love the antique-y look that gives it.












On the back of the tray, also papered, stamped, inked and gilded, I decided to add the phrase KEEP TIME.

I cut out letters from the scrabble tiles sheet from the Kaisercraft Timeless Classics collection, stuck them onto card, and inked and gilded them. 











Very happy with my homemade scrabble tiles!















I cut the Tim Holtz Weathered Clock out of Grungeboard ready for some hefty treatment. 





The joy of Grungeboard is it will take any amount of paint, medium, texturising and inking without falling apart - in fact, it stays completely flexible throughout - amazing stuff.












I patted on some DecoArt texture paste with my finger tips, so that it would have lots of texture to it. 



Then it got some paint and some gilding, some more paint, some more gilding and some inking until I was happy with the look.











Everything was glued in place using Glossy Accents...




... and the whole thing got a sealing coat of Studio Extra Time Medium.






(It didn't need to be Extra Time, but I'd run out of all the others!)














A final dusting of White Fire Treasure Gold, and we're done!

I had a wonderful time again with the amazing Calico Crafts goodies. Huge thanks to Helen of Calico Crafts, and the fabulous Louise (a.k.a. Zuzu) who co-ordinates the team, for having me back.




Thanks so much for taking the time to stop by today.  I'll see you very soon, somewhere out there in Craftyblogland!

How did it get so late so soon? 
It's night before it's afternoon. 
December is here before it's June. 
My goodness how the time has flewn. 
How did it get so late so soon?
Dr. Seuss

Ingredients available from Calico Crafts:
Small Wood Specimen Tray with Sliding Lid
Treasure Gold - White Fire
DecoArt Americana - Burnt Sienna, Burnt Umber, Buttermilk, Whitewash
DecoArt Weathered Wood Crackle Medium
DecoArt Decorating Paste
Claudine Hellmuth Studio Extra Time Medium
Kaisercraft Tic Toc Texture Stamp
Rusty Hearts
Steampunk Watch Parts
Kaisercraft Timeless Classics paper pad
Artemio Oldies Vintage Style Metal Clocks and Cogs
Tim Holtz Grungeboard
Tim Holtz Sprocket Gears
Tim Holtz Corked Vials
Tim Holtz Trinket Pins
Large Vintage Collage Sheet - Postcards (discontinued, but there are lots of other lovely ones)
Antique Ivory Cotton Crochet Lace
Ranger Glossy Accents
From my stash: Vintage Photo Distress Ink, Weathered Clock Die, various embellishments and doodads

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


Monday, 13 August 2012

A handmade wedding

This post is dedicated to the amazing friends without whom I couldn't have achieved the transformation: Jo, Lynda, Sheila, Katy, Simon, and my mother, Gil.

Hello all, and welcome!  A post slightly off the usual tack today... but there's plenty of crafting content too...

So, alongside everything I've been blogging about for the last couple of months I've been carrying out some other - top secret - crafting transformations, and this was on an industrial scale: a whole wedding's worth!  I couldn't blog about it because it was all supposed to be a secret from Laura, the bride, my brother's partner, though there has been the odd sneak peek.  Those sneak peeks encouraged some of you to hope that there might be some pictures of the end result... well, you asked for it!!

The venue was a scout hut: the grounds are already rather lovely, but the hut itself - though it has very large windows in the main room - is a pretty dingy affair, so something drastic needed to be done.  It was my task to transform the lowly scout hut, inside and out, on a (compared to most weddings) pretty minuscule budget.  There was borrowing, begging and a lot of handmade crafting.  So I think I'll start with some 'before-and-afters', and then show you some of the details.






















We "wallpapered" over all the posters and posterboards with metres of lining paper. And we took down the grimly dark blue curtains and swooped net curtains between the very useful metal struts. 


The metal struts were decorated with ivy, metal hearts, and hooped decorations created out of a scarf holder from Ikea.  The bits and pieces from Czech bric-a-brac stores were decorated with paints and inks to suit the wedding colours of sage and lilac.





Tables were decked with either white or lilac tablecloths - some were old family linen recently discovered in the house clearing we're doing; the lilac linen an incredibly lucky find in the Oxfam shop where my mother volunteers (and cut and hemmed by Jo); some were paper - and all covered with metres of material painstakingly cut into table runners to go down the centres (and I HATE fabric - any other kind of crafting, let me at it, but not material!) 

The green runners were cut from material bought very cheaply in CZ.  The top layer of runner is heavy duty paper, bought in great quantities years ago by my mother for dollshouse wallpaper.

If you click on the photo of the windows above, you can see the wonderful butterfly wings effect Simon and Katy managed to achieve with the nets.


The place cards are made on tiny tags to continue the theme started with the wedding invitations (made months ago - so I now find them a bit tame! - but much admired by the recipients).

The tiny clothes pegs we'd had sitting around for years (benefits of hoarding again), but unfortunately the hearts were bright red... that was fairly tedious - 80-odd tiny hearts needing, in some cases, three coats of white acrylic before the scarlet stopped showing through!

But I was delighted that many people attached their name to themselves for the rest of the day, as I'd hoped.


I used the little Prima stamp as the background, and on the back, and the most used Distress Ink for this wedding was Bundled Sage (predictably, given the wedding colours of lilac and sage!).

We were working in a world of shabby chic and vintage... so one of my ideas was that everyone should have a slightly different drinking vessel, and a mixture of beakers and wine glasses.







(Champagne flutes for the toasts were hired, which was great because then all the place cards were at the same height as you looked along the tables!)

Again, some we'd had for years (I'm quite a glass collector); and we scoured charity shops and car boot sales (sort of like yard sales only with all the yards in one big field together!) for bargain vintage glasses.  The gold-rimmed ones you can see in these photos were my Czech grandmother's, so it's lovely that we had that sense of heritage in the day too.







In this view from the top table, you can see some of the other glassware being used.  (Bride and groom each had the gold-rimmed champagne glasses; mine's the green spirally one!)



For the wild flowers on the tables (grown in our garden, gathered from hedgerows, begged from strangers' gardens - how lovely people can be... and the gypsophila our one flower expenditure) I went with simple jam jars of all shapes and sizes, with rustic string wrapped and tied in a rough bow.





Also on the tables were some of the vast numbers of picture frames we'd sourced, and I'd filled with collages and pictures not only of the bride and groom, but of Victorian wedding couples too (Google image search I love you!). This is the selection directly in front of the happy couple, along with the gorgeous glass bell, another Oxfam find, which we used to announce the speeches.




Most of the rest of the pictures formed part of the decorative backdrops on either side behind the top table.  And the vast majority of this lot I already owned - what can I say, I'm a shabby chic, candle girl!




We'd been gathering picture frames both from charity shops and from the house-clearing process we'd been going through, and had amassed quite a large, but disparate collection.

The silver and gold ones I decided could stay as they were, but the motley crew of pine, stained wood, and plain old nasty plastic (some of it masquerading as wood) needed dealing with.  Distressing time!!





I tried out a couple of techniques I found online, but in the long run worked out the simplest method was simply to use good old gesso - it needed a couple of coats in most cases, but it looked really good, plus it felt really great to the touch, grainy and rugged.

I then made some collaged backgrounds, using all the greenish or vaguely mauvey coloured papers I'd dragged out of my paper stash (many from K&Co's Best Of collection), and some of which I'd doctored with some stamping or Picket Fence Distress Stain.








As focal points I used the "vintage" wedding photos (the printer played up again, and instead of sepia a lot of them came out lilac coloured - oh happy serendipity!)...





...the happy couple's favourite photos of themselves, reprinted in many different shapes and sizes...


...and some "vintage" postcards I'd created using the wedding colours.










The picture frames (with a specific travel twist to these ones) also put in an appearance as part of the "Gift Table".

Rather than presents, given they've been together twelve years, have two gorgeous children, and a houseful of belongings, Adam and Laura requested contributions to a 'travel fund' so that they might take a family holiday, something which they can't often afford.

So I knew I'd need somewhere for people to leave envelopes and cards with "holiday money", and had always had the idea that I'd love to have some vintage luggage involved (because I love vintage luggage!).




I had a tiny leather suitcase that I used to keep my dolls' clothes in; another belonged to my uncle when he went to school; and the largest was a donation from friend Sheila.




So with another Google Image search I gathered old travel labels, and I used the Tim Holtz (phew, he made it into the post) Distressables to create some "vintage" postcards.



I made a large scale postcard telling people that they could leave their gifts in the smallest suitcase.







We had also found, when clearing the house, a shoebox of real vintage postcards, which I left for people to write messages on and 'post' into the suitcase too.




There was even a vintage style cotton nightdress, and men's stripy pyjamas hanging above on padded, embroidered hangers - I forgot to take a picture, but I think you might be able to spot the pyjama legs somewhere here...

Then, of course, there was the outdoors to be dealt with...


One of the very first things I was desperate to do was find a way to disguise the horrid plastic chairs being used for the ceremony.  At the wedding breakfast, the chairs would be less of an eyesore, since attention would be drawn by the decorated tables, but at the ceremony, it would be just the chairs, standing in rows in the garden (as long as the weather remained fine...).







Eventually, after toying with and discarding a number of ideas, I came up with the idea of draping the chairs with tulle (otherwise known as discarded net curtains).  Then we'd wrap ribbon/fabric/raffia (still, at that point, to be decided) round the seat, with some lavender and ivy tucked in to it.

Now ivy we've got growing in profusion all over the house and garden, and we set about growing some new lavender.


As soon as the stems were large enough, we snipped a crop and then ran it through the dehydrator (usually used for fruit!); we didn't have time to wait for nature to take its course.

Fortunately, since there were more yeses to the 91 invitations than I'd been hoping (sorry, Adam and Laura, but I had my fingers crossed for lots of "sorry, can't be with you" responses!), we were able to raid a friendly Czech's magnificent lavender display in a nearby village.


And then the operation started really to be on an industrial scale!  From the garden, to the dehydrator, or up into the garage roof to dry naturally, then into a crate to be shipped back to the UK with us.  Can you imagine what the car smelled like as we drove across Europe?!


We also collected old net curtains from all our usual sources - Oxfam, friends, friends-of-friends both in CZ and the UK.  We ended up with vast bagloads which all needed cutting to the right size for draping over the chairs.  The sashes to tie round them were cut from the remains of the runner and tablecloth material - at least it meant everything matched!




Lynda did incredible work assembling the 75 chairs on the day before the wedding.  It was the element I'd been most unsure about - I still thought maybe it would look too random and makeshift.  But as soon as they were all lined up, I was deliriously happy with the look...








After the ceremony we scattered the chairs in groups around the garden and people were able to gather, eat, drink and chat in the glorious sunshine... it was completely lovely!








We bought some cheap rose arches to form an aisle - one at the start, one behind the celebrant's table, and one to provide a backdrop to the garden bench under the tree for the wedding photographs (you can just see it behind the arch).




They're decorated with some more cut-up net curtains tied into bows, some metal tealight holders of mine, and some balloon string ornaments made by my niece and nephew (with some parental assistance I believe!).  And then of course some ivy, gypsophila and lavender to complete the look...










And another jam jar and candle affair to adorn the celebrant's table.




One last element I was very pleased with (if there's anybody still with me...) was the table map.

Adam and Laura named the tables after delicious teas and their favourite cakes, and then we'd ended up needing to have the tables in columns to fit - but I didn't see any reason why the table groupings within the columns couldn't still have their tea-and-cake names.


There was a posterboard right at the entrance, perfect for my table map (which was rather large).

Each gesso'd frame had information about the cake or tea of the table it represented - this one is for a delicious Czech honey cake called Medovnik.  





The text was computer generated of course, but stamped with a Kanban frame of wild flower silhouettes, and the individual name labels have the Prima background stamp again.





We were fantastically lucky that the weather held out, and everyone had a wonderful time - the greatest satisfaction was seeing people enjoying themselves so much in the surroundings I'd created.  It took blood, sweat and tears, and hours and hours of work.  And then it all had to be returned to its original state before leaving, so I can't tell you how exhausted I am today - but I know what it meant to Adam and Laura... so it was completely worth it.

My thanks to all of you who sent good wishes for the wedding day, so kind, and I hope you've enjoyed seeing some of the results.  Normal blogging service will be resumed as soon as I've recovered a bit!!  Hope to see you again soon.

Now join your hands, and with your hands your hearts.
William Shakespeare

Oh, and a totally fantastic P.S. - my thank you gift from Adam and Laura is a workshop place for when Tim Holtz is next in the UK (have to get in there early, of course!)... I'm ecstatic!

I'd like to offer this up at Inspire Me Fridays - to let people know that you don't need to spend thousands on a wedding - all my stuff came in at under £200, and the venue itself was £130 (including the day before which gave us crucial set up time)...