Please let me hear from you!

This blog is for sharing a love of paper crafting. You can also check out my Pintrest pages. If you find the ideas here to be helpful, I'd love to hear from you. It is what helps make the time I put into this blog feel worthwhile, and always brightens my day. I love hearing your ideas too!

(To leave a comment, scroll to the bottom of the post. You will see how many comments there are for that particular post. Click on the number of comments and the comment window will open. Also, if you want to add a link to something, follow the instructions at the bottom of this post.)

NOTE: If you click a link from the menu (below left) and are told the page does not exist, chances are good that it's a prepared post that will post at some point in the future, so be sure to check back!

You can also click this Pinterest Button to pin pictures in the blog posts.


Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Using Spellbinders Nestabilities with the Big Shot die cut machine

Focal Framed using Nestabilities dies
The multipurpose platform that comes with the Big Shot makes this pretty easy:

The basics -- Nestabilities are considered a "wafer-thin" die, so you cut them with all tabs closed, and sandwiched as shown on the picture on the platform.
  • Place an acrylic mat on top of tab 2, then your die (cutting side up), then your paper/cardstock to be cut, then another acrylic mat -- and run it through the machine. This cuts your paper or cardstock. Now, DON'T remove the paper from inside the die yet, we want to emboss it!  
  • Pick up the die with the paper or cardstock still in it, fold one tab back and make your embossing sandwich.  Place an acrylic mat on tab 1, then your die with paper/cardstock still in it (cutting side up), then your silicone rubber and impressions pad (that comes with the texturz kit).  Run it through your Big Shot and your item is embossed.  
If you don't have the texturz kit with the silicone rubber & empressions pad, you can still emboss your nestabilities.  Pull all tabs back, place an acrylic mat on the platform, place your die with paper/cardstock in it next (cutting side up), place Spellbinders two tan embossing mats next, and finish with another acrylic mat. Run this through the machine and it will be embossed.  If you don't have Spellbinders embossing mats, you can cut down a silicone baking mat and use that!

Taking the next step -- You can use a magnetic sheet to hold your Spellbinders Nestabilities dies in place so you can cut and emboss two at once to create a frame.  Since this is a bit thicker, you may not want to run it through in the same sandwich as before - you don't want to stress your Big Shot.  Perhaps it is best to fold back one of the tabs before you cut it. Since magnetic sheets vary in thickness, you will need to experiment a bit to see what works best, adding cardstock on top of the last acrylic pad until it is thick enough to cut on tab 1. For the magnetic sheet that I used, I cut it on tab 1 with 4 thicknesses of cardstock added on top of the final acrylic mat. This shows what it looked like after cutting and embossing it:


I used this to frame the focal in the card above.  I used a pen to draw along the raised embossing to help it stand out better.  This focal used 4 sizes of the "Petite Scalloped Ovals Large" nestabilities. The smallest and the 3rd smallest were used to cut the frame shown above. The one between those two sizes was used to cut the picture that went behind the frame, and the one just larger than the largest used for the frame was used to cut the dark mat.

No comments: