The words were also were stamped with blue permanent ink and hand cut out to be a word bubble for the origami crane. (The two squiggly lines above the words were wiped away before stamping the words.) I folded the crane (the only thing I can fold without instructions) out of a small piece of patterned washi paper and glued it onto the chopsticks. Since I had a rubber stamp with Japanese characters expressing 'happy birthday', I stamped it in the lower right hand corner of the card. The ink wasn't dry when I smudged it so I decided to wipe it off and cover it up with a stamped paper seal, but I liked the faded look so I just left it. Inside the card I stamped, 'have a souper day' by curving the words on the acrylic block before stamping. As a final touch, I added a little kamaboko image from the Hero Arts stamp set. I think (I hope) that my son will like this card designed just for him. It's a special card for a special person!
Joy, Hope and Wonder
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Hi everyone, I have recently seen some lovely winter scene cards featuring
the Northern Lights, so I thought I’d have a go at my own version, broadly
ins...
9 hours ago
1 comment:
I'm sure your son loved his personalized birthday card! Really love the effect you achieved with distress archival ink + alcohol on yupo paper. The origami tsuru on the hashi is the perfect added touch! BTW, seeing your card is making me hungry for ramen right now... and how come I haven't seen the flower shaped rolls of kamaboko at the market lately?
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