
This is my second - & (sadly) final - guest design post for the Double Trouble Challenge blog. Before I go on, I really want to thank them for inviting me to do this. It's been a blast! They celebrate their 8th anniversary on May 25th with a raffle challenge. You can create a project (or more than one!) in any of the following four categories:
- Anniversary or Wedding (yellow ticket)
- Father's Day or Masculine (blue ticket)
- Birthday (pink ticket)
- Graduation (green ticket)
Obviously, I went with the Birthday/pink ticket option for my card. May 25th is also National Brown Bag It Day, so Thing 3's optional twist for this challenge is to use Kraft or Kraft-like elements on your project. I have not done pencil coloring on kraft cardstock for a hot minute, so I decided to do that for my card. And of course, I used the sketch from Double Trouble's sister challenge, Try a Sketch on Tuesday's Challenge #696 for my design. ***Keep in mind, if you want to enter TSOT's challenge, that does not start until May 26th. So while Thing 2 gives you a preview of the sketch, do not post or publish your project before Tuesday, so you don't risk backlinking.
When I saw the sketch, I immediately thought of four (discontinued) digital images from Sweet 'n Sassy Stamps (now
Creative Worship) in my collection: "Magnolia Block," "Lily Block," "Daffodil Block,"
& "Tulip Block." I thought they would go perfectly with the grid design in the sketch. So I began my creative process in Photoshop by creating a file with a 4 x 5-1/4" blank canvas. I brought the images in one at a time so each was on its own layer to make positioning them on the canvas easier. I had to adjust the proportions slightly on a couple of them, because they were ever-so-slightly rectangular rather than perfect squares, but thankfully it worked out in the end. Finally, I printed my design onto a panel of kraft cardstock.
I colored the tulip first. I had a picture in my mind of a pink tulip with streaks of darker pink coming up from the bottom of the petals. Because I was coloring on a darker cardstock, I did a base layer of a very pale pink over each petal first, adding a pale green for the stem. This allowed the darker colors on subsequent layers to show up better & more true on the kraft cardstock. I have seen this done using a white pencil, but thankfully the pink & green pencils I had were light enough to accomplish the same task. I made sure to maintain a light pressure - enough to get color on the cardstock but not enough to fill in the tooth of the paper too quickly. Once I had established my base layer on a petal, I went on with darker pinks. (I used a darker green to shade the stem.) I basically worked one petal at a time so I wouldn't get "lost," as the pencil colors pretty much obscured the printed image lines. I was tickled pink (pun intended) when I finished, as it looks exactly like I had envisioned it!
I went on & colored the lily, magnolia, & daffodil in the same manner. When I finished the daffodil, I felt it looked rather "mushy" (for lack of a better word). I had used a dull pinkish-purple (Prismacolor Clay Rose) for the shading, which has usually worked for me, since it's basically the complement of yellow. I guess because this was on kraft rather than white, though, I didn't get the contrast I wanted with that color. So I tested out some other colors for shading the yellow (I made swatches on the back of my cardstock), & landed on Dark Umber. Brown had never occurred to me before, but dang if it didn't work better than the purple! 😃 After I had colored all the flowers, I chose 2 light blue pencils for the background in each square. I basically colored a wide soft-edged "outline" around each flower with the darker pencil, & then blended that out with the lighter blue. Finally, to re-establish the outline of each square, I went over them with a 70% Warm Grey Prismacolor pencil, using a ruler to guide the pencil.
To mat my panel, I chose a pale blue cardstock that I felt went well with the blue background color in each square. Before I added it to my white A2-size card base, I stamped my greeting (from Dare 2B Artzy's "Simply Birthday" set) in the middle of the panel. I tried it first with Versafine Clair Morning Mist pigment ink, but for some reason the cardstock just didn't like that ink. So I cleaned the stamp, repositioned it on my cardstock (still away from the edges), & tried stamping with Weathered Wood Distress Oxide ink. That was too light, so I went over it with Black Soot Distress Oxide ink. Thank heavens for the MISTI stamp positioning tool! Finally, I trimmed the greeting strip out with my craft knife & a metal ruler, & glued that to my kraft panel. (My main panel covered the "hole" from where I had cut the greeting strip, so no one but you & I will ever know.) I adhered my blue mat & kraft panel to my card base, & that wrapped up this project! I am sooooo happy with how this came out, & probably shouldn't wait as long to color on kraft again.
I'm also entering this card in Try Stamping On Tuesday's Challenge #696.


Oh my, what beautiful coloring on your florals... it's amazing how you changed your colors and found ways to get the colors you wanted on Kraft paper. Love how you changed things so quickly and wrote it in your blog, and I'll keep your secret that you and I will only know. Thanks again for being our Crazy Cousin for this month and hope you consider combining both TSOT and DTC in future challenges and would welcome you back as a Crazy Cousin. Thanks again.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Suzanne! :)
DeleteYour card is beautiful, and I am in awe of your coloring skills, pencils on kraft card stock. The light blue mat works perfectly with the sentiment as well as subtle blue highlights in your colored florals. Well done!! We are proud to have you as Crazy Cousin at the Double Trouble challenge.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Kim! :)
DeleteSo pretty, Andrea! Beautiful coloring. Thank you for joining us as our Crazy Cousin, and we hope you will continue to play along with our biweekly challenges.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Melanie! :)
DeleteWow! Stunning pencil work, Andrea!! What a beautiful combination of florals. Thank you so much for sharing your card at TSOT.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Dena! :)
DeleteWonderful color pencil coloring! Makes me want to get out mine and play! Thanks for playing with the sketch over at TSOT.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Laurie! :)
DeleteAbsolutely beautiful! The coloring is amazing and is a good reminder of how neat colored pencil coloring can look! So glad you could be our Guest Designer at Double Trouble :)
ReplyDeleteThank you, Kellianne! :)
DeleteWhat a beautiful birthday card! Thanks for sharing with us at TSOT!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Polly! :)
DeleteJust a beautiful card, and your colored pencil skills are amazing! So happy you enjoyed your time as our Crazy Cousin, thank you for joining us at Double Trouble.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Melanie! :)
Delete