Monday, October 20, 2014
Personalized Gift Idea
There are several blank readymade calendars available online; here's one that's 12"X12" and has cardstock pages --
http://smile.amazon.com/Adorn-It-Blank-Calendar-12-Inch-Pages/dp/B00BOWVOKS/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1413809279&sr=8-4&keywords=calendar+blanks
Or you can download free printable calendars -- lots of online sources exist for that option; but I think many of us would rather skip the challenge of printing generous-sized calendar pages on cardstock.
Why blank calendars? Because it's fun to make a gorgeous calendar to give as a special personalized gift! At Christmas, especially.
Below is a start of a layout that still has far to go till completion; my next step will be to lighten selected areas with layers of paint. Then I can add words and/or photos to work toward creating one page of a brand-new calendar.
The starting layers above were created in a workshop I took in Oct. 2014, in South Orange, NJ, where a roomful of us had the pleasure of learning under the guidance of the energetic, entertaining and very knowledgeable
Jane Davies
.
After a first layer of collage, I brushed areas with a mix of Golden Fluid Acrylics in Manganese Blue and Titanium White. Immediately, while the paint was still wet, I pressed down my 9"X12" stencil
Facets
.
Using the reductive/subtractive technique that I've shown in earlier posts, I quickly rubbed off color in the open areas of the stencil. Then I lifted the stencil, turned it over and applied pressure, creating the reverse-print which shows faintly in the lower left of the layout above. (Click on the image to enlarge it.)
To apply that pressure, I covered the stencil with a sheet of scratch paper and rolled firmly over the scrap paper with my hard rubber brayer. The scratch paper has a dual role: It keeps paint off the brayer, and it protects the stencil from the possibility of damage as the brayer's pressure is applied. The stencil I used,
Facets
, has no unconnected/unanchored lines, so there was really no need to protect it from the brayer.
But other stencils, such as
Branching Blossoms Silhouette
, were designed to have some fragile areas which are not connected to those anchoring lines that we designers call bridges. This creates a more attractive stencil but also a more fragile stencil. Ya can't have your cake and eat it too!
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