Spring Mixed Media Technique

Welcome to Make It Monday! Spring is probably my favorite season. I love how everything springs back to life with gorgeous colors to declare that winter is over. Flowers and blossoming trees are such a glorious sight when you’ve seen nothing but bare branches and brown, or blankets of white snow covering everything! One of my favorite sights of the season is the crabapple tree in our back yard, which is the inspiration for this mixed media canvas. Today’s techniques can be used for mixed media, art journaling, or even scrapbooking.

Spring blossom 8" x 8" mixed media canvas.

Spring blossom 8″ x 8″ mixed media canvas.

This particular project was created on an 8″x8″ canvas. Heavy body acrylics were used with a plastic card to spread the color. For scrapbooking, you can start with a piece of card stock and use various inks, sprays, or colors that do not add a lot of moisture to the paper.

Basic supplies for this project base.

A canvas, heavy body acrylics, plastic card.

After spreading the color, I added a bit of a bright green.

Another bit of color added to the mix.

Another bit of color added to the mix.

 

More color applied with the plastic card.

More color applied with the plastic card.

Texture lines were added with black paint, by just using the edge of the plastic card.

Texture lines added.

Texture lines added.

Sewing pattern tissue paper.

Sewing pattern tissue paper with a twist.

I like to keep sewing pattern tissue to use for various things and decided to use it by twisting it, creating a branch. Once it was twisted, I applied some liquid matte medium on it to help it stick in the twisted state, and to adhere it to the canvas. Other papers you could use for this would be lightweight kraft color paper often used in packing, or a paper lunch bag. Try various widths to create a branch which is a good diameter for your project. A scrapbook page may only need a bit of twine so that you are not added so much bulk to the page.

You may find the next step to be reminiscent of childhood crafting. I really debated using it on a project to share with you, but I just couldn’t help myself. It just seemed to scream that it was the perfect way to achieve my crabapple tree blossoms! I grabbed some colored tissue paper and tore it into pieces about 1″ square. You could easily do the same thing with bits of any paper that is not too heavy. Patterned paper would create interesting variations in the blossoms. The shapes where shaped into little shapes, and a dab of glue was used on the outer tip to apply it to the branch.

Colored tissue paper torn into small little squares.

Colored tissue paper torn into small little squares.

After all the blossoms were added, a cardboard tube section was snipped and shaped into a leaf shape. The edge was dipped in black paint and used to make leaf outlines.

Blossoms applied and leaf shapes added.

Blossoms applied and leaf shapes added.

A bit of a darker green was lightly painted into the leaves, and a bit of detailing was done with black.

Leaves painted and detailed.

Leaves painted and detailed.

The bright green was dabbed into the centers of the blossoms with a tiny paintbrush. ‘Spring’ was written with acrylic paint which was watered down to create an inky consistency.

Blossoms completed and the word 'Spring' was added.

Blossoms completed and the word ‘Spring’ was added.

Here is the completed project. I plan to create one canvas for each season and hang them together.

Spring blossom 8" x 8" mixed media canvas.

Spring blossom 8″ x 8″ mixed media canvas.

Okay, now comment on this post and let me know that you remember using some variation of this tissue paper technique while you were growing up!


make it monday-pink logoMake It Monday Blog Circle

  • You may have landed here from Karen Fitting’s post at Photos Kept Alive where she discusses joining the Planner Craze, showing us her planner.  She’s also sharing her custom page as a free download. Don’t miss out.
  • Next up following me is Alice over at Scrapbook Wonderland. This week, Alice has a unique and creative approach for scrapbooking a game.

Moving

KS profile_lfJust so you know, this is not necessarily an artsy post today. I always have mixed feelings about sharing too much of my life in a blog post, and yet balancing that with letting you know me. So today, it’s a little more personal.

After suffering for years with Alzheimers, and being in care for six years, my dad passed away in mid January. These diseases that keep people hanging on, with no quality of life, are so cruel. Here is a post where I talked some about my dad. My husband and I, along with our three daughters, moved from Colorado to Minnesota 26 years ago. So during my dad’s illness, it was not always easy helping my mother from 1,000 miles away. I’m not sure how I would have ever done it without the help of my oldest daughter, Kathy. She was often able to go help and check on things when I was not able to go.

At the very end of last year, my husband and I decided we would go back to Colorado. My husband works from home, and the stars must have been aligned correctly because most all of our family is going to be able to move back as well! Leaving my grandkids in Minnesota was nothing I ever wanted to do!

We are now trying to get our home, as well as a daughter’s home ready to put up for sale. We are in a whirlwind of activity, doing MAJOR downsizing. Think just a bit larger than “tiny home” size. I was doing well until I started in my studio. All I can say about that is, YIKES! My art and scrapbooking supplies were not an area I planned to downsize, and it may be a lot harder to deal with than I first thought! Plus living in a home for 20 years, which was 20 years old when we moved in, is requiring some updates to plan for a quick sale. I may not have as much time to create and post here, but I am thinking about it most of the time. I hope you will enjoy posts like yesterday, where I share ideas from others! If I come up with any great ideas for organizing supplies to move, I’ll be sure to share those!

Take care, and Cheers to YOUR Artful Adventures!

KS

 

Wednesday Wonder – Mini Art Journal Technique with Denise Alloca

In today’s Wednesday Wonder, I’d like to introduce you to Denise Alloca from My Art Adventures. Since I seem to love all things small, I loved her featured video on Donna Downey’s Artist Gang this week. She created a little art journal and shows how she made it from one sheet of paper, and the cover from an empty cereal box. This is a fantastic way to create the backgrounds for a journal, and then have it ready for anything else you’d like to do to complete each page. This basic technique idea will allow you to use supplies you already have on-hand! I have posted two of Denise’s videos below. Enjoy!

If you’re ready for spring, as so many of us are, you’ll love this next video, too. See how she uses pieces of cardboard for some of her mark making, especially the petals of the flowers.

You can see Denise’s entire post with closeups of these little canvases on her blog.

You are welcome to share photos of your own Artful Adventures in our Facebook Group!

Cheers to YOUR Artful Adventures!

KS