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...

Wednesday, 5 December 2012

The Year in Poetry

Hello all, for the second time today (if you've already seen What's On My Workdesk this Wednesday)... and a very warm welcome (back) to Words and Pictures!  (Gotta love all those Wws in that first sentence!)



As I mentioned earlier, I'm absolutely delighted to have been invited to design for Nicecrane Designs.

Ignacio Molina, as well as producing sets of gorgeous vintage images for an absolute song, is one of the loveliest people to buy from and do business with... you get emails so full of enthusiasm (and commas) that it brings a huge smile to your face.

As well as the online store, there's a lovely blog where you can find lots of inspiration for how to use the images.

I've used Nicecrane images on past projects, and have bought quite a few more, which are still sitting waiting for me to play with them... so it's a real treat to be able to show off some of the latest ranges he's been creating.

Here I've used the lovely Country Lady Save Pack, inspired by the illustrations from Edith Holden's Country Diary of an Edwardian Lady.

Since there are twelve months to get through, I'm issuing a Long Photo-Heavy Post Warning!!








This was one of those projects where it really felt as though I was just along for the ride... I didn't know very much about it!  That may be the effect of it all arriving in my head in the middle of the night, and half of it being made in the early hours of the morning, but I think it's also a good sign that you're "in the zone", or at least "in the moment" as you're creating... just letting things happen, and enjoying the ride.

It was also clear that the universe was on my side when, after a snowy night, the sun came out to allow me to capture some some photos in its late afternoon golden rays.






There's part of a photo from the earlier shots of my desk that will give you some idea of the journey of this piece.

I used sheets from a cheap watercolour pad (bought from The Works for a couple of pounds), and tore them to the size I wanted.

I printed the lovely monthly illustrations on some canvas weave printer paper which gives them a lovely weight and texture, slightly fabric like... I think you can see something of what I mean in later photographs.










To weather the papers, and tone them in with the images, I did a lot of spritzing.  I started with coffee (yes, actual coffee), but wanted a bit more colour, so I mixed a bit of Mushroom Color Wash in with it.

This gave a good base colour; then, for extra texture and colour I spritzed very lightly with the Mushroom again, or with Espresso Color Wash, and sometimes with both to build up the interest.







Once that was done, I blended Vintage Photo and Wild Honey DIs onto the edges of the pages.  The Wild Honey is great for warming up the tone of whatever colour you're using, and given that these images had quite honeyed tones in them anyway, it seemed the perfect ingredient.











You can see the eventual look on the back cover and these close-ups... and what I love is that each page is unique, with its own colour combination and splatter pattern!

And of course I used the Tim Holtz paper distresser and some more Vintage Photo DI on the edges of the illustrations.  I think you can probably see the woven texture of the paper I printed on here too, as well, obviously, as the lovely texture of the watercolour paper.

Some twine and raffia to bind the pages together... and we're pretty much done.






I'm going to leave you in peace to look through the journal shortly, but I should just say that the stamps come from a variety of sets: the front cover is Tim Holtz's Book Cover (simply love this stamp, and must use it more often!), and inside there are more TH stamps, as well as Stampology, Tattered Angels and Artemio images.

They're stamped mainly in Archival, but blending colours and sometimes including DIs on there too.



If you really desperately want to know more precisely, then drop me a comment or email with the month you want to know about, and I'll share the details with you.

But for now, I'm going to leave you to enjoy the winter sunshine... All I will add are the poem extracts from each page (in case the photos are not clear enough, or you can't read my handwriting) and sometimes a little something about the poems themselves, or perhaps the poem in full, or at least slightly expanded.

Some of the poems arrived on the pages here as inevitable participants, long-loved poems I've lived with for years; some I had to go in search of, and am delighted to have discovered some new poetical treasures!




So, on to the quotations, and the photographs of course!  Don't forget you can click on them for close-ups.














January is here, with eyes that keenly glow,





A frost-mailed warrior striding a shadowy steed of snow.
Edgar Fawcett







February.  Get Ink.  Weep.
Write the heart out about it.  Sing
Another song of February
While raucous slush burns black with Spring.
Boris Pasternak



Another day in March.  Late
rawness and wetness.  I hear my mind say
If only I could paint essences.

Such as the mudness of mud
On this rain-soaked dyke where coltsfoot
displays its yellow misleading daisy.

Anne Stevenson










April is the cruellest month, breeding
Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing
Memory and desire, stirring 
Dull roots with spring rain.



Winter kept us warm, covering  
Earth in forgetful snow, feeding
A little life with dried tubers.

From The Wasteland by T.S.Eliot







Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?
Thou art more lovely and more temperate.
Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
And summer's lease hath all too short a date.
William Shakespeare






I went down the ways of the roses this noon,
     The birds were in tune with the infinite skies,
And all my heart sang, "It is June, it is June,"

And all my soul teemed with the lovely surprise,
As I went down the ways of the roses this noon.

     William Stanley Braithwaite










Hot July brings cooling showers,
Apricots and gillyflowers.
Sara Coleridge











I want to walk through crisp gold harvest fields,
Through meadows yellowed by the August heat;
To loiter through the cool dim wood, that yields
Such perfect flowers and quiet so complete—
The happy woods, where every bud and leaf
Is full of dreams as life is full of grief.

From August by Edith Nesbit





September Song
(born 19.6.32 - deported 24.9.42)

Undesirable you may have been, untouchable
you were not. Not forgotten
or passed over at the proper time.

As estimated, you died. Things marched,
sufficient, to that end.
Just so much Zyklon and leather, patented
terror, so many routine cries.

(I have made
an elegy for myself it
is true)

September fattens on vines. Roses
flake from the wall. The smoke
of harmless fires drifts to my eyes.

This is plenty. This is more than enough.
                                                                                                     Geoffrey Hill



A springful of larks in a rolling
Cloud and the roadside bushes brimming with whistling
Blackbirds and the sun of October
Summery
On the hill's shoulder...

From Poem in October by Dylan Thomas






So dull and dark are the November days.
The lazy mist high up the evening curled,
And now the morn quite hides in smoke and haze;
The place we occupy seems all the world.

From November by John Clare





In the bleak midwinter, frosty wind made moan,
Earth stood hard as iron, water like a stone;
Snow had fallen, snow on snow, snow on snow,
In the bleak midwinter, long ago.

Christina Rossetti










I'm entering this in the following:
Sugar Creek Hollow's challenge Distressing
Try It On Tuesday would like us to Get Inky
Crafty Boots who are playing Anything Goes
Inspire Me Fridays which is also Anything Goes
Artful Times - guess what... Anything Goes












Click here to go direct to the lovely Country Lady Save Pack...






WOYWW 183

Brrr!!  Well, what do you know... it's been snowing!  That's pretty unusual for the outskirts of London in December.   I was up before 5 doing some insomniac crafting, and then was too chilled to get back to sleep again, so I've given in and decided to share What's On My Workdesk this Wednesday.  I had thought I probably wouldn't get round to joining in this week, but having just gained all these hours...  well, here I am, and here's my workdesk this morning: 



If you're not sure why I've capitalised all those letters, then hop over to the Stamping Ground where our hostess, Julia Dunnit will explain all, and join in with the craft world's nosiest bloghop!


I'm back home, delighted to be reunited with the rest of my crafty stash after nearly a month away with only limited supplies... and as a result I'm in the middle of about six different things.  

There's a children's board book which I started before I went away, covering the insides with torn up book pages.  Yesterday I started work on the cover using some Tim Holtz Kraft Resist papers.  

There's a tag which started completely by accident.  I didn't want to throw away the tissue tape that I'd used to secure my little £1 alphabet into its box for the journey back from Stratford upon Avon.  

Being only £1, it doesn't have a lid, and I found I had no tape with me except my lovely TH tape, so I had to use that.  When I peeled it off yesterday, there was no way I was chucking it in the bin, so I layered it on to a tag - so that's now ready for development.

There's a tiny little wooden box with a ship scene on it (just behind the tiny alphabet, on top of my other alphabet in its posh wooden box) awaiting alteration.


The main reason for my - very mild - insomnia (I spent years suffering from the real thing, so I don't like to take the name in vain) was an over-excited and busy brain: late yesterday, I was invited by the delightful Ignacio Molina to join his small team of designers working with the amazing images he produces over at Nicecrane Designs.  My brain got to work right away, turning over possibilities, and pretty much wouldn't leave me in peace.  So the other thing you can see are lots of lovely images which are on their way to being part of various projects... most of which weren't there at midnight last night.  Expect to see more very soon - possibly later today (yup, it's up now) if I don't fall asleep!!

For now, I'll wish you all a very happy WOYWW, and look forward to snooping round your way very soon!

A ruffled mind makes a restless pillow.
Charlotte Brontë

If a man had as many ideas during the day as he does when he has insomnia, he'd make a fortune.
Griff Niblack

Tuesday, 4 December 2012

Embossability

Hello all, delighted you could drop in on me here at Words and Pictures today.  It's Tuesday (I believe...), and time for the new fortnightly challenge at Fun With ATCs.  This time we're looking for Embossing - dry embossing, heat embossing... you take your pick, or mix and match them all on one ATC if you like!  So, I'm offering you two ATCs today - each of them using both dry and heat embossing.




To be perfectly honest, I'm not entirely sure how I feel about these...


I had to make them some time ago, as I knew I'd be away from my BigShot for November, and therefore unable to use embossing folders, so any dry embossing had to be done before going away in order to meet the DT deadline.



Coming back to look at them now, there are things I'd do differently I think... or even start all over again - but deadlines are deadlines, and here they are.  But I'd certainly recommend hopping over to see what my amazing team mates have provided for inspiration too...





































The rusty ATC has a background of Kraft Core run through the Tim Holtz Bingo embossing folder, and then painted and inked and sanded until it had a weathered look.  I added a TH die-cut key which I'd rusted up some time ago using Andy Skinner's textured rust technique.








The lock is cut from the same Hardware Findings die, from some chipboard covered in numbers paper (which I think was from the Vintage Gentleman's Kit I got from Vintage Page Designs, but I'm not completely sure now...).

I then used some Vintage Photo Distress embossing powder - which has a lovely rusty texture all its own - to edge the lock, and attached it using a couple of Idea-ology long attachers.   I used the Vintage Photo powder around the edges of the ATC too.








I used an embossing pen to highlight the word FREE in the centre, and then added clear embossing powder to it for a glossy finish.











On another piece of kraft card, I wrote my little sentiment Unlock Your Potential using the same embossing pen, but in the end decided I preferred to UTEE the whole of the piece of card rather than just the lettering.  It's mounted on a piece of rusty mesh from the Funkie Junkie Boutique.







For the silvery ATC, I started with a piece of black cardstock, and cut it to the ATC size - 2.5 x 3.5 inches.  

I stamped one of the recent Stampers Anonymous Classics releases in clear embossing ink, and applied silver embossing powder.  Once that was heated, I used some of the mica paint from the palette I created for a previous project to add colour to the image.  

I trimmed the corners of the ATC to the same angle as the stamped image.  

And on the very edges I used some of the Frantage Aged Silver embossing powder - that's the one that has the varied colours within it.








On the top and bottom edges I used the little TH embossing folder out of the Pattern and Stitches set, and then swiped clear embossing ink onto the raised stitches and added silver embossing powder to those two.

I do like all the diagonals and angles within this ATC, and the silver against the black.  The gleam that you get when you tilt it in the light is pretty yummy, so I think it probably comes out as my favourite of the two.  

I don't know... what do you think?!


It's so great to have you drop in today...  Do pop over to Fun With ATCs and see what my amazing team mates have been up to, and of course we'd love to have you play along.  It was lovely to see so many familiar faces amongst the entrants last time round!  

Continuous effort - not strength or intelligence - is the key to unlocking our potential.
Winston Churchill

I don't know the key to success, but the key to failure is trying to please everybody.
Bill Cosby

Success is not the key to happiness. Happiness is the key to success. If you love what you are doing, you will be successful. 
Albert Schweitzer

Sunday, 2 December 2012

Something New



Hello all, I'm delighted to welcome you to Words and Pictures today for my first post as an official member of the eclectic Paperie Design Team.

eclectic Paperie have an online store packed with lovely stash goodies, and a fabulous blog where you can find lots of inspiration and tutorials for how to use them.

And my fellow newbies Marjie Kemper and Annette Green are also making their first contributions this week, so be sure to check out their amazing creations too!

I've been having a play with some gorgeous Graphic 45 papers - the ABC Primer (which is on offer in the store at the moment), as well as my favourite Distress Inks, lovely Idea-ology lettering, and some texture paste, to create this dimensional hanging.
















And if my "something new" for today works out, then you'll find all the product details at the foot of this post, and you can click through to eclectic Paperie and put them straight in your basket!!







I started with a paperboard frame which my sister-in-law picked up for me at a bargain price in The Range (it's about 15x6 inches), but you could use these techniques on any untreated frame.

If your surface is already painted or varnished, you might need to sand it down first or you could do the same as me and start with a coat or two of gesso, which should give enough "tooth" for other paints and inks to adhere to the surface.










Once I'd done one rough coat of gesso (instant "shabby chic", I call it!), I used a palette knife to apply some paste through the Crafter's Workshop Mini Ledger template.  

I love the raised texture this gives the text.  Another coat of gesso once the paste is dry makes it look part of the frame itself.









I then used Distress Inks in Antique Linen, Vintage Photo, Black Soot and Wild Honey to build layers of colour on and around the raised text.  











On the sides of the frame I used the same template, but this time I blended Black Soot Distress Ink through it using a blending tool.  

I love how versatile these templates are - you can use them in so many ways, with inks, sprays or texture pastes... the list goes on.






Then I started selecting papers from the lovely ABC Primer set... I wanted to stick to a neutral colour palette for this project, so those were the papers I pulled out and started putting in place.  












Once I had my three main panels, I chose a letter, a sum and a bookplate for each frame, edged them and the main panels with Vintage Photo DI, and adhered them using mounting tape for a dimensional effect.  







Each element within the frame has a different number of layers of tape so that they sit at different heights as you look at them.

And I left the interior walls of the frame in plain gesso - it really makes the contents of the frame pop, I think.










Finally, we come to the sentiment.  It's a thought I really like to live by - for me the most exciting thing in the world is learning and discovering new things.  It's one of many reasons why I've been so lit up by this whole new crafting hobby - the learning curve is huge, and there's so much inspiration and information out there to discover, explore and play with.




The lettering is from Idea-ology: the brilliant Newsprint AlphaParts (also on offer right now). 



I love these little plastic letters... you can alter them with inks and paints as I've done in past projects or, as here, leave them in their basic state.  















They're sticky on the back, so you just twist them off the frame and adhere them to the project.
 














One of the main things I love is that you get plenty of each letter within a set; so, even though I've used four 'e's for this sentiment, there are still some left for next time.  







So that's me for today... I'd love to know what you make of today's offering.  Your thoughts and comments are so much appreciated, and it's great to have your company as I set out on this new adventure.  I'll be sharing an eP project with you here at Words and Pictures once a week, and every so often I'll be letting you know about a post over at the eclectic Paperie blog itself.  But for now I'll just wish you a wonderful week, whatever it is you're up to, and I look forward to seeing you again soon - either here, or elsewhere in Craftyblogland!

Anyone who stops learning is old, whether at twenty or eighty.
Henry Ford

I am learning all the time.  The tombstone will be my diploma.
Eartha Kitt

Products used:  
(Click to go to product page at eclectic Paperie)



I'm entering this for the following:

Artful Times are playing Anything Goes this fortnight
Simon Says Stamp are also playing Anything Goes at the moment
Top Tip Tuesday are playing Kids and Teens
Sugar Creek Hollow's challenge this week is Distressing - and by that, I don't mean that it's upsetting me... oh, you know what I mean!