Art Journaling Basics for Beginners ebook and Videos

Art Journaling Basics for BeginnersLearn the basics to getting started on your own Artful Adventure into Art Journaling!

If you have always wanted to find out more about art journaling, here’s your chance.  This eBook is complete with video links, as well as images and ideas for your first few pages! It addresses some questions you may have about the very basics of getting started.

The ebook is a downloadable 26 page .PDF file and includes 4 video links along with the printed information, which is NOT a transcription from the videos!  It is an 8.5 x 11 inch size, so that you can print out the included images and quotes to use in your art journaling.

This eBook offers valuable tips on:

  • What to use for a journal
  • Instructions for making your own journal by recycling a book, if you’d like to go green!
  • Tips on Basic Supplies
  • Information on Adhesives
  • 5 Ways to Make Backgrounds
  • Tips on Getting Started
  • Starter Prompts
  • Printable Images and quotes to help you get started! 

Get yours now for just $7

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art journaling basics for beginners ebook


 What People are saying:

I highly recommend Kristie’s ebook, Artful Adventures – Art Journaling Basics, for anyone who has dabbled or who has thought about dabbling in art journaling. Kristie debunks the myth that you need to be an artist to have an art journal. With her open, shoot from the hip style, you learn what an art journal can be, what to look for when buying one and how to create gorgeous background patterns. Getting messy can be the hardest thing for Type A people like me but after watching Kristie slap gesso on the page with her hands, I want to try it! Thanks to Kristie’s tips and tricks I feel more confident in my own fledgling art journaling attempts!

Alison Day
AlisonDayDesigns.com

I love Kristie’s approach to learning about art journaling.  I am so glad I got a chance to read her book.  It is full of beginner info that I found invaluable.  This book should be in every beginner’s hands.  

Gina
GinaZee.com

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Vintage Look St. Patrick’s Day Tags

We don’t really celebrate St. Patrick’s day at our home in a big way, but just bringing in some green and thinking that spring will eventually come this year, it was fun to participate in a St. Patrick’s themed tag swap!  These little tags made for a swap, were speeded along by using the vintage images offered by Joanna Grant!

Vintage Look St. Patrick Tags

What size tags do you usually make? Do you tend to stick to one size, or do you like to mix it up? By making these tags 3 inches by 4 inches, they could also be used in pocket scrapbooking pages!

Here’s how these were quickly made:

  • After cutting card stock to 3″ x 6″, the corners were rounded, and a pattern was stamped. I chose to use thinned down acrylic paint to give it a little different look than stamping with ink.  
  • Next, Tim Holtz Distress Ink was used to add more green over the entire card, and a bit of brown was added to the edges. 
  • The vintage images were printed out onto Presentation Paper, and torn around the edges and inked around edge before adhering to the card.
  • One tiny embellishment was added — a tiny pearl in the middle of her bonnet.
  • Finally, a bit of ribbon and twine was added to a punched hole. 

That’s it!

I enjoy using technology to speed up creating, but still love to get messy and crafty! By using this kind of on-demand printing for projects, it can allow you to have less physical product on hand — or not!

What kind of technology do you incorporate in your artsy/craftsy ventures?

KS

Monthly Art Journal Diary Page – March

Some of you may remember the pages we did for a monthly calendar, using a cross between art journaling and scrapbooking. Here was last year’s March layout. This year, I am doing something a little different. I have been participating in Joanne Sharpe’s wonderful online class, Draw Your Awesome Year. We are each working on a journal, and each month we are creating an artful layout to use in documenting little bits about each day.

This is great for me, because I don’t typically journal every day; at least not a full page. That’s why just a snippet of info is a great way to keep a bit of info so that I can look back and remember the year.

March daily calendar art journal.

This particular spread’s design was created with Inktense pencils and a water brush. Isn’t it great how you can create something by only coloring in the negative space? I love these pencils because they are so vivid and not too messy!  Don’t get me wrong, I’m not opposed to being messy!

I pulled out my greens and just went to work. Not a great idea! I should have looked at my color swatches and realized that “Leaf Green” has a brown tone in it! Yes, I dove in right around the title of my page, and it was hard to get that color toned down. I tried to pull it into other areas of the page, but the top of the right page has a little too much more my taste. The background and design are done, and for me, it’s time to move on!

Do you often find that you spend a great deal of time trying to “fix” something you didn’t plan on happening in your art or crafting? Share your stories so I don’t feel like I am all alone!

Word for 2014

I can’t believe today is the last day of January 2014! What kinds of wonderful things are you planning to accomplish this year? Whatever you plan to do, wherever you plan to go, I wish you the best year ever.  Now I am waving my fairy godmother wand over you, so you know you have the power to go out and do it!

I have a theme this year of “More Doing, Less Thinking about Doing!” Towards the end of last year I really got sidetracked with so many things that were going on around me. I did so much more thinking about doing than the actual doing of the things I wanted to get done.  That brings me to something many of you have heard of, or may do yourself, which is select a single word for your year.  My word this year is “NOW!”

Here is a dictionary definition

Now – adverb

1. at the present time or moment

2. without further delay; immediately; at once

For me, this goes along with more doing and less thinking about doing! However, it is so much more. I want to make sure that I enjoy the moments of everyday, being in the present, being in the now. Each day I wake up to a new day, enjoy it now!  Each day I have with my family – enjoy them now. I want to be grateful for all the little things we take for granted – now. I don’t want to put things off that I want to do – so I want to work them in – now! If I can’t actually do it now, write time on the calendar to make the time.  I’m sure you get the picture!

This page was done in an online class I’m taking with Joanne Sharpe, called “Draw Your Awesome Year.” It was colored by using Inktense Pencils, which are a water soluble ink. If you like using bright colors and water – you would love these!

Have you selected a word for the year? Please share it in the comments!

Now-word of the year-Kristie-Sloan

Doing What You Love, NOW!

It is amazing how quickly time slips by!  Speaking of which, you may have wondered what has happened to me. The fact is, we have had a number of health issues at our house, including my own health. Thankfully, I’m good to go, and you can still find me here.

Today, I was thinking about how few posts I’ve written over the last weeks. The reality is that during that same time period I haven’t done much crafting, scrapbooking, or the things like that which I enjoy doing. I would think about it, but just didn’t do it. Now I have nothing to show for that time!

It made me think about how important it is to just DO it! “It” being whatever you are interested in doing. You never know how long you will have to do it, so don’t procrastinate. I look at my dad, and am reminded how important it is to not procrastinate.

LaurenceFiskeFor years, my dad was busy from the time he woke up until he fell into bed. After being in the Navy, he became an electrician and eventually also taught part time at the electrical apprenticeship. He became certified in welding because he could often get a job in welding when the electrical jobs were few. He often drove extensive distances to have a job. We were very active in our church. We lived on a hobby farm which kept him busy when he wasn’t at work. He built the home we lived in; and in later years he added a 1 bedroom home onto our house for my mom’s parents; and of course did all the repairs! He worked on our vehicles and other equipment to keep everything running. When he retired from the electrical trade, he started working for an airline and did ground maintenance, which was about everything EXCEPT the airplanes. So what does all this have to do with anything? Believe it or not, besides all that kept him busy, he had a hobby! He had worked in the shoe shop in the Navy, and had learned to tool leather!

Since I had grown up seeing his work, it was what I assumed everyone’s leather tooling looked like. Not true! After I was grown and had a chance to see more leather work, I realized how perfectly wonderful his work was. He had developed his skills to a level that you rarely see. Over the years he made us purses, belts, wallets, binder covers and more. He always wanted to make a saddle, and he finally did it! People thought it was odd that it was on a stand in their front room! Well, it was a work of love, and since it had never been on a horse, that’s where it resided! I once saw another handmade saddle at our state fair, and even though it had earned a blue ribbon, the work was nowhere as exquisite as my dad’s.

saddle view 2

saddle view 1

saddle

A number of years ago, my dad was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. Those who are not familiar with the disease often think it is just about not being able to remember. It is so much more debilitating than that. As the disease progresses, the person is less and less functional, becoming just a shell of the vibrant people they once were. We now go and sit with my dad, and many days wonder if he understands what is going on or who we are. A once busy and active man now just sits there, as he is unable to even get around anymore.

I am so thankful for the example he set not only in work ethic, but also of taking time to do other things he was interested in!

If you have something you want to do, make time for it!

Don’t look back and wish you had made the time to do it.

Note:  I just remembered I recently made one of those ruffly scarves — and was reminded why knitting is not my fave! Last, but not least, the saddle has been “used” by his grandchildren and great grandchildren!

kids on the saddle

KS