Embossing adds texture to handmade cards
Embossing
adds texture to handmade cards
Jill Sherman
Daily Sun
THE VILLAGES —
A rubber stamping session seemed more like a game of musical chairs
as women switched seats to use different stamps and inks.
The rubber stamping and card making group known as Stamping at
the Landing focused its efforts on embossing Wednesday morning at
Hibiscus Center.
Millie Baumruk said she had done embossing before and liked the
finished product.
“It really adds a lot of dimension to a card,” she
said.
Carolyn Morris, who leads Stamping at the Landing, described embossing
as “making the image rise from the paper.” Embossing
may be achieved using either powder or a stylus; Morris chose to
have the group work with powder.
Powder embossing requires that a rubber stamp be pressed onto a
special sticky ink pad. The stamp is then pressed onto paper.
“You can’t see it,” Morris said of the transferred
image.
When embossing powder is sprinkled onto the sticky stamped ink,
however, the image becomes clear. An electric dryer made specifically
for crafts dries the ink and sets the powder.
The women stampers moved from their own chairs to others as they
progressed through the embossing and enhancing process, sharing
colored pencils and a novel tool called a blending pen. The blending
pen caused applied colored pencil to take on the appearance of watercolor
paint.
Beautifying a stamped image and turning it into a card may sound
difficult, but it is relatively easy to do. The initial challenge
lies in getting the stamping technique right.
“You have to learn to use the stamp straight up and down
so you’re not rocking it,” Morris said, noting that
the uneven distribution of ink caused by rocking results in a distorted
image.
Morris prefers to keep her designs simple. Even so, Stamping at
the Landing members are satisfied and impressed with the cards they
have hand-made together. Baumruk said she would like to be that
creative when stamping at home.
Jill Sherman is a reporter with the Daily Sun. She
can be contacted at 753-1119, ext. 9253, or jill.sherman@thevillagesmedia.com.
Credit to: http://www.thevillagesdailysun.com/articles/2006/05/11/lifestyles/lifestyles02.txt