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The Flower Challenge: Navy plus One

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I have a sympathy card to share for The Flower Challenge–Navy + One. In my case, it’s navy plus gray—a neutral (white) is also allowed.

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Aside from the stamped image from Pinkfresh Studios, everything on the card was die cut.

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And all of the die cuts come from The Greetery: Nordic Frames, Inside and Out Berry Branches, and Fit to be Tied. 

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I layered the Nordic Frames, cut in white, on one another, and then adhered to a dark navy card. The berries and leaves were die cut from the same navy cardstock and two colors of gray card stock, with some shading done with colored pencils.

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It’s always a challenge to create a sympathy card. I’m averse to bright florals for sympathy cards, but don’t want the card to be too dark either. This seems to hit a good balance, and I can see using the design again.

A One Layer Card

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It seems like it would be easiest to make a one layer card, but actually it’s pretty difficult not to put a simple frame, layer, or embellishment on a card. I was playing around with colored pencils a few nights ago for my #100DayProject and ended up with a card that worked for me, so I’m entering it in the AAA Cards Challenge for one layer cards. I’m not using the optional photograph for inspiration.

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It had been awhile since I used colored pencils on kraft cardstock, so that’s where I started. I stamped Altenew’s “Needlework Motif” in black ink on a kraft card base. 

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The next step was to color the entire image with white pencil so that the colors will appear bright as well as providing some highlights. Given the nature of the stamp, choosing colors was clearly personal preference, and I liked the pinks, oranges, and bright greens together.

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The final step was to choose a sentiment. I wanted one that would balance the design on the top a bit since I had decided not to stamp anything from the opposite corner. Papertrey Ink’s two-step sentiments from “Scripted” worked well.

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Time Out: Let Us Be Grateful

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The quote for inspiration at Time Out is one of my favorites:

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In the top five things I’m grateful for are a list of friends, some of whom I’ve know for over 40 years now. This card went to one of those long-time friends.

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She’s a country girl at heart and decorates her home with lots of country-themed accessories so I thought this mason jar and the gingham check would be perfect for her. I die cut the gingham paper from My Favorite Things with the Papertrey Ink Shape Shifter Oval, and tied a piece of twine around it, finishing with a bow. 

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I fussy cut the flowers from Simon Says “Mandy’s Flowers” and popped it up with some dimensional tape. The card base is PTI’s Summer Sunrise. Tulips are done here, now, but we’re blessed with lots of flowers both in our yard and in pots in the front of our house and around the patio. Here’s a peek at some near the front door.

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The sun is out, and although it’s exceptionally cool today, we’ve had lovely weather and have spent a lot of time outside walking, hiking, and sitting/eating on the patio.

Color Throwdown—Week 3

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For the third week in a row, the Color Throwdown Challenge has called my name. I love these bright party colors:

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And it was a perfect opportunity to play with some new products from The Greetery’s latest release. Admittedly, I’d change a couple of things about this card if the challenge didn’t end in just an hour or two, but it’s colorful and cheerful, and I love Betsy’s new pinwheel stencils. I purchased the dies as well, and have lots of things to try with this set as well as the “Birthday Blooms” set which I used for the sentiment.

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I added just a couple enamel dots as embellishment as well as using some dimensional tape for the centers of the orange pinwheels and the die cut sentiment. Betsy’s die cut designs for the sentiments in “Birthday Blooms” are sheer genius!

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Hope your week is off to a good start! The weather here is cooler than it’s been, but just about perfect in my opinion—warm enough to eat on the patio, but not too hot to walk a couple of miles without sweating.

 

Five in Five on the 5th: Peonies in the Park

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Today is June 5th, and time for Sandie’s monthly challenge, 5 in5,  to take five photos in five minutes. With that challenge in mind, I took a series of photos in Highland Park of the gorgeous peonies. Although we live just a short walk from the park, our peonies are just budded. Sadly, there aren’t a lot of buds on our peonies again this year despite applying some fertilizer twice this spring. Not a problem for the peonies in the park which are just gorgeous.

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And finally, my favorite.

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And as always, thanks to Sandie for hosting this meme which has sent me off with my camera every month for several years now.

 

Card Concept: Bright Flowers

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The Card Concept photo inspiration is bright and colorful. 

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I had stamped all the flowers and the vase from Pinkfresh Studios Fleur 2 and decided to pull them out, color them with Copic markers, and arrange them in the vase for a friend’s birthday card.

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I arranged everything on a Nordic Frame from The Greetery and then to an Aqua Mist (PTI) card. The sentiment is from Taylored Expressions Simple Strips.

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The Card Concept identifies a series of card styles from which to choose. I think this one falls under Clean and Layered. There’s still lots of white space, but there are a lot of flowers layered as well as the beautiful Nordic Frame layered on the card base. 

 

One Little Word: May Recap

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Stay-at-home restrictions continued so taking on the #100DayProject was a good decision. I’ve enjoyed the excuse to pull out one of my coloring materials to use every day. I have an unusual stockpile of cards and an envelope of colored images for new cards, and I’ve sent a lot of cards as well.

I kept up with a photo-a-day. As you can see below, the majority of the photos were of flowers and the parks. No wonder! Winter kept a grip on us for the beginning of May, so green trees (not until after my birthday mid-month) and flowers were a very welcome sight. There are a couple of photos of the many birds that keep us entertained outside our kitchen window. We’re always glad to see the rose-breasted grosbeaks who only stay for a couple of weeks. Fortunately, the beautiful Baltimore Orioles stay most of the summer. We’ve seen a few hummingbirds, and have regular visits from two kinds of woodpeckers. The yellow finches, catbirds, and nuthatches also enjoy our feeders.

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I also set a goal to walk every day which we did, sometimes in the snow, and once on a 90° day. The extremes were rather amazing. According to our Runkeeper app, we totaled a little over 74 miles for the month.

I read five books, none of which I rated with five stars although I enjoyed most of them. I particularly liked Rebecca Solnit’s Whose Story Is It? –a group of thoughtful essays about feminism, discrimination, and power, and Eric Larson’s lengthy, but well-written, intimate portrait of Winston Churchill during his first year as prime minister during WWII.

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I intended to continue purging photos from my computer, but that fell by the wayside, so I’m taking that up in June with more concrete goals. I didn’t get back to my Copic Jumpstart class either, and know that will have to wait until the #100DayProject is complete.

As if the pandemic wasn’t enough, the month ended in tragedy and chaos—another Black life taken at the hands of the police resulting in peaceful protests that turned violent in over 140 cities, including Rochester. Our federal leadership does more to incite violence than calm—no sign of empathy or compassion. I fear for our future.

My June goals are much the same. I’ll continue with the #100DayProject, I have six books I want to read, and my study group is beginning our third project which would be book #7 for the month. I’m planning to set aside three times each day to tackle the reading. I want to purge another 5,000 photos (11,000 were purged by the end of April), and Tracy wants to reach 50 days of continuous walking. We’re planning a trip to Wisconsin at the end of the month which always alters our daily rhythms, so I hope to be particularly productive the first few weeks of the month.

 

Walking in the Park

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We live just a short walk from one of the nicest parks in the county. It’s especially beautiful in the spring. During a normal year (which this is definitely not), there would have been a 10 day long Lilac Festival. But the truth of the matter is, had it occurred, none of the lilacs would have been in bloom, and it would have been nasty and cold. May’s weather has been bizarre. We walked in the snow twice, and this past week it was 90°. But . . . the park is now in full bloom. Earlier in the week the lilacs were at their peak. The park was too crowded for our tastes, so we walked among the lilacs and stayed off the sidewalks. It was easy to stay a good social distance apart. 

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We’re at the park every year, and yet, I don’t think I’ve ever come across this variety (“Sensation”). It’s one of the most beautiful in the park.

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Later in the week, many of the lilacs had started to fade, but there was still lots of beauty to be seen. Only about 50% of the rhododendrons are in bloom, but this one is gorgeous.

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I think there is only one of these trees in the park, and it’s the first time I’ve seen it in bloom. It’s called a Goldenchain tree—perfect name!

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Most of the magnolias have come and gone, but this beauty was still there.

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This is always one of my favorite spots in the park. The azaleas are in full bloom.

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These rhododendrons are beautiful, too.

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And this is our parting view as we walk down a set of steps to the street that takes us back to our neighborhood.

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I hope this tour makes up for some of my bitter complaining this spring when all the beauty seemed out of our grasp. It certainly lifts my spirits!

 

 

Going Around in Circles

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The Monday Simon Says Challenge is Going Around in Circles. One of my projects for the Online Card Class Spring Card Camp 2 was to create some watercolor washes. This one was done with Tombow markers which I never would have used for this technique. (That’s why I love these classes. All kinds of little tidbits and new ideas are introduced.) Once it was done, it was very vibrant, and I wanted something to tone it down a bit. I found this circle coverplate by Papertrey Ink, and I love how it turned out.

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I know just who it’s going to. A friend of mine is scheduled for a bone marrow transplant next month, and I’m thinking this might brighten up one of the many days he has to spend in the hospital.

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The sentiment from Simon Says “Hello Darling” set was stamped on Gina K Melon cardstock and cut out with a circle die, then backed with a slightly larger black circle. Off to link up with the challenge:

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Color Throwdown 2

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After rarely playing along with the Color Throwdown Challenge, I have a card for the second week in a row. When I saw the color combination, I knew I’d try to do something. Like last week, the combo spoke to me.

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So today when I sat down to do some coloring for the #100DayProject, I picked out three turquoise Copic markers and stamped a butterfly from “Beautiful Butterflies,” the stamp set in the June Simon Say Card Kit. It’s a wonderful set, and this is the second card I’ve created with it this week. I’m posting nearly every day on Instagram as part of the #100DayProject, but eventually, most of the cards will show up here as well.

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I found the turquoise paper behind the heart in one of my folders of precut papers. I have no idea where that circle die came from—I certainly can’t find it today. I have done a couple big purges since the beginning of the year, but I don’t think I’ve given away any dies. The heart was cut with a nested set of heart dies by My Favorite Things. 

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Both the white panel and the butterfly are adhered with dimensional foam/tape. The sentiment is another from Taylored Expressions “Simple Strips.” I love that you can stamp, emboss, and then die cut a whole group of sentiments at one time. I keep them in a little bag and can pull them out when needed. 

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Hope your weekend is a good one! As usual, during this stay-at-home time, ours will be pretty quiet. Tracy is doing a lot of yard work. He’s taken down four straggly trees along our property line in preparation for extending the fence he started last year. A nearly dead hedge along the edge of the patio also went to the curb today. Things are looking brighter–literally. I have a few more flowers to plant, but most of my to-do list is inside. 

Color Throw Down

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I follow The Color Throw Down challenge and often intend to create a card for it, but it rarely happens. By the time the challenge shows up in my Feedly account, the end date is just five days away. You would think that during this stay-at-home time, five days would be plenty of time to get a card made. It just doesn’t happen, but today after I finished my earlier post, I worked on my #100DayProject. I deliberately chose the colors yellow, gray, and white for this week’s Color Throw Down challenge. Three colors, I might add, that I really love together. So I was not totally surprised when I check the date for this week’s challenge to discover it ends tomorrow, so here is a second post in one day—a rarity to be sure.

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Day 18 of the Spring Card Camp 2 was about ink swiping backgrounds. Being a CAS fan, most of the backgrounds were a bit busy for my tastes. But Seeka created a series for part 2 of the lesson that I loved, and this is one of the designs I particularly liked. I swiped down the side of Bristol cardstock with two ink cubes in gray and two ink cubes in yellow from Pinkfresh Studios.  It’s easier to see the ombre effect in this photo:

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Then I used a Y35 Copic marker to add just a touch of dimension to the leaves. After die cutting the panel with a stitched rectangle die, I mounted it on Simon Says Smoke cardstock. 

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The beautiful vine is from Simon Says’ “Stronger Together” set and the sentiment from Simon Says “Sketched Flowers.” Both sets were part of the Simon Says Card Kit series, and have wonderful images and great sentiments. 

Off to link this up before the challenge closes!

An Almost Double Birthday

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This weekend my niece’s two children both celebrated their birthdays–one day apart. On Friday, Finn turned five, and on Saturday, Rowen turned three. I love making birthday cards for kids. Finn’s card was inspired by Sandie’s photo prompt, “Digits” for the 30 Day Photo Challenge. It’s an almost perfect entry for AAA Cards Birthday Challenge. Finn turned five and the AAA Card Challenge just turned six.

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I’ve used this number border by Papertrey Ink many times, but I think this is my favorite card so far. The green and orange seem to work wonderfully together.

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All the numbers except the five are “empty.” I stacked three orange 5’s before inlaying them in the border so it stands out both in color and dimension.

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The sentiment is from My Favorite Things, “Bitty Birthday Wishes” and the arrow on the banner points to the inside where it says, “For the Birthday Boy.”

Rowan’s card is another entry to the AAA Birthday Challenge: Wings. The previous entries were cards with butterflies as the focal image. This is a more imaginative entry–a unicorn with wings.

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The stamped and die cut images are from My Favorite Things “Fairy Tale” set and the sentiment is from the same set I used for Finn’s card. 

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The glittery stars were stenciled with Nuvo Silver Gem Glimmer Paste and the Altenew “Milky Way” stencil. Lots of sparkly dimension.

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Too coordinate with the sparkly stars, I embossed the greeting in silver on black cardstock. 

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Wonderful Birthday

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This card was sent to a good friend for her birthday. It’s now safe to post it and I’m linking it to the current CASology challenge: Plant. 

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I love this cluster of flowers from Simon Says “Stronger Together” set. I embossed it in white on watercolor paper and used Altenew’s 36 pan watercolors to color it. 

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Simon Says Cream cardstock is a great match for watercolor paper which is rarely a true white. After die cutting the watercolored piece with a Stitched Rectangle die, I added a thin border of Simon Says Green Leaf cardstock and then attached it to the card with dimensional tape.

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The sentiment is from a favorite Papertrey Ink set, Wishes Come True. A simple design with satisfying white space.

Clean and Simple Flower

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A quick post to enter a card into Addicted to CAS’s current challenge, “Flower,” which ends later today. Purchasing and planting flowers has definitely put a dent in my crafting time, but the warm weather is finally here to stay, and since we’ll be spending lots of time outdoors in our yard this summer, the flowers and herbs I’ve planted will surely improve the stay-at-home situation.

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The “white space” this time is a lovely dark gray which matched the border of the stamp. I colored both the border and the rose with Copic markers and then did some simple layering with a pink paper. Since I have many more cards than usual because of my daily coloring for the #100DayProject, I’ve started leaving sentiments off the cards if they can be used for more than one occasion. I’m thinking this card has multiple possibilities.

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The stamp is an older Papertrey Ink stamp, “Botanical Blocks.” Another benefit of the #100DayProject is I’m pulling out older stamp sets and using some sets that have seen little or, sometimes no, love.

It will be a strange Memorial Day weekend. We’re usually with family for a big picnic, but not this year. There’s some rain forecast, but it appears to be off and on, so I’m hoping for a good mix of crafting time, and time on the patio.

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Fun with Letter Substitutions

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I think I’ve enjoyed Spring Card Camp 2 even more than the first Spring Card Camp. I have several lessons from both camps still to try. This afternoon I created three cards I’ll share later from Day 6, but today I want to share two cards I created from Channin Pellitier’s lesson on letter substitution for Day 10. It didn’t take me long to find just the right image to replace a letter in a sentiment. This cute bear holding a heart seemed perfect to replace the “U” in HUGS.

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In talking to Sarah this week, I found out that Hannah no longer wishes to share a card with Caleb. She came out of her room after rest time the other day clutching the rainbow card, and announced, “MY rainbow card.” So this time they’ll each get a card of their own. I’ve had this darling bear stamp from Ellen Hutson for over a year, and have never put it to use. In addition to the heart, I have a whole collection of cute items the bear can hold, so I know this isn’t the last time you’ll see him.

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He was just the right height to pair with The Stamp Market’s “Skinny Upper Alpha” dies which I cut from black fun foam—a technique I saw Laurie Willison use awhile ago. It give the letters a bit of dimension as well as some texture IRL.

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The accompanying sentiments are from Papertrey Ink’s “Big Hugs.” Both patterned papers came from The Stamp Market’s 6X6 “Color Crush” paper pad.

I’m linking up these card to the Simon Says Wednesday Challenge, Animals, and recently revived NBUS (Never Before Used Stuff) Challenge. I should have linked an earlier post this month to that challenge as well. Between the #100DayChallenge and the card camps, I’m getting around to using some products I’ve had for awhile.