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The opposite page of the journal that is done the same way as page two. Again the images are stamps.
Working on a new scrapbook/journal. So far so good....I blogged more about it at www.creativechaos.typepad.com
This A6 journal is made of natural soft leather, sewed on a felt for the additional density. Filled with blank craft paper, great for writing and sketching.
My books are for sale - check out my profile for additional info.
Sorry I've taken along time to upload these photos. I have been doing the prompts each day I just haven't been taking the photos and uploading them each day.
Prompt #11 from Janel of "Run with Scissors" Journal prompts
Journal Prompt 11: Hello friends. Today is another one of my favorite pages. And speaking of favorites, this is a page all about your faves!!
We are going to list your favorites in each of these four categories:
* TV shows
* Music
* Food
* Splurges
These are just a few of my faves in each category.
I'm working on a larger quilt with these colors and needed a sample to test quilting styles. My puckers make me humble, yes I am only human.
Newspaper 6-9-1971
Two of the 17 awards won by The Commonwealth-Journal during the annual KPA convention include Ed Spitzke, left, for a McCreary County mining story, and Bill Mardis, right, for a series of feature stories.
(Gib Gosser)
Jim Slaughter Photography Collection
I was ready for a new journal for a new year. (Plus, my last one was just a few pages from being full.) So I decided to make a new one from scratch and I'm very happy with how it turned out. It's 8" x 10" and I filled it with various paper: watercolor paper, paper from a braille bible, resin paper (used in construction), and pages from an old kid's book. The rubber stamps I used on it are all hand-carved except for the alphabet. I LOVE the binding I did!
This is the original sketch of Sunrift. I abandoned it when I realized how large I was making the building. I late went back (as I was relegated to the couch with back pain) and completed it...wonky lines and all. I do love all the stickers that they had on the doors and windows.
journal pages from my journal Flora. Blogged: caatjesartsystuff.blogspot.nl/2015/02/the-last-journal-sp...
Walking home on city sidewalk in Hong Kong June 22, 2008. Found a large snail, brought it home to sketch and study. Then we released it.
Walking home on city sidewalk in Hong Kong June 22, 2008. Found a large snail, brought it home to sketch and study. Then we released it.
This is from my K&Company Smashbook. I got the Retro Blue one – because it’s blue and because I liked the pages inside; they’re all themed. I don’t generally care for themed scrapbooking or journaling, but most of the ‘prompts’ are great. I also got a themed ‘smash pad’ which is also great for prompts. You pull what you want to use on a given day from the pad, glue or tape the whole thing (or part) down, and write on it. Then decorate the page the best way you see fit.
I wouldn't call them my best work, but two pictures I shot of the derelict Quay Bar caught the attention of one of the art editors at The Architects' Journal! Open up your 6th September 2007 edition and they can be found on pages 12 and 13.
In fact, one of them is page 13. :o)
I was particularly pleased that Quay Bar, Castlefield and the Aidan O'Rourke image were put side-by-side - that was exactly what I had in mind when I took the picture, but never thought someone would end up publishing it!
Update: From 16th November, Quay Bar is being demolished... :o(
Llandaff learning centre, zone 3, level 3. Journals openly available on shelves are from 2000 onwards
After looking at some art journals online I noticed that people were using gesso as a foundation for their pages. I applied it to the right side of this spread and kind of liked the way it turned out. It blocked out the lines from the paper but it also made the pages kind of crunchy. I'm not sure how I feel about that.
On the left side I used some magazines strips, washi tape, and a water drop I carved.
On the right side I just stamped some thought bubble stamps that I carved over and over again. I filled some of the bubbles in but then I covered one up with blue washi tape in the top right corner because I didn't like the way that one turned out.
My journal reclamation project continues. This is from 1985. I was eighteen years old and like most American teenagers I was preoccupied with religious philosophy. I was writing upside down on the even numbered pages of this volume because it was easier on my wrist. This book spent a couple weeks under water in 2005.
This is the second page in the doted half of my nbew journal, and the third picture. For this one I used pearlized watercolor washes in five colors, dried it with a hair dryer and then tangled with an 005 pen. There was absolutely no bleedthrough. It did buckle the paper a little, but when I was finished I just ironed it, and now it's flat again. Tangles used: Florz, Bales, Yincut, Tipple and Crescent Moon.
Public Domain: Canadian Trade Journals Collection archive.org/details/canadiantradejournals?and%5B0%5D=subj...