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On my blog is a description and how to make your own whiteboard soooo much better than those smudgy boring whitboards.
This is finely a picture of how these Binocular-pictures are made -> This is real luxury, cos I borrowed a chair from one of the kitebuggyguys. Photo by Anne Dalsgaard
More pictures shot "Through my binoculars" or in danish "Gennem min kikkert".
Camera: Panasonic LX-3 Binoculars: APM - HD 10x50
Cut off the unnecessary fabric just below the petal points. Be sure to keep the fabric held together with your fingers.
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Step 1 - Procure supplies:
Aluminum foil
X-acto knife
Hair tie
Lens adapter ring (this one was for a telescope mount)
Spoiler alert - more on the shrine for tiaragoth! Don't look if you don't want to see it yet!
I tried painting the clock base flat black --- and suddenly it was WAY too much like a tombstone. That wasn't really what I wanted to relay as the character of Death in the Sandman series really isn't totally depressing. I needed to I to give the shrine more depth, so I first tried more painting and some stamping. Violet and dark blue acrylic added to the black -- now it's more like a night sky. Then I added silver stamping to highlight that night-time look. But now the accents seemed too "shiny" and nice...so I tried to bring down the tone with a coat of matte Royal Coat decoupage sealer. The swirls and stamping started to smear...oh no! Really, I shouldn't have worried...with the less distinct stamping (you don't see that here) the look is much more in keeping with the art in the Sandman graphic novels!
The piece you will see in Shrine 103 reflects the smeary look...which I am actually quite happy about!
I antiqued the little table by painting it black and rubbing the paint off. Then added silver highlights and rubbed those down, too.
I used chipboard to make a name plate for Death, using some gold stick-on letters. These seemed to bright, so I dabbed them with silver.
The star stickers, silver marker, crystal glitter & Diamond Glaze don't get added until the shots in Shrine 103.
Customised Barbie dollstand on top of my laptop keyboard, the photo enlargened to full screen and daylight to the left. Photographed at an upwards angle. Really tightly cropped on the left side in the end.
I ran a continuous (decorative) stitch along the binding between the flags as well, because it meant I didn't have to keep stopping and starting.
These are the two knives I carry while diving. The left is my primary, which I strap to my inner right calf. The other knife I have hooked on a retrieval cord on my BCD. I make sure to wash and rinse my knives after every dive. Unfortunately, my primary knife seems to get some water stuck in the plastic, which means after drying there are often salty rust deposits around where the metal contacts the plastic.
If you want, you can just free hand the image you want onto the canvas. However, I'm not particularly good at drawing, so this is the method I use:
(1) After you draw a grid over your desired image, figure out how many tall & wide you need/want.
(2) Using some basic math, determine how large the squares on the target canvas need to be. (I take the smallest length/width of the canvas, and divide it by the smallest number from the previous step.
(3) Using a ruler, draw squares of the size determined in the previous step onto the canvas.
(4) Using the grids on both the desired image and the canvas, draw the illustration onto your canvas.
Cut off the unnecessary fabric just below the petal points. Be sure to keep the fabric held together with your fingers.
Create your own bookmark -
Take an envelope and turn it so the flap is up-side-down facing you.
Cut the right or left bottom corner off.. or both for 2 bookmarks. Cut the size of your choosing.
Decorate, draw, paint, write. Do your thing.
The page(s) of the book fit into the open pocket :)
Surprise! They are not the same inside. The 'how-to' photos are of a French button, but the instructions work for both French and English buttons.