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Friday, 20 March 2015

Sliding Card

Sliding Card
Smock, Paper, Scissors   Sliding Card
A neat little card with animated parts!
Blog Beat Blog Beat Pop Goes the World | Men Without Hats

  Project:   Cardstock Sliding Cards
  Difficulty:   Moderate (I strongly suggest reading ALL the instructions before starting)
  Special equipment/materials:   Shiny plastic bag and this TEMPLATE

Before we get started, I want to make sure everyone is familiar with the terms I have used in this tutorial...

Right Side: The part of the project that will show once finished, so make it pretty ;)
Wrong Side: The part of the project that will face the inside of the card, so don't worry so much about keeping it clean... Also applies to the "No-Show" parts
Valley fold: A common term in origami, where paper is folded forward over itself, and the fold forms a "V" shape
Adherence zone: Where you'll attach the ribbon that makes the whole card work
Upper Card: The card that will slide up out of the card
Lower Card: The card that will slide down

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This is the template we will be working with... There are a couple of ways you can use the template: You can use it as a guide and copy the design onto the cardstock paper of your choice (you know, to avoid the labels); or, you can print directly onto a single letter-sized (8½"x 11") cardstock sheet since most labels are actually on the wrong side of the card pieces - just make sure to cover up the "Right Side Upper Card" label.

Careful! If you want to print directly on cardstock, the thick paper may not pass through your printer properly. Try a test run first!

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Start with the Base of the card and valley fold into three parts. The "Middle" portion will eventually end up sandwiched between the front and back of the card, hence why I called it the "Middle".

Tip! To get a nice, clean fold, use a bone-folder or stylus with a ruler to press fold lines into the paper before folding. If you don't have a bone folder, any object with a slim end, i.e. edge of a ruler, bobby pin, that pen that went dry last year but you are still convinced there is ink in there somewhere so you didn't throw it away, etc should do the trick.

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Cut out the slits and semi-circles and trim the end of the "Middle" section.

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I posted these pictures to show the pre-embellished upper and lower cards... These are the "Right" sides, or parts that will show from the front. Note that the ribbon attach to the RIGHT SIDE of the upper card

Counter-intuitive, I know, but that's just how it is...

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These are the Wrong or backsides of the moveable parts of the card.

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Time to decorate! This is where you put your personal touches... Embellish away! I decided to use the theme of Paper Petalody.

Don't forget about the base! A card needs a cover!

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This is where that plastic bag comes in... Cut a strip 7½" long and 1½" wide.

I took the strip from a smooth, shiny plastic bag similar to those plastic sandwich bags (a little thicker), but even a common grocery bag would work

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Thread the ribbon through the "Middle" portion of the card as shown...

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... and bring the ends together. You may have a large overlap as I have shown here...

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... so trim the ribbon so that the overlap is about ¼" or the width of a pencil

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Secure the ends together with glue or double-sided tape, leaving some leeway: if the ribbon is too tight, it won't slide very well! Make sure you can pass a pencil between the ribbon and the card.

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Time to assemble! By the time we're done, you should have a sliding card sandwich: from top to bottom, the card Front, the Lower Card, the Middle, the Upper Card, and finally the Back. Align your Upper Card with the top of the "No-Show" zone level with the top of the base.

 Important!  Slide the ribbon seam to the top-most part of the card, as shown above. Why? The seam itself is unlikely to move through the slit to the other side; arranging it this way means the only way it will be able to slide is down (which is exactly where you want it to go!) Secure with glue or double-sided tape.

I marked the seam and where it should attach to the upper card...

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Fold in the "Middle" and align the Lower Card so that the bottom-most part of the "Adherence Zone" lines up with the lowest part of the ribbon (again, so that the only way the bottom card can slide is up!) Glue or tape.

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Almost done! All that's left is to close the card up! Normally, I would just fold the front flap over the Middle and glue along the edge, but the tight fit of the sliding cards within the base almost always results in the sliding card getting stuck, so I came up with a solution: the Pocket piece.

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It avoids the problem of accidentally gluing the sliding card to the base and provides a little more give for the cards to slide. Align the folded edges of the "Pocket" and the "Middle" and glue or tape together.

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Do the same with the front of the card, making sure the Pocket piece wraps around the Lower Card on the closing edge. The image above shows what I mean (the paper clip is holding the Pocket in place).

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Voilà! Congratulations, you're done! Marvel away...

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Try some other variations!

♦   FIN  ♦

Paper Petalody

Tuesday, 17 March 2015

St. Patrick's Day

St. Patrick's Day
Smock, Paper, Scissors   St. Patrick's Day
An Irish Blessing Card
Blog Beat Blog Beat Home For a Rest | Spirit of the West

St. Paddy's day: the day that "going green" has a wholly different meaning...

"May your blessings outnumber the shamrocks that grow, And may trouble avoid you wherever you go" - Irish blessing

Paper Petalody

Monday, 16 March 2015

La Vie en Rose

La Vie en Rose
Cups, Cookies & Cakes (oh, my!)   La Vie en Rose
Silver cake with chocolate pastry cream filling
Blog Beat Blog Beat La Vie en Rose | Edith Piaf

How much can you learn about cake decorating after 8 hours of classes? Plenty!

This is the cake I baked and decorated after taking Wilton Cake Decorating Course 1 at Michael's craft store. I used the gardens of Versailles as inspiration for this cake, wrapping the 4-layer silver cake in chocolate almond icing, with thick chocolate pastry cream between layers, topped with pink roses and hydrangeas.

"A party without cake is just a meeting" - Julia Child

Paper Petalody

Saturday, 14 March 2015

Pi Day

Pi Day
Episode iii.   Pi Day
3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510582097...
Blog Beat Blog Beat Birthday | Katy Perry

Who doesn't love pi day? Especially when it falls on the 15th year of the century! Happy 3.14 '15 9:26 p.m.

Pi-full of cake days

I know 4 people who have birthdays today… That's a lot of cake! Speaking of cake, I'm learning how to decorate them! I discovered that Wilton holds it would be most advantageous to refine my icing skills...

(Probably could have mustered a better segue, but there it is…)

Back to Basics

I thought decorating cake was pretty simple; after all, people on TV always make it look so easy! Put the icing in a triangular bag and squeeze, right? Nope!

Well, not entirely wrong but still... much to be said about practice over theory

It took only the first class to realize that I had a lot to learn about swirls and roses and how to put them on a cake. So, out with the old, untrained theories about cake decorating and time to start learning!

Lessons in Cakery

 Lesson One:  Icing consistency and time management are key
What's a cake if you can't finish it? This.

In my defence, the class was only 2 hours...

 Lesson Two:  Start from the bottom
Master the basics first; building a good foundation will help with more complex detailing later on.

 Lesson Three:  Practice, practice, practice
A common mantra for basically anything you want to master...

Pièce de résistance

Did you know Michael's has a contest to win a trip to Paris? I decided to use my final cake as a Parisian-inspired entry...

After a creation like this, which I would have NEVER been able to accomplish without lessons in decorating, I am definitely signing up for course 2!

"Let them eat cake" - Marie Antoinette (allegedly)

Paper Petalody

Friday, 13 March 2015

Plumeria alba: Tutorial!

Plumeria alba
Flora   Frangipani
Plumeria alba
Blog Beat Blog Beat Escape (The Piña Colada Song) | Rupert Holmes

  Project:   Frangipani
  Difficulty:   Easy-ish; requires some tiny measurements
  Special equipment:   Five-petal flower punch

I used a flower punch to create the piece that will hold the flower together. If you don't have a punch, you can use ¾" or 15mm circles instead. Cut five slits (equally spaced around the circle) about a ¼ of the way into the circle.
( For the geometry enthusiasts, that's five 72° angles originating from the center )
Here, I used chalk pastels to colour the center of the petals
Cut a short slit at the bottom of each petal. They should be about as long as the cuts you made in the center circles if you're using them
( Essentially, you want your petals to touch at the center of the finished flower )
I shaped the petals using the handle of a paintbrush. Curve the left side toward the front of the petal, and curve the right side towards the back, creating an S-shape
Working from the front of the flower, start to attach the petals one at a time. This is where the punched flower/circle comes in: slide the frangipani petal between the punched flower petals
Glue the back of the left side of the frangipani petal to the front of your center punch flower/circle. Sound confusing? The next couple images might help...
Attach the rest of the petals the same way. Note that you do not need to glue the right side of the frangipani petal. Leaving it free gives the flower it's spiral-fan shape!
This is what your flower should look like when all the petals are added. Notice how the petals meet in the middle to cover up that center...
Use your second center circle or punched flower to secure the back. Careful! You want to align the slits or spaces between punched petals with the spaces of the frangipani petals!
( Click on the image for a closer look: the backing should secure your petals to the center without gluing the individual petals together... )
For some extra depth, I used the end of a paintbrush the push the center of the flower into a sponge
Done!
Paper Petalody