Showing posts with label Vintage Toys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vintage Toys. Show all posts

Saturday, August 31

Pull-Along Puppy

We had lots of wooden toys when I was growing up, including something similar to this little dog. The ears were made from vinyl and the tail was mounted to a spring that would bend and wobble as the dog was pulled along. My own children had a plastic version that would also open it's mouth and bark. 


Digital Stamps:

Sunday, August 25

Robot Classic

The robot toys of my early childhood had wheels hidden under their feet, a metal bell contained somewhere in the chassis that would ding every now and again, and a strange whirring voice that repeated robot-y phrases. Very cheesy, but my younger brothers sure loved them!


Digital Stamps:

Monday, August 19

Clanging Monkey Toy


Kathy has a great eye for detail and loves to add interesting little touches to her cards, such as the googly eyes and metal cymbals on the clockwork monkey from the Vintage Toys set. She's also very good at decorating the inside of her cards with sentiments, patterned paper and little embellishments.


Saturday, August 17

Clanging Monkey

I'm not quite old enough to have owned one of these cymbal-crashing-monkeys, but I certainly remember seeing and playing with them when I was growing up. I'm planning to give this card to a friend of my Mum's generation, who I know will get a nostalgic kick from the image!


Digital Stamps:

Monday, August 12

Beep Beep


Check out the awesome card Carla created with the little robot from the Vintage Toys set of digital stamps and a fabulous piece of patterned paper. The little guy looks as though he's walking down a corridor in a futuristic space ship!


Tuesday, August 6

Tutorial - Level Up Your Digital Stamps


Pre-coloured digital stamps are very handy when you need a quick card, but you can also use them as a base for other techniques, such as washy watercolours (if you have an ink jet printer), or sepia toned cards. Today I want to show you how to level up the colours, which is especially handy if your printer is like mine, and a bit miserly with the ink.


1. Print the pre-coloured images onto a sheet of cardstock. I used MSWord to resize and position all four of the images onto a panel for my card. You can use photo editing software if you prefer, and you can work with a single image if that works better with your design.


2. I'm going to apply gel pens over the top of some of the colours in the image. You don't have to recolour the whole thing to get a great result, instead, choose a couple of colours that appear in multiple places in your image, like accents. For example, I wouldn't choose blue as there are large areas that would require a lot of colour!


As you can see, adding a little bit of red has already brightened the entire panel.


Next is some gold and silver.


3. Use a white pen to add shine and highlights, particularly on the edges and corners of metal objects, like my robot, and in the eyes of any characters.


4. To add dimension, use a couple of shades of grey to place shadows behind the image. Start with the darker grey and trace a line around the outside of the image, then soften with a lighter grey. For the best result, only add a shadow on two sides of the image - for example, the right hand side and the bottom.


Here's a before and after...


Digital Stamps:

Sunday, August 4

Down Memory Lane


Judy has created two fabulously colourful cards using the new Vintage Toys set of digital stamps, which are sure to have a few of us heading down memory lane. Ahhh, the nostalgia!


Thursday, August 1

New Digital Stamps


New Digital Stamps

Butterfly House
digital stamps


Vintage Toys
digital stamps