Blending images tutorial – Leopard print

The Leopbard

How to take a 2D image and fill a 3D area

Here we found an ordinary looking cupboard for a few quid from Deptford Flea market. Its in good shape, no water damage, everything works. as it should.

We found an image of leopard print on the interwebs. I have fished out some scissors, paints and PVA.  The plan is to use a mix of paint and paper to cut and blend the printed leopard print so it flows seamlessly over our cupboard. The background to the leopard print is a peachy orange, so I have chosen paints to mix up to match it.

Here you can see I have cut out patches of the leopard print and used the paint to create a matching background on the cupboard itself.  Cut out individual spots from the print to join up the patches.

Here you can see the patches are blending nicely together.  Keep going!

Now the whole cupboard has been decoupaged in leopard print – its time to give it a liberal coat of PVA to seal the image and create a barrier between the paper and the final coats of waterbased varnish.

All done!  I have finished the wooden handles in a black enamel.

Decoupage taster sessions at the Telegraph Hill Centre SE14

May 19th saw my first Decoupage workshop outside of my kitchen, that meant packing a suitcase with delectable scraps of paper, jars of glue and things to stick them to and rolling myself off to the Telegraph Hill Centre for the Craft Collective’s regular workshop days.  If you would like to come along to a decoupage workshop, contact me for future dates. They are held at the Telegraph Hill Centre, Kitto Road, New Cross Gate, London SE14

 

Pop Up Vintage Fair

Title: Pop Up Vintage Fair
Location: Islington Town hall
Link out: Click here
Description: Whether you just want to browse and enjoy the eclectic mix of stalls, pick up some bargains, enjoy some afternoon tea in beautiful surroundings or find that unique item – POP UP VINTAGE FAIRS LONDON is the place to spend your Sunday.

There will be over 40 top quality handpicked traders selling fashion, accessories, jewellery and homeware. In addtion there will also be antiques, collectables, including vintage vinyl, film posters, ephemera, textiles, antique lace, vintage knitting and sewing patterns, teasets and cakestands and much more.

Have a vintage style makeover in the Pop Up Beauty Parlour and enjoy tea and cupcakes in the Pop Up Vintage Tea Room whilst enjoying live music or Retro DJs spinning vintage tunes.

Start Time: 11.00
Date: 2012-05-27
End Time: 17.00

 

A Snip of Decoupage

Title: A Snip of Decoupage
Location: Telegraph Hill Centre, New Cross Gate, London SE14
Link out: Click here
Description: Pull up a chair and get snipping and gluing. No special skills needed, just a sense of play. I’ll provide all you need and some tricks of the trade for quick, impressive results.
Start Time: 11:00
Date: 2012/05/19
End Time: 17:00

 

 

Merton Abbey Mills craft market

Title: Merton Abbey Mills craft market
Location: Merton Abbey Mills, SW19 2RD, nearest tube Colliers Wood or South Wimbledon
Description: Up to 100 arts and crafts market stalls
•Artists to sculptors, dress designers to card makers
•A vibrant community with restaurants, shops, pub, restored water wheel and The Colour House Children’s Theatre
•A market that has been trading for 21 years
•Free Children’s activities and live music every weekend
•Easily accessible by public transport
•Parking for over 200 cars in the area
- 2 hours free in adjacent ticketed car park
- 4 hours free opposite in Sainsbury’s and M&S car park
- Free in surrounding residential roads

Start Time: 10.00
Date: 2012-05-12
End Time: 17.00

Merton Abbey Mills Market

Merton Abbey Mills

Merton Abbey Mills gate

Merton Abbey Mills

Montpeliers Cafe, Blackheath. London

The Montepelier’s cafe is an elegant meeting spot with plenty of charm a kite’s sight away from the heath.  Outside has ample stylish seating for Blackheath’s cafe culture, and inside a backroom for more intimate conversations with friends.  Nova and Lorsten were asked to bring a little bit of decoupage elegance to the room, the pictures of which you see below.

 

What’s on

Pop up Vintage in Islington

Title: Pop Up Vintage
Location: Islington Assembly Hall N1
Link out: Click here
Description: Pop Up Vintage Fairs London return to the Islington Assembly Hall, Town Hall, Upper Street, Islington N1 2UD on Sunday 29th April for our Vintage Fashion & Homeware Event.

5 mins from both Highbury & Islington tube station (Victoria Line) and Angel tube station (Northern Line).

40 stalls selling designer & affordable vintage fashion for ladies, gents & children, plus vintage accessories, jewellery, mid-century retro furniture, homeware, antiques & furnishings.

Relax after shopping in our Pop Up Vintage Tea Parlour with delicious teas and cakes by Teaspoon Events served on delicate vintage china.

Don’t forget to get your vintage makeover in our Pop Up Vintage Beauty Parlour.

We’re excited to welcome The Vintage Singer, Madeleine Cooke who will be entertaining us with some wonderful vintage songs. You can see her performing throughout the day.

Our jetsetting seamstress Nanna of Splendid Stitches is returning with her alterations booth, so if that vintage find doesn’t quite fit or needs repairing, pop over to see her in the Main Hall for on the spot alterations and repairs.

Doors open 11 am – 4 pm.

Admission £3 per adult, £2 NUS.
(10.30 Earlybird Trade Entry £5).

By bus: 4, 19, 30, 43
By tube: Highbury & Islington Station Victoria Line (5 minutes) or Angel Northern Line (10 minutes)
By train: Via London Overground to Highbury & Islington Station

For further details phone 07716 295998
Email info@popupvintagefairs.co.uk

Start Time: 11.00
Date: 2012-04-29
End Time: 16.00

How to use two part epoxy resin for decoupage

Welcome to our first tutorial – we hope you find it useful and inspire you to coat everything that stays still long enough in lovely two part epoxy resin.

Step One -

getting your item ready.  There may be areas you DONT want the resin to go – so tape this up carefully.  I prefer parcel tape as any sticky residue from the tape comes off easy enough from a varnished surface with a bit of white spirit.

Here’s what I am starting with – a Monet chest of drawers – I am going to resin the top.

Next, tape up carefully..

I want the resin to roll off and under to create a nice rounded edge, so I have taped underneath the edge to allow for this.

Mix up your resin in carefully measured equal parts resin and hardener.  Use a calibrated plastic cup – not waxed and perfectly clean.  Make sure you mix accurately half resin and half hardener on a flat surface.  4fl oz = 1 sq foot. remember to put the lids back on the right bottles. (yes, that might sound obvious, but we’ve swapped them around more than once!)

Mix carefully and thoroughly.  Its a good idea to wear plastic gloves and some people have a sensitivity to it on their skin- even so, its fiercely sticky and you don’t want to get this where you shouldn’t.  If you do, wash hands in washing up liquid.  DO NOT smear in your eyes or eat it – you will be in a very very bad state if you do.  In all seriousness folks, its hazardous stuff ingested or in the eyes and not to be messed with, in the same way you wouldnt fool around with oven cleaner – kapesh? Once hardened it is stable. Also, watch your temperature – moderately warm, like most homes is perfect – cold takes longer to cure.

See or Decoupage materials section in the shop to order this resin

 

Next – just pour it on – be generous.  Move the resin about with a paintbrush.  (one you dont want to use again).  Look out for hairs that might drop out of the brush.  This can be most annoying. If you do get this, wait til its cured, hack it out and give it another coat – you won’t see the bad bit.

Use a good light source to make sure you can see every bit has been covered and the resin is dripping off the edges.  If you are too stingy at the edges, it can pull away from the edge and leave  missing bits. Again, if you do get this, wait til it cures and give it another coat.

Next, waft the blow torch over the surface and watch the tiny bubbles magically disappear.  You only have to do this a couple of times and when the resin is wet, (about a ten minutes window) dont go over the same spot too much as the resin can pull away, leaving a dimple.  If this happens still  in its wet stage, it will probably settle down and even out.

this pic shows me working on some tiles, but dont let that confuse you – its all the same technique.

Now the last stage is optional – I tend to use a dust tent as I have two cats and a healthy disregard for domestic chores.  Its also a heartbreaker to discover some airborne nasty has settled in your glassy resin over night, so I think its worth considering. Trouble shooting this is same as before – hack it out with a scalpel, give it another coat.

Its so easy -  velcro some tarpaulin to the ceiling and tape the bottom to the floor.

one side of the velcro stuck to the tarpaulin

 

 Velcro on the ceiling

getting tucked up for the night…

That’s all folks!  Hope you enjoyed that, and if you give it a go (see our shop-decoupage materials for the resin for sale)- we would love to see what you came up with.  Feel free to get in touch any time if you need any assistance! If you like – please comment! xx

We create decoupage swans from ugly ducklings – from the scuffed and unloved and good for the tip we create a range of furniture and home accessories.

By buying the stuff that nobody wants we move in a virtuous circle of reinvestment in our charity shops and flea markets,  with an aim to reinvent and reuse.  You’ll find our passion for music is a common theme that finds it’s way into our designs and we are inspired by the cute, the kitsch and the clever.

As this is too much fun to keep to ourselves, we like to share our skills in small, regular workshops and parties- get in touch if you’d like to know more about them.

Why not transform existing furniture of your own?  we’ll work with you and your style to create something unique and personal to you and your home. No need to throw out Granny’s dated furniture because it doesn’t suit the modern home – leave it to us – it soon will -we’ll transform it into a future heirloom.

 

Ecopage

Nova and Lorsten are featured in The Ecologist Magazine

We’d all like to decorate our walls with Picassos and Warhols but great art comes with even greater price tags. But that doesn’t mean having to settle for trappings from TK Maxx either. Your next work of art might be sitting right in front of you. Whether it’s an old dresser gathering dust in the garage, or a mess of bottle caps collecting at the bottom of your bin, materials that can be turned into something fabulously decorative are everywhere. With each person in the UK generating 264 kg of waste per year that isn’t recycled, according to DEFRA, there should be plenty of ‘junk’ to choose from. And if you don’t feel you’re the artistic type, there’s no need to panic. These simple and sustainable projects don’t require an art degree, but are sure to impress.

From magazines to catalogues, we all battle to get the mail out of our post boxes at times. Once you’ve read your favourite publication, immortalise it forever with some scissors, varnish and creativity. ‘The idea of cutting out bits of paper and sticking it to something else is sort of a simple and beautiful one,’ says Carol Vigurs, co-owner of Nova and Lorsten Decoupage. ‘It doesn’t need special equipment or training. So you can pick it up and have good results really quickly.’ Decoupage has suffered from a twee reputation in the past, she says, bringing to mind cherubs and smiling children. But innovative eco-artists like Vigurs have taken the art form to new levels. ‘Decoupage doesn’t have to be twee, it can be punchy; it can be punk; it can be fun, lively and culturally relevant – it’s up to you.’

 

Full article here: http://www.theecologist.org/green_green_living/home/1240344/how_tomake_recycled_art.html