Thursday, November 9, 2017

Today's Blog Post at StencilGirl Talk!

 
Honored to be featured in today's post here!

A sneak-peek --






Click here for step-by-step photos and directions in using stencils to make journal covers.  The two journals I made are mini-sized gifts for Christmas stockings. 

To see my full line of stencils, please click here.

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

CLUSTERED LEAVES Used in a You Tube video by Kathy Adams


My 9" x 12" stencil Clustered Leaves was used in this You Tube video with the Gelli Plate to make layered backgrounds for art projects.  

The artist here is Kathy Adams -- who has joined many of us who've cut off the outside borders of this stencil, making it more versatile and (in my humble opinion) more beautiful.

Clustered Leaves -- before its rectangular border is trimmed off -- looks like this:




Thanks for visiting my blog today!  If you want to follow this blog by email, just use that option in the upper right sidebar.  

To see my full line of stencils, please check here.

Sunday, November 5, 2017

Kreative Kymona and FEATHERS 6 Stencil


Please check out this issue of StencilGirl Talk featuring Kymona Tracey.  She's delighted me by using my Feathers 6 stencil on the cover of a journal --





Make It Matter strikes me as a perfect title for a journal!

To keep up with Kymona, check out the links below --


-- and to see all my stencils, check here.

If you'd like to follow this blog by email, please use this option in the upper right sidebar.

Thanks for looking here today!


Friday, November 3, 2017

Blessed and Thankful


Artist Lisa Dobry invites StencilGirl StencilClub Facebook members to create art according to monthly themes -- a great idea! -- and the theme for November is Blessed and Thankful.

So I gave this phrase the starring role in a piece of art --



For this piece on stretched canvas, I used these stencils:


It's a Jungle Out There (9"x 12")

Marbles 9 (9" x 12" but also comes in a6" x 6" size.)

Mimosa 6 (6" x 6" but also comes in a 9" x 12" size.)

The central area of the canvas -- its title and theme -- was the part I did first.  After sketching in the hollow letters with Inktense pencils, I painted them with water-thinned acrylic inks.  

Next, I created the border. The technique I used for that is shown and described in the Absentee Artist chapter of the book Creative Paper Art by Nancy Welch.  It's also demonstrated in Pat Dews' DVD Designing Great Starts with Texture and Form, available at Cheap Joe's Art Supplies. 

In my very last step, I re-outlined the centralized letters with watercolor pencils.

These stencils weren't used in their entirety.  Each of them had previously been to my chop-shop, where I'd customized them with scissors.
Thanks for visiting today!

To see my full line of stencils, please check here

Thursday, November 2, 2017

Artist Mary Ann Russo with WEBBED MEDALLION and TIGER LILY 6" x 6" Stencils


My friend Mary Ann Russo has created gorgeous stained- glass-window artworks using my 6" x 6" stencils Tiger Lily and Webbed Medallion.

Mary Ann's method was to start with watercolor geometric shapes on watercolor paper.  Next, she used a brayer to roll black acrylic paint over the stencils.  While the paint was still wet, she flipped the stencils over and pressed them to the watercolor paper -- using the stencils like rubber stamps.

Since some of the lines didn't imprint fully, Mary Ann filled in a few gaps with a black marker.  

She cut one of the papers into a stained glass window shape and added a dark paper frame.


Made with Tiger Lily 6" x 6" stencil


Made with 6" x 6" Webbed Medallion stencil



Made with Tiger Lily 6" x 6" stencil
Thanks for visiting my blog today!

My thanks also to Mary Ann, for generously allowing me to post her artwork online.

To see all my stencils, please check here.






Monday, October 30, 2017

Young Artists and Words of Wisdom -- to Remember!


Gymnastic friends and budding artists, Candace Kieya and Olivia Alexander are the young beauties whose art is featured in today's post.




Pictured here (left) holding up art made with a stencil by Jessica Sporn, Candace says,  "I really like the ancient effect with the dark colors, designs and different stencil prints.  I would definitely do this again!"

And Olivia (right) says "that my plan really wasn't to make beautiful art but to just have fun and learn from my mistakes."

Olivia, I would like to engrave your words in stone!  Your statement should be the motto of every person who participates in an art class or workshop.  To use a trite phrase, you are wise beyond your years!  

Olivia above is posing with art she created with my 6" x 6" stencil Heron.

My sincere thanks to Lisa Dobry for this photo and for her kindness in getting parental permission as well as the girls' comments for posting here.  Lisa, you rock!

I'm also indebted to Lisa for her own thoughts about this art-play-date the two youngsters enjoyed --

What Lisa loved about this whole process with the girls was the creativity of their pieces. 

Candace had never Gelli printed before, so Lisa offered a tutorial on that. 

Suggesting they start with 3 colors, Lisa moved the stencil collection closer to them and let them do their thing. 

Occasionally one would express a desire for something specific like, "I want to put something here."  Lisa then would ask the young artist whether she were thinking something random, or something else that would be more repetitive of what was already there.

Lisa told the girls they could use paint or spray ink; she also explained the difference between water-soluble media and acrylic media. 

The two girls made their own choices on everything. 

Below are photos of the projects after embellishments had been added --










It's always a joy to see young artists in action and to hear their own comments about art-making experiences.  


Friday, October 27, 2017

MIMOSA 6 Stencil and Artist Kyriakos Pachadiroglou


Last summer StencilGirl hosted a blog hop featuring a number of artists with a wide range of great ideas.  My last post came from that blog hop and so does today's post.

Artist Kyriakos Pachadiroglou has used my 6" x 6" stencil Mimosa 6 in a fantastic way -- I love the creativity shown in step-by-step detail here, as well as its results!






Post blog hop, Kyriakos Pachadiroglou notified me of another artwork of his using one of my Mimosa stencils (which comes in two sizes -- 9" x 12" and 6" x 6".)  This new, three-dimensional art is a stunning celebration of autumn ... while at the same time, encouraging us to grow and bloom!




Thank you, Kyriakos, for allowing me to share your artwork here!

My thanks also to you readers, for stopping by today; if interested in following this blog by email, please use this option in the upper right sidebar.

To keep up with Kyriakos and his ongoing and beautiful art projects, please check here.


Mimosa 6 stencil (6" x 6")

Mimosa Stencil (9" x 12")

To see all my stencils, you can visit here.  

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

CLUSTERED LEAVES Used by Karen Gaunt


To see my 9" x 12" stencil Clustered Leaves used to make collage paper on a coffee filter, please visit https://www.karen-gaunt.com/blog/stencilgirl-and-imagine-crafts-summer-blog-hop


Like the last artist I featured here, Karen Gaunt has liberated the stencil from its outer borders.  Doing this is a quick and easy cutting job.  I recommend Joyce Chen scissors.  They're sharp and have short blades.


Thank you, Karen, for having chosen one of my stencils for this project!


And thank YOU, for stopping by my blog today.  To follow by email, you can use this option in the upper right sidebar.


To see all my stencils, please visit here.

Saturday, October 21, 2017

Sherry Canino, FERNS 6 Stencil -- and a Blog Hop with Prizes!


Ferns 6 has just been used by artist Sherry Canino -- and her art-making is part of a blog hop that pairs StencilGirl stencils with Tim Holtz' Ranger products!

Check out Sherry's art-making process here.

Hop into the blog hop and you may win great prizes!

Friday, October 20, 2017

More New Art-Prints made with One of my New 6" x 6" Stencils, WEBBED MEDALLION


I found a piece of marbled paper to use as the background for today's first print, made with my new 6" x 6" stencil Webbed Medallion --











Thank you for stopping by my blog today!

To see my full line of StencilGirl masks and stencils, please check here.

Thursday, October 19, 2017

SPRIGS, One of My Four Just-Released Stencils


To create the print below, I went with a simple way of layering -- just three coats of paint, stacked one atop the next, each used with a different stencil.

The bottom layer -- red on yellow -- was printed with my 9" x 12" stencil Facets.

The middle layer -- translucent white -- was printed with Mimosa Stencil, also 9" x 12".  (Mimosa also comes in a 6" x 6" version.)

The top layer -- baby blue -- was made with Sprigs, one of my four just-released stencils.




Thank you for taking time to visit my blog today!


Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Fourth Brand-New Stencil -- 9" x 12" THISTLE


Once upon a time, my farmer-father loaded up the pickup with us kids and a collection of sharp, long-handled tools.  He drove us to pasture land that lay at a distance from our home farm.  

As soon as the pasture came into view, I exclaimed,  "Look at all those pretty flowers!"

To this day, my three-years-younger brother will tell this story with glee.

The "pretty flowers" -- I was quickly informed -- were thistles in bloom.

And we had arrived in this pasture to level them with weed-whackers!

Well, I maintain one person's weed can be another person's pretty flower -- and my fascination with thistles has never waned.

One day an idea marched into my head -- why not make a thistle stencil?

So I did.

Here are prints I've made with my fourth just-released stencil --



Above:  (foreground) Thistle Stencil and (background) Mimosa Stencil (both 9" x 12")

Above:  (foreground) Thistle and (background) Mimosa Stencil (both 9" x 12")


Above: (foreground)  Thistle Stencil; (background) Loopy Ladders (both 9" x 12") Stencil; (central background) Ornamental Iron Curls Stencil (6" x 6")


Above:  Thistle and (background) Vases (both 9" x 12")


Above:  (blue foreground) Thistle Stencil; (distant yellow background) Mimosa Stencil; (gray background) Loopy Ladders (both 9" x 12")


Above:  (foreground) Thistle Stencil; (background) Tangled Pods Stencil (both 9" x 12"); (background) Tiger Lily Stencil (6" x 6")

Above:  a greeting card cover collaged with a partial print that was made with (background) 9" x 12" Prayer Flags Stencil and (foreground) 9" x 12" Thistle Stencil.
My four new stencils are also busily making Christmas cards.  More about that in December!

In its entirety, 9" x 12" Prayer Flags Stencil looks like this:





Thank you for taking time to visit here today!



Tuesday, October 17, 2017

TIGER LILY -- Brand-New 6" x 6" Stencil!


Today's post focuses on Tiger Lily, one of my just-released 6" x 6" stencils.  Here are prints I've made with it -- 








The three prints above show Tiger Lily used alone.  Below are prints showing combinations with other stencils ...


Tiger Lily and Two Vases


Tiger Lily (top) and Webbed Medallion (bottom)


Tiger Lily (bottom) and Tangled Pods

Thanks for coming by to see my blog today!

Monday, October 16, 2017

Help from Mary Beth Shaw, New-Release Stencils and Old Favorite Stencils


The July/August 2017 Somerset Studio magazine carried Mary Beth Shaw's write-up about using silhouette stencils with patterned stencils.

Following Mary Beth's directions, I came up with this:





The "silhouette" stencil in this case is my 9" x 12" stencil Fantasia.  It left unpainted areas on the substrate (a colorful old map.)

The two 6" x 6" stencils that I paired with Fantasia are brand-new releases -- Sprigs (topmost in the image above) and Tiger Lily (bottom).

Mary Beth's technique is quick and easy:  

(1) Secure the substrate to the work area with masking tape; 

(2) use the same tape to layer the "silhouette" stencil atop the substrate.  (In the magazine article, Mary Beth used my Heron stencil and my Osprey Wings stencil -- both of which are closer to what we think of when we say "silhouette."  Here however, I chose to use Fantasia because I was curious to discover what the result would be.)

(3) Add a layer of acrylic paint over the stencil that's fastened to the substrate under it. (For this, I used a sponge brayer loaded with heavy-body blue paint.)

(4) After that paint dries, add one or more stencils with densely figured patterns; use masking tape to hold them down, if desired.

(5) Using a different color acrylic paint, go over the top layer of stencils.  (I used another sponge brayer, loaded with heavy-body white paint .)

Here are two close-ups of the above print:







Thanks for visiting my blog today!

Sunday, October 15, 2017

SPRIGS -- One of Four Brand-New Stencils


Today's post features the second of four just-released stencils, all available here.

s523 Sprigs, my second new stencil measuring 6" x 6", has already been used in so many of my artworks that I will need to spread the photos over two days.





















Thank you for visiting my blog today!