I have a feeling I will be spritzing everything in sight with this fun product! Many thanks to Michael’s for sponsoring this challenge! Be sure to check out for more inspiration and ideas! I discovered these fun canvas stickers at Michael’s and thought they would be perfect to spritz with some Color Shine! I used the gold for the banner under the photo on the travel journal. I love the subtle hint of gold on the chevron resist cardstock and I think the flowers are gorgeous! I added a bit of gold sequin trim for an extra bit of sparkle, and a Polaroid-style frame from Heidi Swapp is the perfect finishing touch. The bottles never clogged, which I’ve found to be an issue with other similar products, and I was even able to layer the colors easily. Lots of glimmer and sparkle with just a few quick spritzes. The colors are so saturated and very glitzy. I had so much fun playing with the Heidi Swapp Color Shinecollection! I was very impressed with the Color shine sprays. Do you still use maps when you travel? Do you use them in your art? Let's have a discussion below.As promised, here’s the mixed-media travel journal I created for the Make Every Moment Count Scrapbook Challengesponsored by Michael’s. But don't tell my husband that, unless you want to start an argument. Using maps in your art is also a great way to recycle these ephemeral treasures that, due to technology, may soon fall out of use. In her Cloth Paper Scissors Workshop TM video "Art Journals On-the-Go," watercolor and art journal artist Jacqueline Newbold shows how to use maps, book pages, and other ephemera to add depth and interest to your art journal backgrounds. This is a wonderful art journaling technique to use to help evoke a sense of place through your background. Then I cut out a destination spot from another part of the map in the shape of a tag, backed it with a frame of scrapbook paper, and added marks with a black gel pen. When that dried, I used white ink and a stencil to write the word Journey over the lake. I also added a little watercolor paint here and there to put some color back in the land area and painted the Lake Ontario area with watercolors. I covered the entire page with slightly watered-down gesso, rubbing it off in places. In my example, I took a free, cheaply made turnpike map from last year's trip to the Midwest. You can also use a slightly wet paintbrush to flick droplets onto the page. To give the map an aged look, gently rub off the gesso in places, rub some brown or yellow ink (or walnut ink) over the gesso layer. A thin layer of gesso will give you a muted background onto which you can paint, stamp, write with gel pen, and so on. Third, unless you want the map to be center stage on your art journal page, you'll probably have to knock back the color somewhat with paint, ink, gesso, or a combination. Travel journal page by Jacqueline Newbold. So either mount the map on watercolor paper first using gel medium or be prepared to attach the page or piece to sturdier paper with adhesive or stitching later. Second, map paper isn't always that sturdy, and if you paint over it, the paper can buckle. So don't use them for commercial art purposes without getting permission (or making sure the map isn't copyrighted). Plus, if the map is of the place where you journeyed, it contributes to the meaning of your art journal.Īrt journaling on a map presents some challenges, though.įirst, be aware that most maps are copyrighted material. All those wiggly lines, symbols, numbers, and colors make a great graphic backdrop. We have several of them framed and hanging on the walls of our home, and I used a ordinance survey map from our honeymoon in Cornwall on the English coast to paper the back of a bookcase.Īnd, of course, maps make terrific backgrounds for travel journals. It's not that I have something against maps, per se. Now we argue over whether the GPS is right, or is giving us the best directions, or whether we should be using the map anyway. I thought that when we got the GPS we could avoid directional discord. One piece of paper with words telling you what to do-no folding required. Nick loves maps and knows what each color, symbol, and abbreviation means. I could keep an entire travel journal just on the bickering and muttering and wrong turns that have occurred over the years. In the car, we used to argue over map reading. (The other is the kitchen, if you must know.)ĭetail of my travel journal page using a map. My husband and I only argue in two places one of them is the car.
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