A while back I picked up some small white bowls from Big Lots ( these look similar ) with a nice satin finish. I already inked one bowl using the flame method , but I still have a few bowls left, so I decided to give one the plastic wrap treatment. I got out my craft mat and some alcohol inks . Then I cleaned my bowl with rubbing alcohol on a paper towel and removed the sale sticker from the bottom. I tore a piece of plastic wrap off the roll that was large enough to cover my bowl, and I set it down on my craft mat, being sure not to smooth it out. Then I dripped ink on the plastic wrap until I liked the combination of colors and the plastic was mostly full of color. Then I placed my bowl in the center of the plastic wrap and carefully applied the plastic wrap to the sides without smoothing it out too much (so it keeps the wrinkled pattern). Then I flipped it over to dry. I ended up using 7 colors on the bowl. I wanted something bright and fun so I we...
A couple of weeks ago, I tried making sun catchers with laminating pouches and tissue paper. The project worked pretty well, and I wondered if I could use ink on those laminating pouches--they are plastic after all, which usually inks well. So I got out my alcohol inks , a craft mat to protect my table, a can of air , and my laminating pouches . I opened up my laminating pouch, and I chose a rainbow of ink colors. I wanted something bright and fun. I started with some sailboat blue drops that I spread out with the canned air. I kept dropping ink onto the surface of the laminating pouch and blowing it around to spread it out and dry it. The surface of the laminating pouches is textured to keep items from slipping around too much in the pouch, so the textured surface absorbed the ink a bit, but it still worked pretty well. I did get a bit of ink on the opened side of the pouch and a bit along the edges, but I wasn't too worried about it being perfe...
I received a package of alcohol inks for Christmas and then bought a second set with a 50% off coupon at Michael's. I've used them now to make coasters and to decorate some candle holders . I was just getting my sea legs with these inks to begin with. I applied the ink directly onto the surfaces and played around with rubbing alcohol as a blending solution. But I thought it was high time that I used an applicator to use them the way they were intended. Of course, the applicator is just a stamp with some velcro on it and it costs 6+ dollars....not to mention buying the pre-cut pieces of felt. So I figured I'd make my own. I was very much in a use what you've got mentality, so I grabbed a scrap piece of wood and a couple of strips of velcro (hook and loop tape). I used the hook side and lined two pieces up next to each other. Luckily they were just the right width. I had the sew-on kind of velcro, so I spread some tacky glue ...
Comments
Post a Comment