Saturday, May 4, 2013

It's All About Perspective Tutorial and a Gift Card Give-Away!

This is a BIG weekend!  It is National Scrapbook Day AND it is Derby Day!  Woot!  I am doing twice the celebrating and starting off the day with a tutorial in conjunction with the Circleville NSD Weekend!  I want you to celebrate with me so at the end of my post, I have a gift card to gift away right here!



This tutorial is all about making die cuts more dimensional and these ideas work with any brand of cutter! It works if you like to hand-cut or if you like to use software to alter your cuts!  It can change whole cuts or just specific areas that seem to flatten out.  I love die cuts because they are a great starting point with so much of the basic illustration, theme, and style already figured out!  The fun is making it your own (and that is where the 'art' is too!)

A few ideas for adding dimension and emphasizing perspecitve:
  • Things that would be closer to you in real life should 'appear' closer to you on the die cut.  You can depict that by using brighter or deeper colors or more detailed patterns, using pop dots or bending the paper to physically pull parts closer, and creating more detailed cuts.  These things are in the foreground.
  • Things that would be farther away to you in real life should 'appear' farther away on the die cut (or behind the die cut if you are making a scene or vignette.)  You can depict that by using more muted colors, less detailed or less focused patterns, inking to make things seem to recess, or covering the background with something like vellum to 'mute' the colors.  For backgrounds, the flatter and more recessed you can make them, the more they set off things in the foreground.
  • It doesn't have to be perfect.  Imperfections just add to the charm of something original and hand-made.
To illustrate this on individual cuts, I made a few examples...

The die cut when created just as it is on the cartridge (left) is flat, especially the body, with no difference in the knee that is farther away than the leg that is closest to us!  By cutting "extra parts" and adding ink (applied with an eye shadow sponge) and sometimes pop dots, the baby has more dimension and looks more separated from the surface of the paper behind it.  


The baby is from the Cricut Everyday Paper Dolls cartridge.  The head and body were cut at 4-1/2".  (The head was flipped).  I backed the eyes with black, inked the edges of the head in pink, and hand-cut an ear.  Details were added with a Micron pen.  I only glued down the bottom of the ear because in real-life, the bottom of the hear is closer to the head, with the top of the ear protruding more.


For the body, I cut four:  one that matched the head so I could steal the hand, and three cut in lilac to make the sleeper.  One of those was cut using the 'blackout' feature and would be the base.  The other two were cut for 'spare parts' so that I could build up the figure.  I simply cut where indicated on the die cut using the marks the machine made.


You can see that the lower left cut was used just for the back knee. I inked it heavily because in real life, it would be more shadowed than the leg closest to us.  I also used the rest of the body from that cut and adhered it to the base.  I cut off the hand from the flesh-colored cut and adhered it next.



I adhered the arm.  I glued it flush at the top, but used a pop dot at the bottom so that the upper part looked more sewn-in and the part near the wrist looked like it was loose around the hand.


The leg was attached with pop dots.


I attached the head to complete it.

This works for all kinds of different figures and styles.


This example was cut from Cricut Pack Your Bags (page 21) at 4-1/2".  I liked her because she looks like she is wearing a Derby hat and I forced her to change her drink order from a lemon-adorned beverage to a mint julep in a traditional silver cup for Derby Day today.

I started with two cuts in flesh.


The 'spare parts' I needed included an arm that would be added last so that it could be pushed forward (and away from her hair), separate legs that could be pushed back behind a billowy skirt, and a separate head so that her face could tilt and have a chin!

I discarded everything from that figure except the parts I needed and clipped away the unnecessary parts of the remaining flesh-colored figure (left arm, legs, and lemon) and discarded those.


I cut two hair layers, one for the base and one to cut to make extra locks that would be attached only at the top and bent up at the bottom for dimension.  I wanted it to be a windy day (as opposed to the rainy one we are having today!)


I placed her extra face on top of the base after inking it.  The top was applied flush with glue.  Her jutting chin was made by using a pop dot on the lower part.



I added her bangs and inked her arm and chest-- easier to do before the dress is applied.

I added the other details to her face using the regular cuts on the cartridge and a Micron pen (for her hint of a nose).


Next, I added the hat, cutting off the flower detail since I knew I would be using a different color for that.  (No one likes to keep lining up those petals that will just get hidden!)  In fact, I just used the flower from the hat that was cut as a part of the dress layer.  (Why not?)


I cut a second flower and folded it for dimension and applied it on top of the flat flower cut.


Her billowy, wind-blown skirt would need to pull away from page.

I cut a skirt right off the cart and then hand-cut a separate skirt (without a hand cut out) that I applied to the dress.  (I wanted her hand free, otherwise, I could have just cut two from the card and bent one for the top layer.)  Honestly, I think it would have been okay either way.





I glued her arm on at the shoulder only and kept her hand free.  Last, I colored her shoes in and inked her legs.  The shoes were an experiment.  I was hoping to make them recede even more by making them less bright than the hemline. I used a little black ink on the folds of the skirt, placing the sponge applicator wherever the shadow naturally fell to emphasize them.


This idea can also be used on cuts of inanimate objects.  I think ink does wonders for home decor cuts.


For this example, the bed was cut from Cricut Everyday Paper Dolls at 4-1/2".  (The pillow above was cut from the same cart at 4").  I think this is a great cut, but with only one layer, it really is flat even with the foreshortened perspective.  We get more dimension just by cutting the same shape in a printed paper for fabric elements and an extra brown cut for extra parts. The extras include posts at the head to be inked and applied flush and a popped up foot board that we will give extra decoration.  I hand-cut the elements apart, using the die cut's own lines that were cut in-- very easy!!

By using a printed paper for bedding, I lost some of the foreshortening, but I liked the pattern and didn't want to give it up!


I inked anywhere on the bedding where I thought a shadow would naturally be, or to recess the shape, such as on the sides on the bedspread.  


After I applied the foot board, I realized that the bedspread that was tucked into the end would be  closer like the foot board so I popped it up too.  (In the end, I think it would have been fine either way.  Sometimes it is just about guessing.)

Then, I cut decorations to look like wood carvings on the bed from Something to Remember (page 51 phrase-shift).  I inked it and used a Micron pen to add details.  I only put it on the foot board, hoping to help pull it forward... not sure if it did the trick, but I really liked the way it decorated the bed.


I liked it... .until I took pictures!  Something wasn't right... The pillow was too bold and pulled forward  visually.  I cut a piece of vellum to soften the pattern and color saturation a bit.


Before...

After...

So those are the basics!
Are you ready for a little drama?  This is perfect for turning a silhouette (like those on the Suburbia cartridge) into a dimensional figure!

I started with the woman on the beach from the Cricut cartridge, Suburbia, cut at 4-1/2".  For illustrative purposes, I made it just like the cartridge handbook shows.  Then I made her again with dimensional layers and inking!


A silhouette necessarily flattens out any object.  All die cuts without layers really are just silhouettes.  Altering the cuts, cutting 'spare parts', adding layers that get popped up, and inking, as shown above, will transform a cut so that the perspective is clear and dimension is achieved.

I started with multiple cuts of the same figure.


I cut two in the color I wanted to use for the swimsuit/hat and two from flesh.  I used the arm and head/neck from one flesh cut and applied it to one red cut.  I hand-cut hair, inked, and added facial features with a Micron pen.  I didn't add an ear, but I did cut the hair in a way to make a silhouette of the ear.  Since the head is recessed, subtle features aren't required anyway.  From that same flesh cut, I cut the top leg and inked it.

From the second flesh cut, I only needed the bottom leg.  I inked it heavily and glued it on top of the red figure I was working with.  From the second red figure, I only needed her hat band, which I attached to her with a pop dot in the center and gluing flush on the ends, to curve it.


I applied the top leg by gluing flush at the hip and thigh but popping up at the foot.



And speaking of the foot, you are probably thinking, gee, her foot is the closest to the viewer, why don't you have a very detailed foot drawn in with painted toenails?  Well, I am horrible at drawing feet (like most people) but I couldn't ignore them so I put a few dots to hint at detail.  (Just a bit of cheating!)


I realize that I have ignored a big point when it comes to adding dimension and that is atmospheric perspective.  I thought this figure might be a good one to move from 'example' to 'finished project' so I decided to make her into a card.  (Is it weird that my project for National SCRAPBOOK Day is a card?!)

So, here's the thing, if I put her on a detailed background, it would lose the effect so I decided on a simple background, though something more realistic would have been just fine too, as long as it didn't have lots of details.  After all that attention to detail, it is kind of fun to tear some paper so that is how I made my beach.





Then I trimmed it down and glued down my figure.


This mat was then adhered to a card I cut to fit.  I tucked her bent leg in under the paper layer a bit on the finished card.


You can see that by altering the digital and cartridge cuts, the images become less 'Cricut' or 'Silhouette' and more YOU as it shifts from craft to art in this way.  ...And it is just more fun too!

OK- so I promised a give-away!  I have a $20 Hobby Lobby gift card to give away in honor of National Scrapbook Day to one randomly-drawn person who comments on this blog post!  Only one comment per person will go into the drawing (just to save you and me the trouble of multiples!)  The cool thing about Hobby Lobby is that they have an online store so you can use your gift card even if there's not one in your town... and they have sales on shipping from time-to-time as well.  You don't have to be a follower of this blog (unless you just want to) in order to enter.  You do need to provide an email address or other way for me to contact you if you win, so please don't forget to do that.  (You know if I can't find you, it will kill me to have this gift card in my possession so let's do us both a favor on that, okay?)  I will draw for a winner next Sunday, May 12, 2013 (Mother's Day)!



Now if you don't normally swing by my blog, but want to find me again in the future, you can follow me using the nifty "Join This Site" app on the sidebar so that I show up in your Feedly or other reader.... or you can follow my page on Facebook (click here) or you can follow my board on Pinterest (click here) or you can sign up for email updates (you will find that on the sidebar under the Members app).

And lastly, there are several of us who are participating in the Circleville NSD Weekend who are also posting our tutorials and/or challenges and/or prizes on our personal blogs.
Everyone is invited to join in the fun!  Here is a list of participants and the times you will find their posts on their blogs (all times are Eastern Daylight Time):




Friday, May 3, 2013

Join me here on Saturday for National Scrapbook Day!!!

Just a little shout-out that I will be posting a tutorial tomorrow in conjunction with the Circleville NSD Weekend!


I will have a blog prize and a list of my fellow participants' blogs who will feature tutorials, challenges, and/or prizes as well!  I will be posting here on Saturday, May 4, 2013 at 8AM EDT, but this will go on all weekend long and my contest will continue until Mother's Day, May 12, 2013.

(If you are receiving this on Saturday via email with the blogger lag, you may want to go straight to my blog to check it out!)

Happy Crafting ~ Happy NSD ~ Happy Derby Day!


Monday, April 22, 2013

Happy Birthday Barbara Stewart!

Yesterday was a milestone birthday for my friend, Barbara!  To celebrate, our friend, Donna, threw her a card shower!  I wanted to share the card I sent.  My favorite on-going theme is the Birthday Queen.  This is Gertie-Jean.


I started with a figure on Cricut Country Life, a hair style from Cricut Paper Doll Dress Up, a cake from Cricut Imagine Yummy, glasses from Nifty Fifties, and a tiara from Cricut Princess Party.  From there, I hand-cut her gown.

I cut the figure in flesh and traced the bodice in patterned paper so I could give her a little frontal 'enhancement', which I popped up.


The sleeves are tissue paper and the trim at the bottom and collar is some that Donna herself bought me last year at a little shop when we were all together in Atlanta for Circle Mania!


I trimmer-cut papers for the front of the card and created a birthday candle trim using an edger punch and hand-colored the flames.


The cake was added and adhered with pop dots.


In the end, I placed the image so that the card would open from the center on the paper mats.


Happy Birthday, Barbara!  
And may the Birthday Queen continue to bring you many happy birthdays!


To see another birthday queen, check out a post here on my blog:  click here.
To see many of my other paper projects, check My Project Gallery.

And I have works of art from Barbara, in case you don't know her!  Click here to see a gorgeous multi-media canvas she gave to me.  Click here to see a mini book she sent me featuring some of the Ryan Gosling "Hey Girl" statements we used to laugh about on the message boards.

Thank you for checking my post today.


Sunday, April 21, 2013

Best Friends Page -- Scrapfriends Sketch Challenge #12



I am working (slowly) on a mini album of my daughter for 2013.  This is another 8" x 8" page using a sketch-- this one is from Scrapfriends, a site new to me that I just found a couple of days ago.


I went into high gear because there was an impromptu, on-line challenge announced yesterday on a favorite message board to coincide with the events at Circle Mania in Atlanta.  How could I not participate?  After all, Allison's on-line crops were my favorites in the first year of the Cricut Circle, when all of the live events were too far away!

I started with a school picture of my daughter and her BFFs.  This was the spring photo, one where the kids were allowed to come in street clothes and pose together.  It is dark and a little edgy for these girls, a problem for me as I started with dark papers.  After re-doing it and struggling with paper choices, I decided to focus on the pink and turquoise and ignore the bricks and denim.

Just for fun, a couple of days ago, I tried cutting from a digital image I won last year.  I had never cut anything using CCR on my Cricut so I was pleasantly surprised that it wasn't too bad... and since it was the only way I would ever be able to cut this Teressa Collins Basics image, that was a relief!  I used the negative space from the cut on this page to give interest to the plain white corner and to cover some of the text on the printed paper on the opposite side of the page.


The framed photo was popped up 1/8" to pull it off the page.  I used embossing folders to give a little life to the solid papers.  I used and punches, die cuts, and stamped images for kid accents.


All die cuts were made with a Cricut Expression:

  • Frames were cut from Fancy Frames (key 23) at 3-1/4" and 3-1/2".
  • Shamrocks were cut from A Child's Year (page 31) at 3/4" icon-shift.
  • Tab was cut from a file folder image on Fabulous Finds (page 131) at 3-1/3" blackout.
  • Peace signs were cut from Feeling Groovy at 1/2".
The bugs, butterflies, and teeny hearts were punch cut.  I used a microfine pen to add details and text.  The tiny tickets were stamped on and hand-cut.  The metal "Live Loud" embellie was something from my stash.  


Thank you for checking my post today.  (And thank you, Diane, for the deadline so I could get this puppy done today!)  To see many of my previous paper projects, check out My Project Gallery.

I am linked up and so impressed by the fantastic interpretations of the sketch by all the other participants!

ScrapFriends button



Friday, April 19, 2013

Jeepers! Piper's Peepers -- a challenge from The Paper Bakery!



I have been delighted lately to find more and more fun sketches by some of my favorite crafty people!  I just found one created by Juliana Michaels on her blog that led me to a challenge on The Paper Bakery, a new site to me.  And do they ever have awesome stuff!!  


What I love about this challenge is that you don't have to use specific papers or other merchandise-- anything goes!  (Anyone who knows me knows that I am very big into using up my crazy stash.) 

For my project, I used a couple of photos of my daughter from the day she got glasses.


She had wanted glasses when her two best friends got them so... when she suddenly showed the symptoms of needing them, I thought she might have been faking!  She is the most honest, compassionate, and kind person, so I should have known that simple vanity and peer pressure was not directing her.  In the end, she is near-sighted and really needed them!  I felt like the worst mom ever for doubting her!  These pictures are of her purple pair-- I can't believe how grown-up she looks here.

From the sketch, I used the idea of overlapping rectangles  the left-of-center placement of dual photos, the title placement, and the rows of upper and lower dots.  

The font is from Cricut's Doodletype cartridge, cut at 1" with shadow.  The glasses are cut from Cricut's Nifty Fifties cart, cut at 1-3/4" (layer one). The banner is cut from Cricut's Artiste cart (page 58), cut at 3/4".  My page finished at 8"x 8".


Thank you for checking out my post today!  To see many of my previous paper projects, check out My Project Gallery.



I'm linked up and loving everyone's take on this sketch!  


Thursday, April 18, 2013

At Circle Mania in Spirit Only


One of the most fun weekends I have ever had without my sweet husband was at Circle Mania last September!  Sadly, I have to miss the one going on this weekend, but I sent along a door prize-- and made a card to go with it so I could be there in spirit!


Lately, I have been playing with the figures on the Cricut cartridges again.  This card features the French woman from Summer Celebrations, tweaked a bit to look less French and more Circlet-y.  She was cut at 5" on my Expression.  I hand-cut to remove her beret and add locks of hair.  I added a nose and a skirt.  I cut an extra sleeve to pop up and cut off her arm that is furthest away and reapplied it with pop dots to give her even more dimension.  I put a Circle logo in her hand.  (This one is from Sandy's Circle event in Louisville when Provo Craft sponsored our crops and meetups-- part of the confetti on the tables.  Yes, I kept everything!)  Her earring is cut from metallic paper and I added a little ink to her cheeks, hands, arms, and decolletage.


Her dimension is from the attachment of her arms with pop dots and locks of hair added and popped up.

The figure is adhered to the card with 1/4" pop dots.  I used my Circle embossing folder for the background mat and layered it over the other mat and card.  I adhered a gift card inside and added a message using my computer's printer.

I am so sad that I will be missing this event and so happy for my friends who are able to go!  This is a photo from the last (and first!) Circle Mania. I am in there somewhere!


Thank you for checking out my blog post! To see many of my previous paper projects, check out My Project Gallery.



I'm linking up today!
Pink Cricut

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Happy Spring!



Finally, the snow and cold are gone (I hope!!) and the flowers are in bloom around here!  The day I made this card, it was 81° (ok, a little warmer than spring-like temps, but welcome nonetheless) and all the ornamental pear trees in my neighborhood bloomed all at once on that day!  The sky was blue and the breeze was perfect.  Between my errands and walks, I was stuck in the office... but I stole away a bit of time in my crafty space to make a quick card for a friend.

For this card, I started with the cheerleader image on Cricut cartridge All Sports and cut it at 6" on my Expression.  I cut away her legs and pompoms.


I trimmed down her hair and hand-cut a couple of extra locks.  I cut  an extra "hair do" from flesh colored paper, and created an extra face from the waste, backed it in black and added a little hand-drawn detail to her eyelashes, instead of trying to glue on those teeny, tiny features!  Doing this, she also gained a chin and her head tilt changed.


That GINORMOUS mouth was cut from the cartridge at the 6" relative size (like the body) but my 9-year-old daughter told me it was ridiculous.  Kids tell you honestly what you already know!  I peeled that crazy, big ole mouth off and re-cut only the white layer at 5-1/2" relative size and edged it with hot pink marker.


Much better, don't you think?  I added the collar detail from the cartridge cut and hand-cut a skirt.

The background was printed from Imagine cartridge Best Friends-- I have had it in my stash for a while.  I trimmed it to 5-1/8" x 9".  The figure was popped up on all edges except for the bottom which was adhered flush to the page.

The text was cut from Alphalicious at 1".  The flowers were cut from Mother's Day Bouquet at 1/2" using keys #5 and #27 and layered for dimension.  The grass was edge-punch-cut and the leaves were hand-cut.


Thank you for checking my blog today.  I hope you are having a bit of spring wherever you are today.

To see many of my previous paper projects, check out My Project Gallery (click here).
With Glittering Eyes is on Facebook (click here) and on Pinterest (click here)!

Monday, April 1, 2013

April Fools!



Today, I am on Bitten By the Bug 2, where I have been asked to do a project with the clown bear from Teddy Bear Parade!

Since it is April Fools Day, I used the image to pull a prank on my kiddo!  I cut the bear from vinyl and applied it to glasses that I filled with Jell-O and a straw and allowed it to set-up.  This looks like a drink and she was so interested in the clown image that she didn't seem to notice the tell-tale jiggle! This bear was cut at 2-1/2".


I found that it is best to take short-cuts with the layers when putting images onto cups; it just makes it easier with fewer things to line up!  Using just the head and hands in brown, for instance, makes more sense than lining up the whole body when it will be covered up with the clothing layers.



I had this idea that it would be funny to see the word "GOTCHA" in the bottom of the cup as she tried to drink it!  I cut the letters mirror-image at 1/2" and placed them on the outside of the glass so that it reads correctly when you look into the glass.



And what is an April Fools prank without yelling out "April Fools" so I made a little card with that inside.  I used the same bear, juxtaposed and cropped.  I used embossing folders and a dry brush with white acrylic paint to add pattern to the clothing.  I added a button and mini pom for dimension on the hat.  I used UTEE to make a shiny clown nose.  This bear was cut at 7"; the letters were cut at 1" with shadow for this 5" x 6" card.



My sweet daughter, who is big Jello fan, didn't seem to mind this little joke at all and was happy to pose with her card.  She's a good sport, especially considering my little joke came a tad early.

If you are looking for a challenge using a clown image, head on over to BBTB2 and check out today's post!  I look forward to seeing what you make!

To see more of my paper projects, check out My Project Gallery (click here).

But wait! There's more! Click 'older posts' above!

But wait!  There's more!  Click 'older posts' above!