Off on an Adventure

I’m off on an adventure for three weeks, with limited art supplies and internet access.  I’m not too sure how I’ll go. I do have a new sketch / journal book (my husband bought me one, as well as one for the boys!). My plan is to sketch, journal and write and fill the entire book during those three weeks.

I will miss our weekly challenges, but I shall return!

Hope you all continue to make some art each day.

Michelle

GPP Crusade 21 – Irresistible

Michelle Ward has once again challenged us to a brilliant crusade for this month, over at the Green Pepper Press Street Team. She knows how to take the simple things and turn them into great art! This month is crayon resistance rubbings with paint wash to create exciting background papers.

This captured my imagination! I had paper; my boys have LOTS of crayons; I’ve got paint – all ready to go… What I had trouble with is the textures to do the rubbings with. I tried rubber stamps and couldn’t get a good impression. The paper crinkled around the stamp and I didn’t want to press too hard in case I wrecked the rubber. I didn’t have any fancy wall paper.

Rubbing with dragonflyRubbings with harlequin stamp

Then I remembered I had a collection of Fiskars texture plates for dry embossing. These worked wonderfully! They were flat enough to hold the paper still and made from a hard plastic, so I could rub hard and get a good impression. As crayons are very colourful, I wanted to create colourful rubbings, so used a combination of colours on each sheet. This could also be because I was a little impatient – by doing lots of colours together, it would be easier to see which ones worked more quickly. The texture plates that worked best were the ones with the least amount of raised pattern; the lines and waves, bricks and scale patterns were my favourite. After the plain paper ones, I did some rubbings on text pages.

scale templateNaked rubbingstext pages rubbingsTemplates

And now for the fun part – the painting. The first effort with a cheap black paint didn’t work too well. The rubbing weren’t hard enough and the paint was too watery. The second attempt was much better, although the results were mixed – some crayons worked better or were rubbed harder; various paint thicknesses worked in different areas; some colour combinations worked better than others. Here are some samples – I’ve got tones of pages!  I love how the yellow “popped” out.

finishedpainted text pages

Now I’ve got lots of brightly coloured pages – what to do with them? I’m completely at a loss! I did use some of the extra paint left over to cover an altered book spread, so I used that as a base. Added Gesso to blend the colours and sponged with chalk inks.

true colours spread

true colours close up

“Worship” was stenciled using Fiskars cutter templates and pencil, going over it with black texta. The letters were overlapped for dramatic artistic effect, and because it wouldn’t fit! The “True colours” letters were traced onto the back of the rubbings page; but turning the stencil over, I could stencil in reverse so I didn’t get pencil on the coloured side of the paper. Cut out with scissors and edged in black. Adhered with Xyron.

I don’t think this spread is finished but I’m not sure where it will head next. I was thinking arrows and borders, but I’m out of creative time this week. I’m heading off for a three week holiday on Saturday; caravaning from Melbourne, Victoria to Queensland. We’ll take the boys to Sea World and find some warmer weather. My artistic creativity will be reduced to my Pandora’s box of goodies!

Hope I’ll be back to catch the end of next month’s crusade!

Until then, rally on, valiant Art Crusaders!

Michelle

4×4 Friday – Numbers

Being an Engineer, I LOVE numbers, so the 4×4 Friday theme is great. But where to start? I chose a rhyme that I’ve been reciting often with my boys, to distract them while walking home from the shops – it seems to work most times!

This has been created with limited resources. We went away for the weekend, to my parents cottage in the bush; card, pen and Derwent pencils. Didn’t have a lot of crafting time, but it was quite relaxing.

Michelle

Make a Moo or Two – Cats

This week, over at Make a Moo or Two, the theme is cats (so, I guess, it’s “Make a Meow or Two”!).  These have been done with limited resources, as I went away for the long weekend and only took a few things with me.

Make A Moo or Two Cats

Stamp set from All Night Media (I think!) with Brilliance Graphite Black ink and Faber Castel pencils.

Happy creating!

Michelle

MMM – Bingo

This week’s theme at Mixed Media Monday is BINGO! This page got a little sidetracked this week as I was sick for a few days and I went away over our long weekend, so here’s where I got to!

Top green bingo card from Collections. The rest of the images are from Collage Images, here. You need to join through Flickr. The group has an amazing array of images and I just figured out recently that you can search the images (I spent ages paging through them!)

Michelle

A Moo or Two – Brown, Beige and Cream

I’m getting the hang of these Moo cards! I took too long for last weeks Spots and Stripes, so I jumped straight into Brown, Beige and Cream for this weeks Make a Moo or Two challenge. This wasn’t too challenging as I do a lot of vintage pieces with these colours; the challenge was not to use a metallic (bronze or gold) with them.

Make a Moo or Two Brown

Border stamp from Collections Victorian Sheet #3. Embellishments also from Collections. Images from Art-e-zine and the flicker group (I’ll add the link when I can find it!). Ink is Espresso Adirondack and Sepia.

Happy creating,

Michelle

MMM Pens and Pencils

Mixed Media Mondays challenged us with Pens and Pencils as this weeks theme. Luckily I do have a pen stamp, but then couldn’t find it; don’t know where it could have gotten to. Then found this one from an UM plate.

MMM Pens with blue background

The writing is by me using an aqua pen and Ocean Wave Twinkling H2Os. Pen nib stamp from “Memories of Italy” plate, by Non Sequitur, using Denim Adirondack ink. Background made by me; instructions are here. Stick together with glue stick; a bit impatient today!

Thanks for having a look!

Michelle