Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Color tinting

I am doing a sort of study on color tinting. You know, its when you add color to your stitchery with either crayons or colored pencil. This is a design by
Meg Hawkey of Crabapple Hill. 
It was lots of fun to do!

Then I decided to try it on a design of my own.  I began with crayons, coloring in the whole background with white and then adding the color.
Then I added the stitching and some colored pencil detail. I couldn't stop there and ended up using watercolor pencils.

When I am finished the whole thing will be heat set with and iron, pressing from the back onto a piece of scrap muslin (in case some of the color comes off)
What do you think?

Thursday, October 13, 2011

My friend Jenny is having an awesome giveaway!

Jenny has a great blog in Australia,
and she publishes a monthly little digital magazine called Elefantz Home 
which is all about beautiful stitchery and also lots of tips and inspiration.
I "heart" Elefantz Home,
AND
I have been invited to be a guest designer in a future issue!
Yay!
ANYHOO!
Jenny is having a really great giveaway to celebrate 
1500 followers
 (Wow! check that out!)
Among the PRIZES is a $50.00 gift certificate for 
FAT QUARTER SHOP!!!
So hop on over to Jenny's blog and check it out!


Quilty Neighborhood #5 and peek at house #6!

At long last the 5th installment of the Quilty Neighborhood series is here!
Only 2 more houses to go, and House #6 is almost ready as well!
Here is a sneak peek at the whole thing so far, WITH a little peek at house #6!
Its coming along, don't you think?

Available at your favorite Needlework shop or at my website here!

Friday, September 30, 2011

On TDIPT tonight!

 Ophelia the harvest gatherer!


And Happy Jack!
A tabletop pumpkin!

AND, during the month of OCTOBER, my pattern 
DOROTHY and TOTO is 
ON SALE 
at my website and my Etsy Shoppe!


How to paint a pumpkin head!

 When autumn comes I always feel like making a pumpkin head doll! I love to work with my favorite colors of paint, deep green and olive green, yellow ochre, burnt orange, some pretty reds!
Oh its so much fun!
So I thought I would show you how I do the underpainting on one of these dolls, to get the wonderful depth of color and tone that every vegetable girl should have!
LOL!
The idea is to under-paint highlights and low lights. The cheeks and forehead I have painted with yellow, then I have come in with deep green where the shadows might be.
Here is the face and shoulders:
The side and back of the head:
Coverage is not important. 
You will worry about coverage when you do the top coat.
Right now you are just getting in the highlights and low lights.
The same goes for the arms and legs:
Next,  you will  go over everything with a top coat. I used Terra Cotta. I am just using the 2 oz. cheap paints from the craft store.
First you block in the color, the eye whites, the color of the irises and pupils. When this is dry, sand it all over with 220 grit sand paper. This is what brings out your underpainting, and give the doll that aged patina-almost like leather!
All of the details are done with colored pencil:
Here is another one-just the head!