Monday, December 10, 2018
Gelli Plate + Stencils = Christmas Cards
I've used my round Gelli Plate for the first time in a long time!
The first thing I noticed – to my delight – was that the round shape of the printing plate greatly changes the “look” usually achieved from using a stencil.
This happy fact stood out for me when I used my 9”X 12” stencil
Facets
because I’m so conditioned to seeing it in its original 9”X 12” shape.
Here are 5 prints that show the dramatic change into a circular format:
The first print shown above --
-- was to become the first of two Christmas cards, b
ecause this image reminds me of a stained-glass church window.
In making this print, I started
with black-and-white patterned scrapbook paper, then layered
red, orange and green acrylic paints over it with a brayer.
Once that dried, I used my round Gelli Plate, a gesso-teal mix of acrylic paint, and my 9” X 12” stencil
Facets
to pull the print.
To make the first card, I covered a blank 5”X 7” greeting card with a background -- green mulberry paper embedded with gold threads of tinsel.
My next step was to add the half-circle I’d cut from my Gelli Plate print.
It was really easy to cut out the printed area, because this stencil’s geometric design is divided equally by its axis.
On a scrap of the same green mulberry paper, I used a gold-paint pen to write “Christmas Blessings” – I did it on a scrap, not the card itself, because I wanted to make sure it would turn out the way I wanted.
Then I cut out the lettering and glued it to the card cover.
That card is below:
I used part of the leftover print to decorate a matching envelope -- it became a trim that runs along the bottom edge, right under the area where the name and address will be:
Another print I pulled, using the same teal-gesso mix, was on dark blue cardstock that has embedded glitter-like sparkles.
Here, again, is that print:
To make another Christmas card, I chose a 6"X6" card blank made from "pearlized" cardstock. Because of the change in card size, I cut out a bigger part of the print than I had for the earlier card. I glued the cut-out to my card and trimmed the edges.
I used a rubber stamp and green inkpad to make the greeting on white cardstock.
After cutting it out with Fiskars Paper Edger scissors, I ran the gold pen along its four edges and added it to the Christmas card.
Here's the card, finished -- except for a red border that I plan to add later:
Here's the matching envelope, again with its decoration along the bottom that leaves room above for the name and address:
The church-window-like Christmas card below was also made with my
Facets Stencil
but this time I didn't use the Gelli Plate ...
For me, it was a natural segue from Christmas cards and envelopes to Christmas giftwrap. Some of the prints shown at the top of this post were done on foreign newsprint -- this gives me an interesting background and results in a pliable paper perfect for giftwrap and matching gift-tags.
Here again are those papers:
And here they are, used together, as giftwrap --
And finally, with a gift-tag:
In its entirety,
Facets
stencil looks like this --
To scroll thru the pages of all my StencilGirl stencils, please start
here
.
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