Hella all, Lora here for Gypsy Soul laser Cuts! This ladies origins are a mystery, but she had to come from somewhere....
Mostly
 just from my odd head and because I've been working with birds a lot 
lately and also the beautiful imagery that come with the tree of life 
stories that are in so many cultures.
I like the idea that the 'crown' of the tree is sprouting out of her crown.
And her roots are strong and deep.
I began with four things.....
A cabinet door I got at the resale store for fifty cents, Arch Top Triptych-8 inch and two sets of the 3D Chipboard Tree-6 inch.
I primed the cabinet door and cut up the trees and played with various configurations until I found one that looked good to me.
I
 set the pieces aside ( I used this picture as a reference for putting 
the tree back together later) and using matte medium, I glued in strips 
of old dictionary pages in long lengths that look like newspaper 
columns, but you can use any pattern or random style of your choosing.
After
 the paper dried, I used the center piece from the Arch Top Triptych as a
 template and lightly drew around the edge of the frame. I used this 
pencil mark as a guide for where to place my tree branches.
I glued them down and added a coat of matte medium and let it dry thoroughly.
Now comes the painting! I love playing with paint. The instant gratification that comes with adding color sings in my heart.
I
 used acrylic paints (colors will be in the supplies list) and some 
glaze to keep the colors translucent. I wanted to be able to see the 
words through the color, creating a layer of depth and texture.
Lots of airy blue sky and green, rooty depths. I made sure I painted the crown of the tree white because...
I
 want the (fairly) translucent single ply of the image from a napkin to 
show clearly and a white background makes the images stand out.
I 
peeled the napkin apart, making sure that the image is on a single ply 
of paper (most good quality napkins are three ply, make sure you have 
peeled all three ply apart and are using the single top image ply). I 
tore of the leaf bits I wanted to use, and yes, tearing is best, a cut 
line leaves an obvious edge and a torn edge blends right in. I applied a
 light coat of matte medium to the surface of the board and branches and
 the brushed more on the image pieces as I laid them in place on the top
 of the tree. I used my brush to sort of 'tuck' the napkin pieces around
 the tree branches, leaving a little air space as possible and bringing 
forward the texture of the branches.
Whilst letting 
this dry, I gessoed the arch top triptych pieces and glued in my chosen 
paper. Then gave it a nice coat of gold paint.
I
 used an image from an old cabinet card from 1900 (I scanned the 
image...I never use the originals) and colorized her dress with Copic 
markers and acrylics paints. I used an image of a secretary bird head 
and crowned it, adding tree branches to give the illusion that the tree 
is coming from her head, brain, imagination? You can decide!
And of course, I had to add my dots....
Thank you for dropping by!
SUPPLIES:
Arch Top Triptych-8 inch
3D Chipboard Tree-6 inch
Additional:
Copic Markers
Acrylic paints in;
Sap green, Chromium Oxide Green, Raw Umber, Burnt Sienna
White, Ultramarine Blue.
Tim Holtz Distress paint in Broken China and Salty Ocean.
Graphic 45 Scrapbook paper from Botanical Bella
Dictionary pages
Liquitex Matte Medium
Liquitex Glazing Medium













1 comment:
Love love love this!
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