by Debbie Hodge | Nov 15, 2013 | Art Journaling, Copic Markers, Paper Techniques for Scrapbooking
Each month artist and Copic instructor Michelle Houghton looks at a particular medium and one or more ways to help you add this medium to your scrapbook layouts, as artists from the Creative Team at Get It Scrapped add inspiration to fuel your imagination and get you...
by Debbie Hodge | Oct 18, 2013 | Art Journaling, Paper Techniques for Scrapbooking
Faber Castell Gelatos are great for watercolor techniques and Michelle Houghton gives you step-by-step instructions for your own gelatos art creations. by Michelle Houghton Do you enjoy buying all the new mediums to add to your layouts? Have a basket of them but not...
by Debbie Hodge | Apr 15, 2011 | Art Journaling, Color, Design Principles, DinaWakley
By Dina Wakley I love contrast. If you want a page element to be powerful, contrast it with its opposite and you have mega-impact. Contrast is what makes a piece of art surprising, or interesting, or even just plain good. Contrast is essentially the use of opposites...
by Debbie Hodge | Apr 7, 2011 | Art Journaling, Composition, Design Principles, DinaWakley
By Dina Wakley I always say that one of the reasons I love art journaling is that there are no rules. Anything goes. You can do what you want. The process of putting paint on the page is more important than the finished outcome. So, why care about composition? I...
by Debbie Hodge | Oct 19, 2010 | Art Journaling, Ideas, Paper Techniques for Scrapbooking
Love spray ink? Wish you knew more about spray ink? Or are you just looking for some examples of spray ink projects? Begin with Dina Wakley’s video tutorial and then check out the links for other online spray-ink how-tos as well as several spray-ink projects....
by Debbie Hodge | Sep 9, 2010 | Art Journaling, Design Your Story, Journaling, Paper Techniques for Scrapbooking
by Michelle Houghton Sometimes, for something fun and different, I like to write my journaling in shapes—not just in a circle but spiraling around the edge of a circle or other shape. It isn’t practical for reading—the reader always ends up upside down and backward...