Adhere the white strip onto the center of the Broken China strip. 5” x 3.75” strip of watercolor cardstock, and trim the right end into a diagonal. 75” x 4.25” strip from the remaining Broken China Oxide paper. Step 11: Adhere the card panel to a 4.25” x 5.5” Perfect White card base. Apply a remnant rub sentiment, and trim the ends into a v-notch. Step 10: Ink a scrap piece of watercolor cardstock with Broken China Oxide. Coat the smaller snowflake with Perfect Medium Embossing Ink, and then coat it with Bridal Tinsel Embossing Powder. Die cut a smaller snowflake from plain watercolor cardstock. Step 9: Die cut the largest snowflake from the Wilted Violet panel. Step 8: Ink a smaller piece of watercolor cardstock with Wilted Violet Oxide that is just big enough to die cut the largest die shape from the set. And then adhere this at an angel onto the larger piece of watercolor cardstock that was set aside. Layer the snowflake panel and the Blueprint Sketch panel, and adhere them together at an angel. The middle section will be covered, so don’t worry about inking the center. Step 7: Trim a 4” x 5” piece of watercolor cardstock, and working on the smooth side of the cardstock, apply Blueprint Sketch Oxide to the edges of the panel. Once you’re done, ink the edges with Broken China Oxide using the Ink Blending Tool. Or simply trim down your panel a bit to remove those areas, which is what I’ve done. *If you still have spots around the edges that need to be filled in, add those. Spray the corner pieces with water, and blot it dry. A good tip for inking very small pieces like this is to place them temporarily down onto some low-tack tape, which will keep them from shifting while inking. I waited until this stage to ink the corner pieces so that I could gauge what color I needed to use to match the rest of the panel. Gather those pieces that you set aside from before, and ink them with the Distress Oxide Inks. Step 6: After inlaying all of the die cuts, you should be left with open corners. Dab adhesive onto the back of each snowflake, and inset them back into their die cut openings. Step 5: Coat the back of the die cut snowflake panel with small dots of Multi-Medium Matte adhesive, and then glue it to the embossed panel, lining up the edges on all sides. Cover the paper with Bridal Tinsel embossing powder, and then heat set the powder using a Heat-It tool. Dab a Perfect Medium embossing ink pad over the entire panel. Step 4: Trim a 4” x 5.25” piece of watercolor cardstock. Leave the water for about 30 seconds, and then blot it with a clean cloth or paper towel. Step 3: Mist the inked panel with clean water using the Distress Sprayer. Using a mini ink blending tool, apply Broken China, Blueprint Sketch, and Wilted Violet Distress Oxide inks in a random pattern over the die cut cardstock panel. Be sure to retain the corner pieces that were clipped off during the die cutting process. Step 2: Remove all the die cut snowflakes from the panel, and poke out the inner detail pieces from each snowflake. Use a bit of low-tack tape to hold the dies in place, and then run the panel through your die cutting machine. Working on the smaller panel, lay out a variety of snowflake dies onto the paper, so that the edges of the snowflakes extend off the edges of the panel. Step 1: Begin by trimming down some watercolor cardstock into one 4.25” x 5.5” and one 4” x 5.25” panel. I’ve got all the step-by-steps to share, so let’s take a closer look. These heavily pigmented inks smooth like butter, particularly when used with Ranger Watercolor cardstock, like I’ve done today. If you’ve ever had trouble achieving the perfect blended background with your Distress Inks, then you really need to try the Oxides. Surely a combination that will chase away any winter blahs. And of course a touch of glittery sparkle feels like freshly fallen snow. The blend of blues and purple makes me think of an evening sky in the midst of a snowfall. Both the frozen lake and the cyan castle revealed to be the Frozen Lake and the Ice Castle, respectively.Now I am normally a neutral-loving gal, but there’s something about this bright color combo that just feels so perfect for winter. When this stage appeared, ice-covered trees spawned on the eastern side of the map, along with a frozen lake and a cyan castle.This stage has the most enemies that share their names with enemies from another stage, the Grey X Walker, White Roundhead Snake and the White Boss X Walker.This stage marks the return of the X head, which was last seen from before even the Castle.This stage introduces enemies that use Ice attacks.This is the first stage to include a snowing effect (since ver10.4).
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |