Showing posts with label Emerald Creek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emerald Creek. Show all posts

Saturday, August 4, 2018

Saturday Showcase - Techniques with Emerald Creek embossing powders and Distress Oxide Inks

Hello dear friends! It's Maggi here and I'm excited to share my very first Saturday Showcase on the Frilly and Funkie Blog. Today I want to show you some of my favorite coloring techniques.  We'll use Distress Oxide Inks, Emerald Creek embossing powders, and mists.  And in that process we're going to make a really pretty Etcetera tag that makes a great display piece.

Etcetera Tag Tutorial by Maggi Harding for The Funkie Junkie Boutique

1. Let's get started by first painting a medium sized Etcetera tag with white gesso. These tags are a great size at 6 1/2" x 12" and take mixed media so well because they are a sturdy thickboard. You could also use the oxides directly on the board but I wanted a white layer underneath the oxides to keep the color light. Putting the oxides straight on the board would result in a different look.

Etcetera Tag Tutorial by Maggi Harding for The Funkie Junkie Boutique

2. After the gesso dries, color the tag with distress oxides. I chose several colors to work with, and just randomly dabbed on color, then I spritzed lightly with water and let the colors muddle a bit, dried with my heat tool, repeating this process until I was satisfied with the result.

Etcetera Tag Tutorial by Maggi Harding for The Funkie Junkie Boutique

3. Now let's give the background some contrast and interest by adding some Botanical Collage Paper. Tear off a piece of collage paper and tear along the sides for a nice look. Adhere the torn paper to the tag with matte medium or collage glue. Be sure to paint all over the tag and the paper as this will also seal the ink. The matte medium may cause the ink to bleed a little but I was ok with that. The colors just blended a little more.

Tip: It's really easy to tear paper if you paint a thin line of water along where you want to tear. Let the water soak in and just tear. The paper tears right where you want it, and you get a great torn edge look.

Etcetera Tag Tutorial by Maggi Harding for The Funkie Junkie Boutique

4. Time to dig out the embossing powders. First let's color a chipboard sentiment. I used Emerald Creek's new Baked Texture embossing powder from Seth Apter's "altered page". These powders are fabulous, they add so much texture and deep color. I used Chunky Rust on the sentiment and I love how it looks!

Etcetera Tag Tutorial by Maggi Harding for The Funkie Junkie Boutique

5. Next I want to create a die-cut layer using collage paper and card stock. First, adhere some collage paper to plain card stock. I use Xyron's Creative Station to apply my adhesive but any sort of adhesive sheets works well. Now your paper is ready to run through your die-cut machine. I used a die from Cheery Lynn Designs to cut my design. Now comes the fun part! Dab some embossing ink randomly on the edges of the die-cut, sprinkle on some embossing powder and heat. I used another Baked Texture embossing powder, Ancient Amber. It is such a rich amber color with darker flecks throughout. See how the embossing powder edge creates a frame? Love how that looks!!

Etcetera Tag Tutorial by Maggi Harding for The Funkie Junkie Boutique

6. Before adhering the sentiment, we need to tone down the bright white of the collage paper. Some Distress in in Antique Linen should do the trick. Now adhere the sentiment to the die-cut piece. Looks good I think with the textured letters and gilded frame look!   

Etcetera Tag Tutorial by Maggi Harding for The Funkie Junkie Boutique

7. Let's try out another technique for coloring chipboard. Squeeze a little embossing ink onto your craft mat, and, with a thin paint brush, paint the area you want to emboss. In my case I want to use Emerald Creek's Baked Texture Dirty Sand to color the trellis. The first photo shows how I've painted just the trellis and covered with embossing powder. The center photo shows the Dirty Sand after heating. Next, I painted embossing powder on the leaves and heat set. I love the detail of the two colors of embossing powder.

Etcetera Tag Tutorial by Maggi Harding for The Funkie Junkie Boutique

8. Let's assemble this piece now. Glue the chipboard trellis in the upper left corner and use cardboard or dimensional foam tape to pop up the die-cut and position as show in the photo.

Etcetera Tag Tutorial by Maggi Harding for The Funkie Junkie Boutique

9. Of course what we need now is flowers! But first let's make another fun embellishment. Embossing powder does wonderful things for metal. Just dab or paint on some embossing ink, sprinkle with embossing powder and heat. The effect is so striking and varies considerably depending on the type of powder you use. I again used Dirty Sand on these pieces and look what a textured finish these pieces now have. Try some metallic embossing powder too, that looks really WOW!


Don't they look pretty tucked in with the flowers?

Etcetera Tag Tutorial by Maggi Harding for The Funkie Junkie Boutique

Just to show you how embossing powder can change the look of your metal pieces, I had to sneak in this little photo from another project of flowers embossed with gold embossing enamel, pretty cool right?


10. Ok, let's get back on task. 😃 Die-cut some greenery to go with the flowers. I've used a leaves dies from the new Graphic 45 Staples Large Tag and Flowers Die. Now that's one of my favorite new tools! Love these leaf clusters with the pretty embossed details. Now to give your leaves some real pizazz, lightly mist and dry with a heat tool. The mist adds subtle shades of color and drying with the heat tool causes the paper to curl a bit so that the leaves do not have a flat appearance. No mist, no problem! Lightly ink the leave with one or several colors. I often combine ink and mist.

Etcetera Tag Tutorial by Maggi Harding for The Funkie Junkie Boutique

11. Now for the final assembly!  Place some pretty flowers on the trellis and all around. Tuck the greenery around the blooms and that should do it. All finished!
Etcetera Tag Tutorial by Maggi Harding for The Funkie Junkie Boutique

Close up of all the pretty blooms at the top.

Etcetera Tag Tutorial by Maggi Harding for The Funkie Junkie Boutique

Now it's time for you to dig out your mists, inks and embossing powders and get to creating! Be sure to visit The Funkie Junkie Boutique where you can find many of the products I've used today.

I hope you'll stop by every weekend for our Saturday Showcase. The Frilly and Funkie team always has a fun project/technique to share with you. Plus we have fun challenges kicking off on every other Wednesday. I hope you'll craft something and join in our challenges.
Thanks so much for joining me!
Maggi xxx

Products from The Funkie Junkie Boutique


Saturday, July 28, 2018

Saturday Showcase - Emerald Creek and Seth Apter Embossing Powders

Hi everyone and welcome! Jenny here with the latest tutorial in our Frilly and Funkie 'Saturday Showcase' series. This is where a member of the Design Team gets the chance to shine a spotlight on a product or range currently stocked by The Funkie Junkie Boutique. This week's featured range comes from Emerald Creek Crafts who, amongst many other things, create gorgeous blended embossing powders. They also collaborate with other designers to create bespoke embossing lines including the Baked Texture range by Seth Apter.

I began this whole creative process by making a swatch card of the Emerald Creek embossing powders currently in my possession and quickly realised that the mix of greens, browns, golds, rusts and black coppers were very reminiscent of the beach. This fits rather well with the current Frilly and Funkie challenge which has a travel theme (details HERE). Some are original Emerald Creek ones and some are Seth's delicious Baked Texture powders and they work together effortlessly. I thought back to trips to the seaside where souvenir stores would sell weathered wooden nick-nacks covered in semi-precious stones, multi-coloured sands and other beachcomber things. And so I set about making a 'semi-precious' trinket box to show off the beauty of these gorgeous embossing powders (click on each image for a closer look);


The 'How To' Tutorial


Now I bet that looks super complicated right? But actually it's just a pile of heat embossed die cuts arranged on a weather worn look trinket box. I used Eileen Hull's Trinket Box by Sizzix but you could do this on anything from a wooden spoon to a card or even a piece of driftwood! Let's show you how.

I used the dies from Tim Holtz 'Funky Floral' sets #1 and #3 and ran each one through my Sizzix Sidekick for speed. I also recommend using Ranger's Emboss It Dabber to deliver lots of embossing ink and Ranger's Heat Tool (initially from a distance) because it is less forceful and allows the larger granules to melt into the smaller ones rather than move around.


For the largest flower use kraft card and apply two layers of Chunky Rust Baked Texture Embossing Powder. Having embossed the first layer use the dabber over the flower again and just apply a second layer of powder. The 'floss' element to this powder give the flower a beautiful fluffy textured finish.


The centre of the flower is also cut from kraft card and embossed with Emerald Creek's Oil Rubbed Bronze Embossing Powder. Only one coat is needed and once set it can be glued onto the centre of the flower.


Cut the long leaf stems from white card (though this powder is opaque when melted so you could use kraft card if preferred). Emboss with Seth Apter's Patina Oxide Baked Texture Embossing Powder.


The grass fronds definitely need cutting from white card because one coat of Seth Apter's Deep Sea Baked Texture Embossing Powder is semi-translucent and you get a gorgeous mottled deep green effect when melted.


One of my all time favourite powders, Emerald Creek's Fractured Ice Embossing Powder works amazingly over dark coloured inks, but for these branches apply onto white card to get that pale turquoise mottled effect.


Seth Apter's Ancient Amber Baked Texture Embossing Powder is also a semi-translucent powder and over kraft card produces a beautiful golden shimmer with just one coat.


Emerald Creek's Charred Gold Embossing Powder is another of my all time favourites. This is also an opaque powder and has multiple colours included (in fact it has a look of rough sand when in it's un-melted state) so cut the seed head flower from either white or kraft card and emboss with one coat of powder.


The final flower head can be cut from kraft or white card (I went with kraft) and is covered with Emerald Creek's Burnt Copper Leaves Embossing Powder which has a delicious mix of copper and gold tones.


Finally cover the base of your chosen project, be it box lid, card, spoon or driftwood etc with a coat of Matte Distress Collage Medium and sprinkle with Seth Apter's Dirty Sand Baked Texture Embossing Powder. It will stick firm in place without the need for heat setting so you can achieve that matte multi-toned look of real sand.

To finish layer up the various embossed flowers and foliage. I began with the largest flowers mounted on black foam tape and added in the other elements underneath overlapping them as I went. I also added Emerald Creek Quartz Gemstones into the centre of the large flowers.

The Close Ups


I took a bunch of close ups to let you see in more detail the beauty of these gorgeous embossing powders. Remember you can click on each one for a closer look;











I'm sure you'll agree these Emerald Creek and Seth Apter Embossing Powders create wonderful effects in both their heated and un-heated states. Check out the full range available at The Funkie Junkie Boutique HERE. And I've added a full list of ingredients for this project below.

Thanks for joining me here today. Have a great weekend and remember to get creative!
Jenny xxx