About Me
- Diana Evensen
- These are a few of my favorite things (not in order of importance): Creating beautiful things from paper or fabric; Loving puppy dogs (and cats, and other furry critters); Being part of the Eagan Hills Alliance Church family; Enjoying my grandchildren; Relaxing with my husband - especially someplace with dramatic nature (like the North Shore of Lake Superior); Being appreciated by folks where I work.
Nov 7, 2012
Sending Hugs & Kisses
This card combines The Craft's Meow's November sketch challenge, and last week's Mid-week Throwdown at Operation Write Home (a valentine). This card uses Gina K Designs stamps, and various bits of ribbon scraps I had around.
Nov 5, 2012
Forest Green Sympathy Cards


I did one masculine version, with tan for the
focal point and a leaf border punch, and one more feminine version, with
a pale olive green for the focal point, swiss dot embossing, and a lacy scallop border punch (from Stampin' Up!). The sketch is from the Just Us Girls JUGS #161 challenge.
The image came from Stampscapes "Tree Cluster" 266D K.J.N. 2001. The sentiment is from Gina K Designs "Not Forgotten" set.
These cards also fit for the CAS-ual Friday challenge to do a masculine card, and the current Cupcake Inspirations challenge to do a forest themed card.
These cards also fit for the CAS-ual Friday challenge to do a masculine card, and the current Cupcake Inspirations challenge to do a forest themed card.
Nov 4, 2012
Cool Winter Wishes
Another winter card for Joan's Garden and Oozak, using the first November sketch from Viva le Verve. This card uses a Hero Arts image, as well as the color scheme AND dry embossing for their November contest.
The color scheme was a little different - wet cement, soft olive, red royal, soft granite, and tide pool. The olive, red and tide pool (teal) are pretty obvious. The soft granite is the grey mat that has been embossed with a Cuttlebug snowflakes folder. The olive oval is also dry embossed, using a Stampin' Up! folder. The wet cement color is the body of the house (clapboards). The rest of the image was colored with Copic Markers, and then I added white flocking to the image where snow is indicated. The wet cement color just didn't work for snow. LOL!

Winter Wishes

Three different Cuttlebug embossing folders were used. Dry-embossing fits for the Hero Arts November challenge. I didn't use a Hero Arts stamp, but did use Hero Arts Soft Grey Shadow Ink. The snowflake image stamped with that ink is by Stampin' Up!, and the words are from a Northwoods Rubber stamp.
Winter Vibes for a Card that POPS!
There are two challenges to make "winter" cards this week. One is Joan's Garden challenge #40, and the other is the Oozak November challenge. For 365 Cards Day 246 the challenge was to "say it with flair" - have one item on your card that really "POPS!" Sandy Allnock recently did a card that had clear embossing on a black background, and I decided a nice bright snowflake would "pop" on black.
This card uses three Stampin' Up! snowflake stamps for the embossed background of irridecent snowflakes on black. The bright snowflake is also by Stampin' Up! - both the stamp and the punch that does all the fine cutting for you.
I wanted my punched snowflake to sparkle, too, so I used Versa Mark and the iridescent embossing powder to give it two coats of sparkle. Multilayer embossing is a technique that I haven't used in awhile, so it fits for the Our Daily Bread challenge to Operation Write Home. However, there's a limit of one card per person on that challenge, and I already submitted one. Even with the double embossing, the snowflake didn't "pop" enough for me, so I punched a second snowflake from glossy white card stock and layered it under as a "shadow" to the flake. That made it work for me. Of course, to attach the snowflake to the card I used the Xyron Create-a-Sticker.

I wanted my punched snowflake to sparkle, too, so I used Versa Mark and the iridescent embossing powder to give it two coats of sparkle. Multilayer embossing is a technique that I haven't used in awhile, so it fits for the Our Daily Bread challenge to Operation Write Home. However, there's a limit of one card per person on that challenge, and I already submitted one. Even with the double embossing, the snowflake didn't "pop" enough for me, so I punched a second snowflake from glossy white card stock and layered it under as a "shadow" to the flake. That made it work for me. Of course, to attach the snowflake to the card I used the Xyron Create-a-Sticker.
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