Hi, everyone, it’s Charlotte C here. Thank you, Sheila, for having me visit again
this month. Today I am sharing a
technique that was recently posted by Jennifer McGuire. I’m a fan and follower of this talented lady,
and even though I didn’t have the dies she used, I decided to give it a whirl
with what I had, namely, a set of 6 Classic Scallop Hearts from
Spellbinders. And the stacking of the
dies before cutting gives you almost a one-layer card and cuts down on the
weight of your card for mailing. So here
goes.
Using the second, fourth and six (largest) die from the set,
I arranged them face down on my table and used repositionable tape to tape them
together on the back, as you see here, so that now they work as one die.
I used repositionable tape on the back of the cut hearts to
keep all the pieces together until I completed the next step. I cut a heart from craft foam using the fifth
size die and glued it on the back of my piece to give it some dimension on the
card base when assembled. Set that
aside.
Now
I glued down my main piece (the heart) in the center of the black square, and
once that was in place, like a puzzle, I removed the black layer. And there was a method to my madness – read
on. Card now looks like this.
On vellum, using a stamp or generated by computer, I put my
sentiment to go across the front of the card. I taped the vellum
down to the back of the black layer All I had to do now was run adhesive
around the back of the black layer and fit it back on the card base. These are two examples of how they turned
out.
I know this is wordy and photo-heavy, but I don’t do videos
and I wanted to be as clear as can be.
And there’s more (can you stand it?).
Did you know that if you print on vellum with an inkjet printer you can
use embossing powder on it and get a raised effect? That’s what I did for cards to my
children. The other card is a stamp that
I embossed. Vellum likes to warp when
heated, so make sure your heat gun is turned on getting hot before you hit the
vellum with it; cuts down on the warping tremendously. Also, I used craft foam to pop up the center
image, but you can use foam tape, or don’t bother popping it at all. It’s up to you.
You can do this with any shape die sets and I hope you give
it a try with what you have.
Thank you so much for joining us today.
3 comments:
How cool is this! Thank you for the very clear explanation, Charlotte. Gonna try it with my hexagon dies. TFS
Such a beautiful valentine!!! And I love the instructions... even I should be able to make it! Thanks so much for sharing with us today!
This is fabulous Charlotte - love the hearts. Happy Valentine's!
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