I always thought it would be nice to have somewhere to chat about the projects I was working on, the ideas that were forming in my mind, somewhere I could keep track of what I was doing and possibly inspire myself to complete some of the endless projects that I seem to have on the go at any one time.....that all seemed so easy when I had no blog or website, and no idea on how to set one up, easy to put aside to do some day!!
Well.......that day has arrived, thanks to fellow papermaniac Jayne I have no excuses left. She set up the blog, included a page for me, gave me some basic instructions and said go to it!! So bear with me as I find my way through this maze of postings, categories, feeds, links, etc, etc.
Well.......that day has arrived, thanks to fellow papermaniac Jayne I have no excuses left. She set up the blog, included a page for me, gave me some basic instructions and said go to it!! So bear with me as I find my way through this maze of postings, categories, feeds, links, etc, etc.
Triple Time Stamping 4586J Snowflake set of 3 from Kaszazz
At our last get together I showed everyone a card I had made using the triple time stamping technique that I had come across on youtube by dostamping with dawn.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bmculp_tz74 With this technique you cut three graduated layers of light coloured card or paper, layer them evenly on top of each other and stamp. Each of the layers are then mounted on contrasting cardstock and attached to each other, maintaining the stamped pattern. A very easy, effective technique. Jayne suggested it could be done with less paper by stamping on a single piece first then cutting the one piece into 3 frames and mounting those on mats. I decided to try this but took it one step further and also cut the contrast card into frames as well. You still need a base card the same colour as the contrast mats. The photos below should hopefully make this a bit easier to follow.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bmculp_tz74 With this technique you cut three graduated layers of light coloured card or paper, layer them evenly on top of each other and stamp. Each of the layers are then mounted on contrasting cardstock and attached to each other, maintaining the stamped pattern. A very easy, effective technique. Jayne suggested it could be done with less paper by stamping on a single piece first then cutting the one piece into 3 frames and mounting those on mats. I decided to try this but took it one step further and also cut the contrast card into frames as well. You still need a base card the same colour as the contrast mats. The photos below should hopefully make this a bit easier to follow.
Here is the you tube clip with the technique I originally started with.