Please feel free to use any of the vintage images on the website in your artwork. Be sure to share your artwork with us. This is a labor of love and I love to see what you create. Please do not post the original unaltered image on the web but post your artwork and link back to this site for the original image. Please do not sell or post the image alone or in a collection without my permission. Thank you. I can't wait to see what you create!

Showing posts with label americana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label americana. Show all posts

Saturday, May 30, 2015

Saturday, November 29, 2014

Saturday Image Bonus 344

Today's images are from a August 1860 Yankee Notion comical magazine.  It is filled with political satire and comics that would not be considered politically correct today.








Saturday, August 30, 2014

Saturday Image Bonus 335

These images are from a 1922 Sears catalog I just sold on eBay.  This was in the best condition of any catalogs i have owned but very hard to scan because the binding was still so tight.








Sunday, July 6, 2014

Saturday Image Bonus 334

Here are a few more of these precious baseball cards from the early 1900's.





Sunday, January 19, 2014

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Saturday Image Bonus 311

This morning I have five pages from a May 1888 American Agriculturist.  What a great slice of what life was like in rural america 126 years ago!  I am loving the ads for everything from bicycles to tuxedos.  After all a man needs to look good on that bicycle.





Saturday, December 14, 2013

Saturday Image Bonus 306

While hunting for treasures last summer at the flea market I found this Sears catalogue from 1940.  The images are a little later than I usually post but I had to pick it up.  It is such a history of that year.  There is clothing, household items, sport gear, doors, windows, farm equipment and almost anything you can think of inside the pages.  Here are a few images from this amazing catalogue.







Saturday, September 28, 2013

Patriotic Tag Using Gesso Resist Technique

In the mail last week I got some new stencils by Tim Holtz. I love these stencils. I wanted to create something special with them. Though it is not 4th of July I was inspired by the Stripe and Star stencils. So I created this tag below. Stencils are great. You can easily create patterns on surfaces using lots of different medium. Today we will be experimenting with using gesso as a resist medium. The reason I like using gesso versus white paint is that gesso has more grit to it creating more interest in the final piece.
Supply List:
Liquitex Gesso
Tim Holtz Layering Stencil; stars, stripes
Star punch or die
Distress Stain; chipped sapphire, festive berries, antiqued bronze, black soot
VersaColor; Pinecone
Patriotic vintage postcard
Various bits of vintage lace,net
Red dot ribbon
Star button or brad
The Ultimate Glue
Ranger non stick craft sheet
Foam applicator
Manila tag
Lightly moistened paper towel
Directions:
Take star stencil and apply gesso with a foam brush to half of the manila tag.
Repeat on other half of tag using the Stripe stencil. Let dry
Quickly apply Festive Berries Distress Stain to the Stripe surface of tag. Be careful not to get red on Star surface. Take a moist paper towel or craft sponge and wipe paint off the raised gesso stripes.
Apply the Chipped Sapphire Distress Ink to the Star stenciled area. Carefully remove excess from gesso area with a moist paper towel to reveal the white below. Dry.

Cut out image from copy of vintage postcard below. Cut out the number 4 with star punch or die.
Use Pinecone VersaColor cube to color edge of images and tag. Apply image to tag using The Ultimate glue.
Color the star button brad with Distress Stain in Antique Brass Gently apply a little black Soot to antique the surface.
Make a small hole at the bottom center of the card and place the star button brad in the hole.

Put red dot ribbon through the top hole of tag. Take the antique lace net and cut bits from the edge. Glue around the circle part of postcard image with The Ultimate glue.  Let dry.
Add more bits of antique lace to corners of tag. Place 4 from the postcard on tag.