It took a while to come up with something for the horizontal lines on the sketch. In the end I used the tails on various stamps in the Handwritten Borders set.
The central panel was stamped with Seedless Preserves, Crushed Olive and Mustard Seed inks. The sentiment was stamped with Archival Black ink and then run through a stitched border die before spritzing with Teal Color Shine by Heidi Swapp. It looks quite subtle in the photo above but I hope you can see it in the close-up below.
I also spritzed the card base in the top right corner.
Thanks for visiting.
Products used:
Stamps: Wet Paint (PTI), Pretty Peonies (WP9), Handwritten Borders (SSS)
Ink: Seedless Preserves, Mustard Seed, Crushed Olive, Archival Black
Cardstock: White, black
Accessories: Heidi Swapp Color Shine Teal, Sequins
Cheers
Karren
So pretty!!
ReplyDeleteThis is lovely Karren! I love how you've interpreted the sketch with those squiggly lines and combined them with that big bold sentiment!
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful card, Karren! Love it! Thank you so much for joining us at the Color Throwdown this week!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful Karren! I'm having hard time coming up with the idea for this sketch. Yours beautifully, cleverly done! Neat idea for the horizontal lines.
ReplyDeleteHow pretty...I absolutely love your doodled background and what a pretty flower!!! Thanks for playing along with us at the Color Throwdown!!!!
ReplyDeleteGorgeous card! LOVE the lines in the background and the pop with the flower! Thanks for joining us at The Color Throwdown!
ReplyDeleteBold & beautiful! The squiggles on the background are so fun!!! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for joining us over at CASology!
What a creative idea to add the squiggle lines as the horizontal stripes! Beautiful card! Thanks for playing along with us at Color Throwdown!
ReplyDeleteThose scribbly lines are PERFECT!
ReplyDeleteI LOVE your entry this week Karren!
Beautiful! I love how you inked that flower! Fabulous take on the sketch!
ReplyDeleteWonderful card!! You really did a fab job of combining all those challenges, the elements all work together really well!
ReplyDelete