Doodling with Debby: From Sketch To Finished Card
Hi friends! Please join me in welcoming back the always inspiring Debby Hughes in the latest edition of our monthly blog series of Doodling with Debby! Be sure to watch the video and enjoy!

Hello, Debby Hughes here. In today’s video, I’m taking a very rough sketch, filling it out into a plan and taking it to a finished card using the Christmas Kitties set from Simon Says Stamp.

STEP BY STEP INSTRUCTIONS

- Create a rough sketch in a notebook/on the corner of a piece of paper/whatever is to hand at the time.
- Cut a piece of scratch paper to size and expand the sketch. Planning out in pencil and a light ink the placement of elements.
- Cut a piece of watercolour card to size and pencil a border around the edges.
- Stack the plan on top of the card and place in a Misti.
- Align the cat stamp according to the sketch. Lift the sketch paper and stamp the cat in Antique Linen Distress Ink.
- Use a Nested Circle die to draw in pencil a crescent moon according to the placement planned out in the sketch.
- Tape the card to a board and fully cover the wide border.
- Watercolour. I used Daniel Smith paints.
- Lift the Painter’s Tape and place the card back in the Misti.
- Treat with Anti-Static Powder and stamp a greeting in Versamark ink before heat embossing Simon Says Stamp White Embossing Powder.
- If the edges of the paint have bled, trim the panel and attach to another piece of watercolour card with foam tape.
- Use a Faber Castell Polychromo pencil to deepen the shadows.
- Use white gouache and a paintbrush to add stars randomly over the background.
- Attach the panel to a card base cut and scored from Ivory card.

Well, that’s me for this month. I hope you enjoyed this tutorial. Thanks for joining me and I hope to see you next time for Doodling With Debby.

WATCH THE VIDEO:
Watch below or in HD on YouTube.
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Thanks so much for stopping by, and thanks to Debby for being our guest!
Studio Monday with Nina-Marie: Holiday Gift Card Pockets!

Hello friends, it’s Nina-Marie Trapani with you today and I have some fun holiday inspiration for you today! We’re going to make some festive gift card pockets using some of the new products in our Holly Jolly release, along with our Petal Envelope die!

With the holidays coming up fast, these cute gift card pockets are perfect for placing under the tree, tucking into stockings or popping in the mail to someone special!

I’ve stamped the envelopes with our Holiday Words and Outline Merry Christmas background clings. Each gift card holder is decorated with a variety of die cuts, embellishments, and twine. Some of the new dies I used were the Chunky Trees and Holly and Sophie snowflakes. I even cut a window into one of the envelopes with an old favorite – the Rina snowflake die!

The best part is that these are SUPER easy to whip up – you’ll have many little pockets in no time, which makes mass producing easy-peasy. I hope you will watch the video below to see how I made these adorable little gift card envelopes!

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Textured Circle Background
Hi all! Happy Sunday! I hope you’re having a great weekend so far! Please join me in welcoming back special guest Anna-Karin Evaldsson who has made a gorgeous new project to inspire! Read on and enjoy!

Hi everyone! I am so happy to be here on the blog today to share a stamping tutorial with you. I can hardly believe it is November already and even though I normally enjoy winter, this year I have not looked forward to the darker months. Quite the opposite. After having switched to winter time and changed to winter tires last week, I decided to do an art journal page with a cheerful feel.
This background is full of circles and textures and is easy and fun to do. The design can be scaled down if you would rather make a card. Circles are such fun to work with and here I used a mix of white embossing, color embossing and stamped circles, combined with Distress Ink and Distress Oxide ink. The background was adhered to one of the denim pages in Dina Wakley’s Blue Edition Media Journal.

The background was created using only one stamp set by Simon Says Stamp, namely the Mix and Match Circles set. The circles on the set can be combined and layered in numerous ways and I didn’t even use all of them here.

Cut a piece of watercolor paper. My paper is 6 x 8.7 in. Stamp circles with SSS embossing ink and emboss with white powder. Always be very careful when using a heat tool, so that you don’t burn yourself.

Smear Speckled Egg, Mermaid Lagoon, Pumice Stone and a little Ground Espresso Distress Ink on a non-stick craft sheet. Mist with water.

Smear Speckled Egg, Mermaid Lagoon and a little Ground Espresso Distress Oxide ink on a craft sheet and mist with water. Just lightly touch the paper to the ink, you don’t want to press too hard or smooch the paper around. We only want little dots and areas of the oxide ink here and there. Note that I forgot to add Speckled Egg and Mermaid Lagoon Distress Oxide Ink to the photo. I used more of those than of Ground Espresso.

Press the paper into the ink and watch the magic. You could leave it like this or let it dry and repeat the process, for darker colors and more texture. I added one more layer of Distress Ink. Let dry.
Continue adding circles using Ranger’s Mixed Media Sea powder and more white powder. The circles on the set are designed to fit inside of each other. Stamp some circles inside the others and let some of the others overlap.

When the background is dry, stamp circles with Mermaid Lagoon and Ground Espresso. Mist lightly with water before stamping. Some of the circles were stamped inside others, some overlapping and some just slightly off-set to create a shadow. I also stamped some stars.

Splatter a little white Gloss Acrylic Spray on the background. Screw off the sprayer and tap it to get splatters from the end of the sprayer (the piece that is usually inside the bottle).

Die cut the Simon Says Stamp Slimline Borders and Edges from white paper. I haven’t separated my dies yet, which is why the edge is shaped on both sides. I die cut a bunch of these for future projects, before separating the dies from each other. Also die cut Poppy Stamp Evergreen Trio. Smear Ranger Moon Dust Stickles over the die cuts.

Die cut the SSS Chunky Happy from vellum and Glimmery Baby Blue cardstock.


Glue the outline to the vellum and then glue to the page, adding small dots of glue with the SSS craft tacky glue behind the cardstock die cuts, so that the glue won’t show through the vellum. The second part of the sentiment comes from the Reverse Happy Sentiment Strip.

Add more sentiments from the sentiment strip, sanding the edges for a distressed look. I also added left-over hearts from die cutting the borders.

The sequins come from the SSS Seaglass set. I often reach for sequins and they were perfect for this page with its circle theme.

The circles on the Mix and Match set are designed to fit together, so that you can create layered circles, like this one. Several of the other designs, for example, fit into this double-circle, which means that you can get lots of variations from just one stamp set.

Sentiments from Mix and Match Circles were also stamped here and there on the background. They fit into the circles. Here the dots were also stamped in brown, off-setting slightly to create a shadow effect.

The white splatters will pick up some of the color from the ink in the background, making it look as if you splattered the page with different colors.

The Distress Oxide ink dots almost shine if you look closely, adding to the layered look of the background.
This labyrinth design is one of my favorites on the set. The sentiment comes from SSS Laugh In Flowers.

I placed the star burst above the trees to make it look like a big star or snowflake.

The Evergreen Trio trees are such beautiful trees and I like that they are in three different sizes.

Let’s finish with my favorite detail on this project. When you heat emboss and then do the type of inking technique we did here, the embossing can lead the ink, making it pool in some areas and avoid others. Here the second layer of ink pooled outside this double-circle, making the circle lighter than the background.

I hope this tutorial inspired you to do some heat embossing and inking. You can, for instance, to a full sheet and then cut the background down to use on several cards. Thank you so much for looking! Stay safe! Happy crafting! -Anna-Karin
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Thanks so much for stopping by, and thanks to Anna-Karin for being our guest!





