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Abrimos una argollita y acomodamos la cuenta que va a estar en la caída de la cascada; es decir al final :-) En este caso elegí una perlita. A mí me resulta más fácil ir haciendo los dos aros al mismo tiempo, así no me equivoco con la cantidad ni con las cuentas.
Tutorial and download the santa template, here: bit.ly/gqr0
1. Sketch, traced over with Sharpie, 2. Trace on plastic with sharpie, 3. A view of both, 4. Cut out circle, then hole punch it, 5. Turn over, and color, 6. Finished coloring, ready for baking, 7. Into 200-250 degree oven, 8. Starting to warp/shrink, 9. All Shrunk!, 10. Purdy, aint it., 11. Close up, 12. Finished, next to original template
Created with fd's Flickr Toys.
This is some sort of tutorial on how I do my brick wall backgrounds. Though scrapbooking papers can give you a very realistic and easy brick background, sometimes I love to make a "real" wall with texture and color.
The wall is made out of styrofoam, the window is made of foamboard.
You can use the ball tool and move it in circles and spirals across the surface for example. And I love to use the biggest ball tool and let it drop onto the foam, too. Nothing adds more realism to such a project than unplanned actions ; ).
Listening to the right music can help you achieve a more rough texture *lol*.
Fold the diamond's tip down. None of these folds should be difficult because they're all on preexisting folds.
Repeat on the other two sides. The order is a matter of personal preference. You can go clockwise, doing the center next and then the other side last. I prefer to go counterclockwise, leaving the center until last. I like the stability of having the sides done and folding the center tip down gives me a chance to round out the petal.
Wonderful colorful, translucent and lightweight polymer clay earrings. Ideal for your Summer outfits.
Tutorial on how to make them is available in my Etsy shop: artstudiokatherine.etsy.com in English and German. :)
Fold the flap to the right and repeat on both remaining flaps. DO NOT FOLD ANYTHING ON THE SINGLE RIGHT FLAP
It had to happen : this is the result of the fusion of my mishaps with the Acrylic Paint tutorial and my experiments with the twig tutorial. I am trying larger branches tomorrow.
iluminacion a una foto con tutoriales como leyenda. Otro experimento que estaba realizando en Photoshop
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Skils Matter - Progressive .NET Tutorials 2016, Wednesday, 22nd - Friday, 24th June at CodeNode, London. Images copyright www.edtelling.com. www.skillsmatter.com/conferences/7235-progressive-dot-net...
5. Next is the wire, I start at the tail end and either coil it or twist a small loop so that it has a finished end. You can leave the loop as is or use it to attach a charm or something similar.
6/7. Start adding the buttons with the first button at the tail end by threading the wire from back to front and then back down in the opposite hole. If the button is one with four holes, start the same and then just come back up in of the empty holes and back down the opposite again. It is just like sewing a button.
8. As you add more buttons, always start them from back to front. Each time I add a new button, I like to flatten the strand before taking the wire back through so that I can make sure I don't have any gaps.