Today's cards were actually completed the middle of July - but I had to wait until now to post them as the one you see at the top of this post was made for an August swap (and I can't post until my swap partner receives it!). These cards were made using materials from a Hunkydory kit called Shabby Chic - from the set called Perfect Picnic - along with the coordinating papers & inserts pack. From time to time I also added a few things from my stash. Here's a picture of the basic Perfect Picnic set (You may notice that the AS (adoreable scoreable card stock) has been cut in the picture. I already had everything popped out and cut apart for cards before I remembered that I wanted a "before" picture of the set!):
Here's a picture of the 7 cards that I made:
Next we'll look at each up close.
Card #1:
I started with a portion of the AS - cut just a little smaller than 5" x 6 1/2". The border is from the set, but I cut it apart so the phrase started & ended at card's edges. The greeting (also from the set) covers the gap. I added it with foam tape for dimension. The red strip is scrap from my stash.
Card #2:
July 10 is Teddy Bear Picnic day, so I decided to add a couple of teddy bears in honor of that day. They are pieces from the HD Teddy Love Decoupage Book that I fussy cut (trimming off stuff that didn't work for this card). The background is another piece from the AS, and the picnic setting is from the deco sheet. The border & greeting are also from the set.
Inside:
Since I had an inside insert from the paper and inserts pack, I decided to use a part of it here.
Card #3:
A piece of blue marbled paper from my stash forms the background for this deco piece. I also added a second deco piece (hat & book) on foam tape. The sentiment is also from the set & is added with foam tape on top of a border scrap of the coordinating double-sided paper.
Inside:
Inside is another piece of the insert paper.
Card #4:
I'm not sure if this one is interesting or weird. It was sparked by a challenge on a message board I frequent - to have the following on a card: flowers, rectangle, and embossing. As you can see, I made a rectangular card using the coordinating double-sided paper - with a rectangular sentiment from the set. I embossed the paper using a Cuttlebug embossing folder called Kitchen Weave. The sentiment was added with foam tape, and a piece of embroidery floss from my stash made a bow to finish things off.
Card #5:
This one also was inspired by a challenge: to make something with the letter R (in this case the color Red), and to add stitching of some kind (could be faux as I did here with a white pen). The focal is the focal piece from the set - which I double matted (using a piece of the double-sided coordinating paper and a piece of red card stock from my stash). After adding the faux stitching, I die cut a piece of the red to mat the sentiment (which was also from the set).
Card #6:
Here's another card inspired by a challenge on the message board I frequent. The challenge was to make a card with something interactive on the card front. I decided to make a penny slider card - and here's how I did it.
- I started by gluing a piece of blue marbled paper to white card stock to make it sturdier, and then cut it just a little smaller than . Then I cut out the slot you see using one of my tearing rulers & a craft knife. Next, I inked the edge with red ink. Finally, I added foam tape to the back side of this piece and set it aside.
- I glued another piece of the blue marbled paper to the card front under where the slot would be and traced around the slot onto it using a pencil. This enabled me to line up my stamped message (from HOTP Matching Borders & Focals). Then I erased the pencil marks.
- Next I readied my penny by cutting a small round piece of foam tape (smaller than the slot so it could move freely). I put this, penny side down on top of the slot, and then attached the piece from step #1 to the card front - centering it, and making sure the penny could move freely in the slot.
- I added a second penny on top of the foam tape & penny in the slot - sandwiching the foam tape in the slot. Then I prepared my kite piece by fussy cutting it, adding a piece of baker's twine, and gluing it to a piece of red card stock to make it sturdier (forming a narrow red mat around the edge of the kite). Then I glued this in place on top of the penny. The kite now moved freely in the slot.
- Next I added the picnic deco piece from the set, making sure that the end of the kite string was caught up behind it. This completed the front of the card.