To learn more about Composi•mold, I found a wonderful video tutorial here which explains how easy it is to use.
Mixed Media Mini Journal (Faber-Castell)
Burnt Umber acrylic paint (Plaid)
Copper Gilder's Paste (Altered Pages)
German Scrap (Altered Pages)
Scor-Tape (Altered Pages)
Versamark Ink
Black embossing powder
Distress Inks, Stains, and Markers: Rusty Hinge, Brushed Corduroy, Antique Linen, Scattered Straw, Peeled Paint; Tea Dye, Tattered Rose, Vintage Photo (Tim Holtz)
Crackle Accents, Glossy Accents (Ranger)
Niji Water Brush (Altered Pages)
Metal embellishments (various)
Helmar 450 glue
I first painted one page with Burnt Umber acrylic paint on both sides.
Then I trimmed a piece of G45 Typography paper to 4-1/2" x 5-1/2" and heavily distressed the edges. I further distressed the edges with Vintage Photo distress stain. I like to use the stain because it softens the edges and absorbs the color better. I used a small round stick to curl two of the edges. Then I adhered this piece to the page.
Next, I used Creative Paperclay® to make my copy. First, I placed small pieces of the paperclay into the tight spots along the sides, as shown.
Then I finished filling the mold and turned it over to see if I got all the nooks and crannies filled.
Allow the paperclay to dry a bit before removing it from the mold. Before the clay is completely dry, you can smooth edges and do any fine trimming, if necessary. After the clay dries, you can also sand it to smooth out any roughness.
Paint entire piece with black acrylic paint and let dry.
Apply a wash of silver acrylic paint over the piece and wipe some of the excess off of the top.
Next, I hit the high spots with archival black ink. Set aside to dry.
Adhere the other side of the mesh strip to the right side, pulling it taut, as shown, and adhere metal letters (TYPE) I found in my stash over the end. I also found these letter brads in my stash, so I removed the brad prongs and attached them with Glossy Accents.
I adhered two red metal numbers at the corners where I had curled the paper back. See photo above.
I found this scrap of mesh material in my stash, so I trimmed it to size and adhered it to my page with scor-tape, or similar double-sided adhesive.
Scor-tape around the edges |
Mesh adhered to scor-tape around edges, bottom shows my attempt at adhering with EP |
I colored the woman with a Tattered Rose distress marker, the watch with a Peeled Paint marker, and added color to the column with a Tumbled Glass marker. I then added shading to the column with a Scattered Straw marker and a Tea Dye marker around the clock face.
Then I blended all the colors with my water brush.
Next, I fussy cut the pieces and adhered the column collage image to my page with foam dots, and wet glue for the lion image. Adding these three metal studs gave it some added dimension and interest, as well.
Next, I used a ticket punch on the "Antique-aholic" piece and edged with Peeled Paint Distress Ink. Then I adhered some metal filigree jewelry findings in the upper right corner and attached my "Antique-aholic" piece over that. This gave it some interest with a bit of dimension.
The last thing I did was add small areas of Crackle Aceents over the clock face to imitate a broken, shattered clock crystal.
I hope you are enjoying all of this month's DT posts and inspiration using stamps, embellishments, and Composi•mold. As I said before, this is so easy to use and lots of fun. I hope you will give it a try. Be sure to pop on over to the SCS Store to see all the new products and the SCS Blog for tons of inspiration.
Have a wonderful and creative weekend.
Barbara
Great details! fantastic job! love it
ReplyDeleteBoth pages are beautiful. I bought that typewriter, too. I never used it on a project because it is so heavy. Your mold idea is very cool! It would be lighter and I would think a lot easier to adhere to the page! Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteAwesome project! I love the typewriter and how you painted it!
ReplyDeleteMichelle from ComposiMold
Thanks, everyone. I really love ComposiMold. It is a wonderful product and so easy to use.
Delete