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Wanderlust 2023 is now open for registration and I’m excited to be back as a guest host this year! This is the 8th year for Wanderlust and if you’ve been a part of it you know how much fun this year long mixed media art journaling course is! You also might have an idea about how fast the early bird spots go!

They’ve actually lowered the price for this year’s early bird. It’s $89 (there may be additional local taxes) and there is a payment plan option now too!

What is Wanderlust? It’s an online, year long mixed media art journaling course where you get a new video lesson (with a downloadable pdf) each Friday in 2023. There are a total of 55 lessons.

It starts January 6, 2023 but when you join now there are bonus videos waiting for you right now inside the classroom. That way you can start playing now!

There are 30 teachers which means you get a buffet of styles and techniques. There are star supplies and hero techniques which means every single lesson is different! One of the many perks of being able to explore with so many different instructors means you can try on different styles.

As one of guest hosts, I have the honor of sharing 4 lessons with you in 2023. Who are the other guest hosts? Mary Beth Shaw and Jeanne Oliver and they will each also have 4 lessons!

Who is this for? Both new and experienced art journalers. If you’re just getting started with art journaling, everything is clearly explained from the supplies to the techniques! For the more experienced art journaler, it is inspiring to get a look inside the process of the instructors, try their techniques and incorporate it with your own style.

The supportive community is the part that excites me the most every year. It’s bonus inspiration seeing how students interpret the lessons in their art journals while trying different styles. Watching the Adventures connect and support each others creative growth is contagious in the best possible way! 

Get all the details, check out each of the instructors, and join the fun here!

What’s included:

  • 55 video lessons
  • 30 teachers
  • Hosts: Kasia Avery and three guest hosts (who will each be doing 4 lessons)- me, Mary Beth Shaw and Jeanne Oliver
  • Every Friday a new video lesson and a handout to go with it
  • All videos are downloadable with lifetime access
  • A community platform to share your work and connect with others in the Adventurers Circle (it’s not on Facebook)

$89 for the first 2,000 who enroll (There may be additional local taxes.) This sells out every year very quickly so jump on in if you want the early bird price!

Looking forward to seeing what you create in Wanderlust!

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Take a gel print and fuse it into fabric? You can with sublimation paint by Artesprix and a Gel Press plate! The image isn’t painted onto the pencil bag, it’s permanently fused into the fabric! The very fancy pattern making tool I’m using to create the print is a dryer vent from the hardware store.

The red paint did stain my gel plate but it is just cosmetic. It has zero impact on how the plate works and the red staining doesn’t show up in future prints.

Once the heat is applied, the paint becomes wonderfully vibrant, as you can see below. BUT before the heat, the paint looks dull.

I’ve also go another video using a gel plate for sublimation making metal magnets so you can see a different way that I use a Gel Press plate with the paints!

Here are the supplies used. Some of these links may be affiliate links which means I get a small percentage and it doesn’t cost you anything extra! And you get a really good feeling knowing that you are helping keep the free tutorials coming!

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What’s the play for today? It’s Art Houses! This is how I’d love to paint an actual neighborhood, but there are practical issues, so I’ll have to stick with mixed media ones for now! In this video you’ll see how I cheat on creating a random or serendipitous look, why I am grateful to all that time playing Tetris, and some commitment issues. Spoiler alert, it turned out to be a good thing.

I’m playing with this month’s StencilClub set that I’m honored to have designed for StencilGirlProducts! The Art House collection I designed is two 9×12 stencils and it includes the 5 house masks. You can see all the details about what’s included in StencilClub here (and there’s a members only video each month too!)

Start with a background. You can use paper you’ve painted, like I did, or anything else you’ve got! A gel print, book text, scrapbook paper, decorative paper, anything at all!

I could just wing it and slap the house masks down anywhere on this and hope it looks good. But I want to be sure I like how the houses will turn out. So that’s where the stencil let’s me cheat!

I audition different locations using the stencil, and when I find a spot where I like it, then I know exactly where to place the mask. No guessing because they fit together almost like puzzle pieces. Then remove the stencil and you’re ready to paint.

These house masks, which come in the Art House StencilClub collection, have windows. If you want to stencil the windows, just use it as it is. If you don’t want the windows, simply cover them with a repositionable tape.

Commitment issues can lead to decision paralysis. I was frozen when it came to these windows during the design process. I wanted the windows for some techniques and not for others and I could find equal reasons to keep them as well as delete them. I won’t even begin to tell you how long I spent on this decision!

So much time was spent sitting on that fence, I decided I had to find a reasonable way to have both options. So the windows are on the masks but are quickly covered up with washi tape or painters tape. Now these houses can do both kinds of techniques!

Using a cosmetic sponge the black paint goes around the mask. Once you’ve got all the paint on there you want, lift up the mask!

A little trick to keep the masks from moving is to make a little tape circle and put it on the back of the mask! You can see a little bit of it peeking out here from under the house.

Playing Tetris prepared me for squeezing every useful bit of color out of this background. All that time making those little blocks fit together on a computer screen was helpful after all!

If you’re using up every bit you can, like I did, it helps to turn the paper or the stencil to see how things look in different places.

Once it’s all painted, then use a pair of scissors and cut out the buildings to create a stash of fodder to use in your play. Use it in an art journal, on a card, in a collage, as an ATC, or any other way that calls to you!

One of these houses is not like the other. That’s because there was a bit of an O.O.P.S. when I was cutting them out. It wasn’t a mistake, it was an Outstanding Opportunity Presenting Suddenly that led me to cutting out the border of one differently. Now there are two options for cutting these out!

I picked three of them to create a focal image for an art journal page. Other ideas for a quick card, added to a scrapbook page, use for an ATC, in a collage, the possibilities are endless!

Want more play with stencils? I’ve got another technique video for you using the words as a mask from the Art House collection here!

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