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Showing posts with label Tiffany-Doodles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tiffany-Doodles. Show all posts

Friday, 4 November 2011

Refillable notebook gift idea - with Tiffany Doodles image

Posted on 18:40 by Unknown
Working on any crafty Christmas presents, yet?

Tiffany Doodles Couch notebooks collage mel stampz copy

Everyone on my list is getting a refillable notebook,
(for a start). The handy thing is that you can even take cards
you've already made & turn them into notebook gifts in a flash.
:-D



Furniture images are nifty, no?
This Couch digi from Tiffany Doodles is my fave.
I've been wanting to make something with it for ages.



So, it ended up as a notebook, twice:

Notebook #1

Tiffany Doodles Couch Notebook 1 - belly band cover on

The 1st version has a removable vellum
belly-band cover that slides off:

Tiffany Doodles Couch Notebook 1 - belly band cover off

...and a matchbook style fold.

Here's the inside:

Tiffany Doodles Couch notebook 1 - inside

Very basic inside, but it has refillable pages (the pages are attached
with tied ribbon instead of being stitched in or glued into the cover).

The refillable page part thrills me, since you can make easy little
'refill packs' so that the recipient can just re-tie them in
with the ribbon to keep using the notepad over and over again.

Notebook #2Tiffany Doodles Couch notebook 2 - Front mel stampz

The 2nd version has the same elements in
a plain top-fold style,

but inside:

Tiffany Doodles Couch notebook 2 - inside Squigglefly Seasonal House on a Hill & CosmoCricket paper

It has a little bit of embellishment fun
(with a teeny painting made using another digital fave
Seasonal House on a Hill digi from Squigglefly).
The patterned paper is Cosmo Cricket "Lucy" from Clementine

---
Both notebook styles measure 6-3/4 inches by 4 inches.



...make a matchbook style notebook
with a vellum belly-band cover
& refillable pages.


  • Couch digital image from Tiffany Doodles
  • Watercolour paper 140lb, scissors,
  • Seasonal House on a Hill digi from Squigglefly
  • Borden & Riley Paris Bleedproof paper for pens
  • Ink Jet printer, clear embossing powder & heat gun
  • White Cardstock 80lb or more (used here: Naturals White)
  • Vellum cardstock, double-sided tape, scoring board
  • Punches: 1" circle, 1/2" circle, 1" square, 3/4" square, 3/4" circle
  • Nestabilities label 9 die (the very smallest one)
  • Note pages: Copy paper or thin printer paper (acid-free)
  • Small rectangular punch, White satin Ribbon 1/8"
  • Copic markers, various colours of thread, paper piercer, a needle.
1) Print Tiffany Doodles Couch digital image on watercolour paper & cut it out

Step 1) Print Tiffany Doodles Couch digital image at 90% on watercolour paper & cut it out.

2) Cut cardstock to be 8 and 1-2 x 6 and 3-4 inches -Score at 1 and 1-8 and 5 and 1-4 inches

Step 2) Make a matchbook-fold style cover for the notebook:

2A) Cut cardstock to measure 8-1/2 inches x 6-3/4 inches.
2B)Score it at 1-1/8" and 5- 1/4" marks.

3) Print & stitch hexagon paper

Step 3) For a fancy wallpaper look: Print or use some patterned paper.
Pierce with a paper piercing tool, and stitch it, if you like.

Print:

I made this custom hexagon paper using
various Cosmo Cricket digital papers:
cosmo cricket filled hexagon papers
Details on how to make the paper (with a link to
the free hexagon template) are in this post.

Stitch:

It takes quite a while to hand stitch in this kind of detail, of course...

close up of stitched Cosmo Cricket hex paper

...but I have a very special recipient in mind for this, who loves to sew.
(And secretly, stitching paper is my most ultimate favourite thing of all!)

4) Cut a piece of patterned paper to make a rug

Step 4) Cut a rug! ;o) Cut a piece of patterned paper the size of the bottom fold piece. This is a patterned paper called "Squares" from Cosmo Cricket's Honey Pie digital paper pack.

Step 5) Finish the matchbook-style notebook:

5) finish the matchbook note book - A) Adhere the background piece & the rug piece

5A) Adhere the background piece & the rug piece.

5B) Cut pages 6 and 1-2 x 8 inches - fold in half - punch holes in pages and cover - Tie into cover

5B) Add refillable pages to the notebook: Cut pages to measure 6 and 1-2 x 8 inches. Fold each page in half. Punch holes in the tops of the pages. Then punch more holes, in the back page of the notebook cover (to align with the page holes). Tie the pages into the cover with a bit of ribbon.

6) Make a sleeve that will slide on & off

Step 6) Make a vellum sleeve that will slide on & off. Here's how I made mine:

7) Make sleeve- Cut vellum cardstock to be 9 x 5 and 1-2 inches- Score at both 1 and 1-4 and 5.5 inches

Step 7) To make the sleeve: Cut vellum cardstock to measure 9 inches x 5-1/2 inches. Score at both the 1-1/4 inch and the 5-1/2 inch mark.

8) Press folds into vellum cardstock

Step 8) Press folds into the vellum cardstock where you've scored.

9) Wrap vellum around card, check fit, add adhesive

Step 9) Add adhesive to the sleeve: Wrap vellum around card, check fit, and add adhesive. (I like to use double-sided tape where it will be hidden by an image or embellishment.)

10) Press vellum flap onto adhesive to close the sleeve

Step 10) Seal the sleeve up: Press the front matchbook vellum flap onto adhesive & press the sleeve closed.

11) Adhere the couch to the sleeve (hides the seam)

Step 11) Adhere the couch to the sleeve (hides that seam).

12) Decorate the sleeve Punch shapes for frames & matching backs

Step 12) Add mini frames to the wall above the couch: Punch shapes for frames & matching solid-shape backs (The solid shape behind gives more dimension & makes things easy to assemble.)

I used different sized circle & square punches to make frames. Tip: start with the smallest size shape (like a 3/4" circle) and punch it first; then punch the larger shape (like a 1" circle) around it.

13) Adhere the backs for the frames

Step 13) Adhere the solid shapes to the vellum band. To make the curvy frames (to the left and right in the photo below) I used a Nestabilities label 9 die (the very smallest one):

14) Add cushions to the Tiffany Doodles Couch -digitally paper pieced to get Cosmo Cricket patterns

Step 14) Add cushions to the Couch These ones are digitally paper pieced to get pattern (using a small section of Cosmo Cricket digital paper "Sweet Nothings" snipped from their Hey Sugar set & turned into a custom pattern in Photoshop so that it would fill just the flowery part of that digi paper.)

15) Print Squigglefly Seasonal House on a Hill image at 15 percent recolour & text 11 & 12 pt font Add frames & punch

Step 15) Make your own custom art: You could use photos or anything you like. Here's what I did:

Print Squigglefly Seasonal House on a Hill image at 15 percent. I erased the border from the image & recoloured it to make it blue. The word art is text that I typed into a word document in 11 & 12 pt font, and changed the colour of. All of it is printed onto Borden & Riley Paris Bleedproof paper and heat embossed in clear.

To get the frames cut nicely: simply stick them to the printed images & words & repunch around each frame.

16) Add stitching to the art

Step 16) Add stitching to the art.

17) Adhere art to the frame shape backs

Step 17) Adhere art to the frame shape backs.

18) Slide cover onto notebook

Step 18) Slide the cover onto the notebook & that's it!

In the end, I wanted something with a little less poof
(that would lay more flat) so I made another version entirely...
Tiffany Doodles Couch notebook 2 - Front mel stampz

I think next time, I'll try the plain top fold style notebook
with the vellum belly band...

Hope you're having the most wonderful week,

Read More
Posted in 3D-projects, cheap-tricks, Digital-Images, Faves, Tiffany-Doodles, Tutorials | No comments

Thursday, 30 June 2011

How to make Custom patterns in Photoshop & use them to fill Line Art etc.

Posted on 20:30 by Unknown

This one's for You, Malin!



...make a custom pattern in Photoshop
& use it to fill line art or digital images


I uploaded a Powerpoint of this tutorial here,
since these Blogger pictures can be hard to see.
(If you like the powerpoint idea, please let me know for
future technical tutorials)

Click the image to go to the powerpoint pictorial:

(Acrobat takes quite a while to generate the preview,
but you can download the powerpoint right away, if you like)


And here's how the custom pattern & image filling is done:

(my way, anyhow)



Step 1) Open the image that you'd like to turn into a pattern. Select the Edit tab, then choose "Define Pattern"

(Sizing: You can use some pretty large images for patterns. I used this one which was 2500 pixels, since that prints at about 8.5" square (and fits on a standard sheet of cardstock). 2500 px is the maximum size for Photoshop brushes in PS so I made some coloured damask patterns that size. I think I may do a little tutorial on brushes at some point, if anyone is curious about them).



Step 2) A window will pop up for you to name your pattern.

A little thought on naming patterns: If you are using someone else's image, it helps to add that info in the name, so you know who to credit when you use it, and you can refer to their terms of use or copyright policies.



Step 3) Close the image you used to make the pattern, and open the line art image (or digital stamp image or template) or whatever you want to fill with pattern....



Step 4) Once you open the image to be filled:

A) select the paint bucket tool.

B) Pull down the tab that says foreground in the toolbar above & select "Pattern" (instead of foreground which gives you solid colour).



Step 5) Pull down again (by the pattern square thumbnail image) to choose your pattern.



Step 6) Set the opacity for your pattern fill. You can make it more or less opaque (solid) or you can make it more transparent (sheer).



Step 7) Position the paint bucket over the line image & click to fill.



Step 8) Repeat with the paint bucket to fill the rest of the image with pattern.



Step 9) Use the zoom tool to get close for easier pattern filling on small areas.




If you like you can fill with colour before adding pattern
by using the "Foreground" paint bucket fill setting first:



(Repeat to fill all areas)



Then, switch to the "Pattern" setting
again, set the opacity, and fill over the colour with pattern.

or....

To get a coloured pattern, change the colour of the image,
then set it as a pattern:



(There's a tutorial on how
to change black &
white images to colour ones

in an older post here).

Then you can fill the image with your new coloured pattern:



Trouble-shooting:

If the whole page fills with pattern, it probably means...



...that there's a hole in the line art somewhere:
(unless you are on another layer that isn't the image layer)



(or in otherwords, there's a break in the line that is
letting that pattern get out of line! ;)



Repair the hole in the line art with the brush tool.




You can use this method to fill templates
(or parts of templates for added detail)


(This template set is available here on Flickr)

It's handy for making custom patterned envelope templates:

(or just making patterned envelope liners)

You can scan anything and turn it into a pattern
(book pages, fabrics, kid's art...)

Even fill things with scanned photographs:



This was done with a vintage photo postcard of
Stanley Park, Vancouver BC Canada.
(I have a collection that I've been meaning to scan & share with you)


Credit for the dress judy image goes to... The image used here is an adaptation of an image created by Monica Gaffney. I turned her Red Dress image into an outline image for a blog buddy, Malin. Monica's fun & funky digitals can be found in her etsy store, AssortedSundries, here.


Coming soon to a blog near you:



If you have any pointers for how to do Photoshop things in a better
way, I'd love to hear them. I just make things up as I go,
:o)


P.S. That sweet T.V. image at the top is available as line art
here at Tiffany Doodles for only $1.o0!
Read More
Posted in cheap-tricks, Digital-Images, techniques, Tiffany-Doodles, Tutorials | No comments
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