Here is a link to the Stampin' Up 2019 holiday catalog that lists products available now:
2018-2019 Annual Stampin' Up catalog
Here is the link to the annual Stampin' Up catalog that lists the products available now:
Stampin Up Annual Catalog
Then if you're just a beginning stamper, there is a brochure with products intended to ease you into stamping without being overwhelmed:
Brochure for Beginners
These links will take you to my Stampin' Up website where you can view or download these catalogs. You can also shop right from the website by creating an account with an email address.
If you would prefer to receive a printed catalog, I'd be happy to send you one. Just let me know!
Tuesday, October 8, 2019
When You Just Need a Little Frosting
Popular trend these days is to encourage people to "think outside the box". Crafters have been doing this for years, coming up with alternate ways to resolve issues with the projects that they are working on.
Well I apparently started this post on March 22, 2019 and here we are almost 7 months down the road and I have NO idea where I was going with this.
I came here today to post photos of things that are going to be offered at Stampin' Up.
The New Year Celebration Stamp set was only previously available in Japan. It is being offered in North America for the first time. It became available on October 1, 2019 and will be sold until January 31, 2020. The stamp set is $25.00.
I have goodie boxes to ship off to my customers to thank them for making purchases in the 3rd quarter of 2019. I scour clearance aisles and the clearance rack and divide up what I find which has included things like the WRMK Letterpress, Ultimate Genius Platform, heat guns, stamp sets, stamp and die sets, holographic paper, glitter paper, cut n emboss folders, sponge daubers, sticker collections, stencils, brushes, paints, glitters, Tim Holtz stains, etc.
Well I apparently started this post on March 22, 2019 and here we are almost 7 months down the road and I have NO idea where I was going with this.
I came here today to post photos of things that are going to be offered at Stampin' Up.
The Christmas Is Here Suite is a great set of stamp images, gold ribbon, gold sequins, a bracelet and designer paper with gold foil accents that is perfect for holiday cardmaking. As of today, it is available to demonstrators as preorder items. It will be available to customers on November 1, 2019. The entire suite is $112.50 but you can also pick and choose which items you want.
The New Year Celebration Stamp set was only previously available in Japan. It is being offered in North America for the first time. It became available on October 1, 2019 and will be sold until January 31, 2020. The stamp set is $25.00.
I have goodie boxes to ship off to my customers to thank them for making purchases in the 3rd quarter of 2019. I scour clearance aisles and the clearance rack and divide up what I find which has included things like the WRMK Letterpress, Ultimate Genius Platform, heat guns, stamp sets, stamp and die sets, holographic paper, glitter paper, cut n emboss folders, sponge daubers, sticker collections, stencils, brushes, paints, glitters, Tim Holtz stains, etc.
Friday, March 15, 2019
Distinktive Stamps - SaleABration and coming in April 2019 Paper Pumpkin
Yesterday I got to play with my new Lasting Lily stamp set that I got for free with $100 purchase from Stampin' Up.
The stamps are the Distinktive style from Stampin' Up. For those of you that were into the photo-realistic style of unmounted stamps in the early 2000s, you may remember the difficulty we had getting a good impression. (I want to say I got most of my collection from Bella Rosa Rubber Stamps - they had two halves to their website with different style stamps offered depending on which side you chose.)
Some people took to their stamps with erasers, some insisted that if you stamped first with chalk inkpad then dye inkpad that you would get the best image. Others used Versamark then dye. Still others began using press machines, standing on the stamps or putting the stamp on your work surface, then inking it and then putting the paper over. Still others insisted that inking it with a brayer was the only way to go. I just remember how delighted we'd be when we finally got it to look like an inked photograph.
I didn't have those kind of issues thanks to the stamp platforms that are popular now. I used one color of ink and let the stamp image control the shading and highlights. I did do some stamping off when I added the foliage at the bottom. My first practice sheet - which is a very glossy but thin printing paper - kept lifting off the stamp platform. The magnets didn't help hold it nor the sticky backing from the Little B Perfect Positioner. The paper was the back sides of printouts that were supposed to be taken for sale at convention by my daughter. The printouts had streaks, smears or wrong size ruining the images. Waste not, want not - the back was still clean, glossy and fine for stamping on. For the full practice sheet, I went ahead and used the Stamper's Secret Weapon and that worked fine. I found that scrubbing at the stamp with a shammy to take off any residue made the stamp work better. Also discovered that more than 2 stampings without cleaning the stamp would produce a duller image - some of the detail was lost. If the stamp wasn't completely flat onto block and you had an air bubble under it, it would show when you stamped. So for the best image, clean seasoned stamp completely flat on pad or platform, not overinking from stamp pad and even pressure to the paper and leaving it there for a few seconds to give time for the ink to transfer. I think my issues had to do with the type of paper I was using but once I got the technique down, then stamping a card went fine. Well the second time it did because the first time I got a green streak across one of my lilies so I had to flip the card front and start over (stray ink - disadvantage of block vs platform). I ended up fussy cutting one of the practice images to make the second card. Here they are:
I shared them to my Stampin' Up team page but they were underwhelmed. The stamp set came with the phrase "I adore you" but I just wanted the "adore" so I covered the other words with post-it notes, inked the "adore", removed the post-its and stamped it onto my die cut. The "today and always" was also part of the stamp set. I think they are pretty and am pleased anyway because they look exactly as I'd pictured them in my head. I will play with these more - more than 1 ink color, highlighting the center, watercoloring, etc. I haven't seen anyone use the irregular blob in the set but I intend to stamp that in a light color as background to a sentinment with a dark color. Not sure if that was the intent of the stamp when created but that's how I see it. Or maybe I'll use it to make an entire background. Definitely need some playtime!
Stampin' Up offers a coordinating die set for $27.00 for these stamps. I have a Scan n Cut so didn't buy those dies. The item is: LILY FRAMELITS DIES 150071 $27.00:
The Paper Pumpkin set for April will have a Distinktive stamp set. Paper Pumpkin subscriptions are $19.00 and include a stamp set, usually an ink cube or two, all the paper supplies needed and instructions to make 4 cards. To get the April set, you must subscribe before April 10th. They sell subscriptions of 1, 3, 6 or 12-month periods. If you see the preview for the next month and don't want it, you can suspend your subscription for that month by the 10th to skip getting it. You can also subscribe month-to-month and have it charged to a credit card each month. I prefer prepaying for a certain length of time and then entering that code into the paperpumpkin.com site. If you subscribe for 6 months, it's $108.00 so they take $6.00 off the price. If you subscribe for a year you pay for 11 months and get the 12th month free for $209.00.
Anyway, that's my stamping update. As always, would be happy to have you join me as a customer or if interested, as a fellow Stampin' Up rep. My site: Shop SU with Vee
The stamps are the Distinktive style from Stampin' Up. For those of you that were into the photo-realistic style of unmounted stamps in the early 2000s, you may remember the difficulty we had getting a good impression. (I want to say I got most of my collection from Bella Rosa Rubber Stamps - they had two halves to their website with different style stamps offered depending on which side you chose.)
Some people took to their stamps with erasers, some insisted that if you stamped first with chalk inkpad then dye inkpad that you would get the best image. Others used Versamark then dye. Still others began using press machines, standing on the stamps or putting the stamp on your work surface, then inking it and then putting the paper over. Still others insisted that inking it with a brayer was the only way to go. I just remember how delighted we'd be when we finally got it to look like an inked photograph.
I didn't have those kind of issues thanks to the stamp platforms that are popular now. I used one color of ink and let the stamp image control the shading and highlights. I did do some stamping off when I added the foliage at the bottom. My first practice sheet - which is a very glossy but thin printing paper - kept lifting off the stamp platform. The magnets didn't help hold it nor the sticky backing from the Little B Perfect Positioner. The paper was the back sides of printouts that were supposed to be taken for sale at convention by my daughter. The printouts had streaks, smears or wrong size ruining the images. Waste not, want not - the back was still clean, glossy and fine for stamping on. For the full practice sheet, I went ahead and used the Stamper's Secret Weapon and that worked fine. I found that scrubbing at the stamp with a shammy to take off any residue made the stamp work better. Also discovered that more than 2 stampings without cleaning the stamp would produce a duller image - some of the detail was lost. If the stamp wasn't completely flat onto block and you had an air bubble under it, it would show when you stamped. So for the best image, clean seasoned stamp completely flat on pad or platform, not overinking from stamp pad and even pressure to the paper and leaving it there for a few seconds to give time for the ink to transfer. I think my issues had to do with the type of paper I was using but once I got the technique down, then stamping a card went fine. Well the second time it did because the first time I got a green streak across one of my lilies so I had to flip the card front and start over (stray ink - disadvantage of block vs platform). I ended up fussy cutting one of the practice images to make the second card. Here they are:
I shared them to my Stampin' Up team page but they were underwhelmed. The stamp set came with the phrase "I adore you" but I just wanted the "adore" so I covered the other words with post-it notes, inked the "adore", removed the post-its and stamped it onto my die cut. The "today and always" was also part of the stamp set. I think they are pretty and am pleased anyway because they look exactly as I'd pictured them in my head. I will play with these more - more than 1 ink color, highlighting the center, watercoloring, etc. I haven't seen anyone use the irregular blob in the set but I intend to stamp that in a light color as background to a sentinment with a dark color. Not sure if that was the intent of the stamp when created but that's how I see it. Or maybe I'll use it to make an entire background. Definitely need some playtime!
Stampin' Up offers a coordinating die set for $27.00 for these stamps. I have a Scan n Cut so didn't buy those dies. The item is: LILY FRAMELITS DIES 150071 $27.00:
The Paper Pumpkin set for April will have a Distinktive stamp set. Paper Pumpkin subscriptions are $19.00 and include a stamp set, usually an ink cube or two, all the paper supplies needed and instructions to make 4 cards. To get the April set, you must subscribe before April 10th. They sell subscriptions of 1, 3, 6 or 12-month periods. If you see the preview for the next month and don't want it, you can suspend your subscription for that month by the 10th to skip getting it. You can also subscribe month-to-month and have it charged to a credit card each month. I prefer prepaying for a certain length of time and then entering that code into the paperpumpkin.com site. If you subscribe for 6 months, it's $108.00 so they take $6.00 off the price. If you subscribe for a year you pay for 11 months and get the 12th month free for $209.00.
Anyway, that's my stamping update. As always, would be happy to have you join me as a customer or if interested, as a fellow Stampin' Up rep. My site: Shop SU with Vee
Sunday, February 17, 2019
UPCYCLING with Stampin' Up
I recently got an order with one of the new incentive stamp sets from the second SaleABration release. It is called All Adorned. This is the stamp set:
This stamp set became available to Stampin' Up customers on February 15th and is available until March 31st, 2019. It is a Level One award, free with any $50 purchase.
Wanting to play with my new toy, but not having a lot of time, I spied a Stuart Hall "Thank You" card set that I received for free with an order from Creative Images. This is what the plain cards looked like:
I took out four shades of Stampin' Up ink pads (balmy blue, mint macaron, pool party, blueberry bushel) and went to town. I tried to use an acrylic block but kept getting stray lines. Using a stamp platform, I got no stray lines but had to rotate the cards and that worked fine. I could've just used a smaller, more appropriately sized block but did not want to go dig one out since I was crafting at the kitchen table and not in the office. To me, it was just as important to ensure that I got some play time in instead of being Uber-efficient during my playtime. Just goes to show that there IS more than one way to accomplish a task.
Those are all the cards that were successfully stamped. Then I took the ones with boo-boos and stamped on the inside to create colorful backgrounds to cut apart to make other cards. They looked like this:
This stamp set became available to Stampin' Up customers on February 15th and is available until March 31st, 2019. It is a Level One award, free with any $50 purchase.
I took out four shades of Stampin' Up ink pads (balmy blue, mint macaron, pool party, blueberry bushel) and went to town. I tried to use an acrylic block but kept getting stray lines. Using a stamp platform, I got no stray lines but had to rotate the cards and that worked fine. I could've just used a smaller, more appropriately sized block but did not want to go dig one out since I was crafting at the kitchen table and not in the office. To me, it was just as important to ensure that I got some play time in instead of being Uber-efficient during my playtime. Just goes to show that there IS more than one way to accomplish a task.
Those are all the cards that were successfully stamped. Then I took the ones with boo-boos and stamped on the inside to create colorful backgrounds to cut apart to make other cards. They looked like this:
That keeps the messed up cards from being wasted. There was no other way to save them because the line went right thru the Thank You sentiment.
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