Good morning Bloggers,
Today’s topic will be about a recent creation I made for
Zoo’s daughter, who has been ill. It so happens, that Zoo had recently sent me
some links into the world of buttons and I decided it would be fun to delve
into that for my get-well wishes, and so it began….
I don’t know what the protocol for inserting other people’s
links are, but I will do it here so you can see where I came by the inspiration
and some of the methods I mention.
http://bustedbutton.com/2015/05/18/button-turtle/ and http://bustedbutton.com/2012/01/29/button-tree/ and http://bustedbutton.com/2012/04/27/button-elephant/
At this point I had
to go looking through papers to see where a purple dinosaur would look good
living. I found in my folder of paper I had made or manipulated a lilac card
stock with texture paste stars on it. This was one done in my first experiments
with texture paste and the StampinUp! Stars stencil.
I then had to take
off the buttons and place them in order carefully on a cleared space on my desk
in order to trace the dinosaur onto my paper of choice (this step could be
avoided if you had already traced it onto the paper to begin with!). I took the
advice of one of the bloggers in the links above and I coloured the figure with
a purple watercolour pencil crayon and used my aqua pen to paint it smooth. I
am not convinced this was necessary, as I can only see a tiny, tiny bit of the
purple paint in the finished product. I imagine that if the buttons were see
through or the seed beads didn’t reach all the empty spaces it would have been
a good idea to have the proper colour under the buttons.
For glue, I ended up using Royal Coat Dimensional Magic. It
is a clear liquid that when dries stays raised and see through to accent what
is on the paper. I picked it because I hoped the buttons would sink into it and
be welded into place. I did not want to do all this work and then have the
buttons fall off in a month.
Once I had all the buttons glued into place, it was time to
get the seed beads out and get started on them. At the beginning, I was sorting
out the pale purple beads out of the mix of all pastel colours. It soon became
apparent that it was going to take a lot more beads than I had first thought,
and so I stopped sorting the purple ones out and poured the whole colour scheme
on. This part in the process shows my lack of patience in the nit picky and I
found it a challenge to finish it all in one sitting. However, once I finished
the spikes and had some of the darker beads around the body it started looking much
better and I was able to complete it. I wanted it to dry flat so I placed it
between layers of parchment paper and placed a couple of heavy book on it to
dry for a few days.
Have a happy St Patty’s Day tomorrow and happy crafting!
Red Bear : )
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