My family thinks I’m off my rocker since I really want to spend a night at an ice hotel. It might be chilly, but what an amazing sight these places must be! For now, it’ll just be a wish in my journal…There was to be one in the USA but I read it was closed due to the fire code. Hmm, makes me wonder….You can read about it here.
The blue people are printed on tissue paper from a digital image by Holliewood Studios.
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Do you ever look at something and know you must cover it in paint? A cardboard box spoke to me. Once I had the painted the cardboard the tree die cut started whispering that it was just what I needed. Once I had the tree things just started jumping out at me. Oh, my, this makes me sound a bit unstable…Good thing you understand about things talking to me…
I had such fun painting the cardboard, I thought I’d share the process with you. I cut a box apart so I had big flat pieces. I had just been to the dollar store and bought this pack of spatulas – for just a $1. I knew they would be be stiff and that is what I wanted!
I squirted 3 colors of paint onto the cardboard.
I used a spatula to spread the paint around. The spatula was firm but not quite as firm as a credit card so it allowed me to spread the paint but it didn’t blend all the paint the way a brush would have. The spatula is my new painting friend.
It was still dark so I added a few drops of white while the green paint was still wet. Once the paint was dry I ran it through my die cutting machine to create the trees. I experiment with different colors and types of paints. A bit of metallic paint adds a fantastic shimmer.
This tree was dressed up with some green glitter and vintage gems I bought at Tinsel Trading Company. This let me get a vintage feel to my painty tree to go with the photo.
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My Paint Party Friday piece with only 3 Colors? Really? I doubted Diana Trout when she taught a class on using only 3 colors. I shouldn’t doubt her. She changed my world – I am now in love the 3 primary colors. I did learn the hard way that cheap paints don’t color mix as well as artists grade paints such as Golden. So, when I am color mixing I do it with the good ones.
Drew overlapping shapes. Still doing lots of raindrops. Perhaps if the sun came out more I would move past my raindrops. (Hint to Mother Nature!)
This stage took a while. I turned to filling these in when I was stuck or feeling uninspired. Just getting painty often invited my muse back.
So many different colors but it all works. In the past, when I grabbed individual paints I would be unhappy with the look – but not sure why. Now I know. The colors did not look like they belonged together because they were made with all sorts of reds, blues, and yellows.
I love to add text to my pieces so I began to write about colors. The recent Build A Rainbow Challenge over at Daisy Yellow inspired me to think about what the colors mean. Everything written on this is somehow related to the color I was writing over. I used a gray iridescent ink and a nub to write- must admit I was cursing the 18×24 size of it during this part!
It still needed something more and a happy accident came to my rescue. I used the gray ink with my finger to shade the edges of the raindrops.
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