Thursday 29 September 2011

Taking the plunge..or what this blog is really about..

I can spend hours and hours wandering around blogland, stopping off when something catches my eye then discarding the site or delving backwards if I like the feel of it or it strikes a chord.  There are many blogs that I drop into every so often, funny ones, funny mum ones, crafty ones, English, American, Norwegian, teaching ones, rude ones, naughty ones, spiritual ones, home decorating ones, cooking ones, entirely made up ones and ruthlessly honest ones...the list is endless.  There is a certain reluctance in me to fully commit to this mainly because I'm not sure quite how I want this blog to represent myself.
I am a mum to a teenager and a toddler , I am a wife - for the 2nd time, I like to make stuff but I also make lots lists of stuff I'd like to make,  I want my home to be a haven of beautifully decorated characterful calm and cosiness but I am fundamentally lazy and crap at doing housework, I brim over with ideas for stories and books but lack the courage to actually put them down on paper.
Some people suffer from such fear of failure that they devote their lives to success at their chosen endeavours, others -yours truly- spend their lives preventing themselves from trying just in case they are not the successes they are sure they could be.

So...I have no idea what this blog will be about, whether I'll be a mummy blogger, a craft blogger, a foodie blogger, a naughty blogger or a big blank space...I think I shall just whack on anything that strikes me as interesting or funny or cool and see what happens...



Thursday 15 September 2011

A post and a stamp tutorial too....blimey!



I have finally sat down and done the necessary to get my camera to download onto my laptop. Feel free to shake your head and tut...I am a sad, tragic technarcoleptic. Any mention of anything that needs to be mastered and my eyes start to glaze and I get frantically interested in anything else at all...classic displacement activity.
Anyhoo, this is something I've been wanting to try for ages but I fell into the trap of thinking it would be much harder than it actually was. I wanted to make some stamps to add embellishment to letters, wrapping paper, scrapbooks etc. but I didn't want to spend money on a whole lino cutting kit - nice though they undoubtedly are - so I improvised...
Bits and Bobs you'll need.
Some rubbers - or erasers if your t'other side of the Atlantic I believe - I got mine for about 30p each at Tesco.
Something to cut the rubber with - a scalpel or razor blade - I bought a whole pack of different sized bladed implements for a £1 at a pound shop (strange that). I don't think they'll stand up to much heavy duty use but they're perfect for this.
A pencil
Something to cut on
Bits of wood to stick your stamp on - makes it easier to hold and use the stamps.
Glue gun - to stick stamp to wood
An ink pad
Decide what image you want on your stamp - remember it will come through back to front, I doodled around until I found something I fancied.
Cut out a piece of rubber bigger than the image you want.
Draw the image you want to reproduce onto the rubber - now comes the interesting bit, you now have to decide how you want the stamp to look and whether you want it in negative or not. It's important to decide which bits you want to carry the ink and which bits will come out as blank space.
With the leaf I cut out the shape I wanted then sliced out a sliver to give the central line as a blank
Once you've cut out and isolated your image glue the stamp onto a bit of wood to give you something to hold on to.
Stamp on!
For bunting draw a line, as curved or looped as you like and stamp along it - the triangles are so easy and quick to do it's worth doing enough for every colour ink you've got.
Once you get started there is no limit to what you can do...A bunting triangle to bedeck a note or envelope, a leaf - just add a green squiggly line and you have a vine twining it's way up the side of a letter, an old style skull to add that little touch of terror to a halloween invitation and lastly far-off seagulls flying in the corner of the page (I made the mistake here of cutting them out as I wanted them to look so the stamp itself became the mirror image - Beware!)
In the olden days they used to used blobs of sealing wax to securely close envelopes and ensure that the contents came from that particular person - make your own signature stamp and use it on all your correspondence...
Hope you enjoy it!