Sunday, March 22, 2015
Art Journal Page w/ Gelatos
I love the pink flowers on this page:
Materials: Gelatos, gesso, script rubber stamp (Hero Arts), poppy rubber stamp ( Hero Arts), postage rubber stamp, book pages, oil pastel, punchinella ( used as a stencil),
Saturday, March 21, 2015
Art Journal Page: Strawberry Cake
Here is a page I recently made. Sorry, I did not capture the process but I thought I would share the page anyway:
Materials used: metallic acrylic paint, molding paste, glitter sticker, printed napkin ( cake image), rubber stamps.
Monday, March 16, 2015
Art Journal Page: Green to Red
I tend to use a lot of cool colors in my journal. Not by design- my hand is always picking up the same colors, especially blue. I have to make a conscious effort to use warm colors and that is what this journal page is about. This page started out with "painty waste' in green I added read, orange and yellow acrylic paint randomly on the page. The faint circles in the background were made by wiping off a stencil that was used on another page:
Next, I splattered red acrylic ink, spray it with water to make and run and then let the ink drip down the page.
I added pink neon acrylic paint for bump up the color a bit.
To tone down the look of the gesso, I stamped one of my favorite stamps- the medallion by Hero Arts- with Ranger archival ink in Sienna. I also used a bottle cap dipped in walnut ink spray and stamped random circles on the page. I also rubbed on distress ink though a screen pattern stencil over the script.
To finish the page off, I added a little shading around the edges of the page using complementary oil pastel colors. This page is now ready for pictures or journaling!
Saturday, March 14, 2015
Store Review: Blitsy
Have you heard of Blitsy? Blitsy is a retail website that sells craft supplies at a discount. The web site proclaims:
The Bad:
Where to shop:
I prefer to support LSSs but I don't really have one. If I want to
place an online order for papercrafting supplies, I will continue to use
my go-to: oozak.com,
which has superfast shipping ( and free for orders over $50), great
customer service and seems to offer a standard minimum 20% discount off
MSRP for most items. Oozak is great at providing order status updates
by email. I have also have good results with bluemoonscrapbooking.com
(great customer service and fast shipping. I ordered recently and
received a telephone call to tell me that my order had shipped!) and
Ellen Hutson (pricey but honorable mention here for good customer
service). Joann.com is also good for sales but are slow to update with
newer products and you have to watch out for their shipping costs.
Blitsy
brings you the best craft supplies at up to 70% off. We are on the
frontlines of the crafting industry, discovering and delivering the
latest designs and trends from your favorite brands. You'll find steals
on products for paper crafting, needle crafts, kids, fine arts, jewelry,
and so much more!
The Good:
Blitsy has a nice selection of current items.
I was a skeptical at first. I find that when some stores claim to sell
"overstocks" at a discount, the merchandise is old, outdated or not
anything you would want to purchase anyway. Blitsy is selling current,
popular items from popular manufacturers. Recently, they had Tim Holtz
mini distress inks, Julie Nutting Prima dolls, Prima flowers, stamps
and embellishments, Memory Box dies, Bo Bunny, Basic Grey, My favorite
Things, Papermania and more. Other categories include fine art
supplies including gesso and paint as well as supplies for jewelry
making, knitting and crochet, sewing, kids crafts and more. They sell
craft items you would actually want to buy, not just the leftovers. All at less than retail prices.
Items were as promised: When I received my order, it was exactly as advertised and pictured on the website. Nothing to complain about there.
Oh Blitsy, I really wanted to like you. I really did. But alas, I cannot not. Here is why:
The Bad:
Prices are not that great: I don't know about you but I try to avoid paying retail prices for craft supplies. Ever. Crafting is a hobby for me so I don't like to pay a lot for items that I do not need. I am willing to pay full price for the things I must
buy- like food & transportation- necessities. ( Even with then, I
tend to focus on weekly special items in the grocery store circular and
try to fill up my car when the local gas station has $.05 off per
gallon). While the Blitsy site says they have craft supplies at up to
70% off, I did not see that level of discount in the papercraft
supplies I looked at. The discounts for the papercrafting category seemed to be 15%
to 30% off. Since I avoid paying retail pricing anyway, a 30% discount
when I have to pay 20% in shipping isn't much of a draw for me.
Login required, even to browse:
Retail websites that require you to set up an account and log in even
to look are a personal pet peeve of mine. Seriously, Blitsy, I came
to your website to see if I wanted to have a relationship with you and
you are demanding my name and email address before we even say "helllo"
No casual drive-by looking here. Annoying.
Expensive shipping:
Another pet peeve is web retailers who charge excessive shipping fees.
Apparently, Blitsy is determined to make it up for its product "discounts" by overcharging on shipping. My order cost $9.99 to ship.
I almost cancelled it when I saw the shipping cost. This is what I
ordered:
A
couple of Prima doll stamps, Prima color bloom spray in berry wine( new
to me and I wanted to try it) and a few colors of Viva Modeling Creme (
you can make and color your own for a lost less but I really like the
colors of the Viva creme)
My order was shipped in this box:
This did not cost Blitsy $9.95 to ship. My guestimate that actual cost to ship was $5.95
Slooooow order processing and shipping:
This is where Blitsy really lost me. I placed my order on February
13. I received my items on March 12. The items ordered were not
pre-order items nor did they site indicate that they were out of stock
when I ordered so I don't understand how it could have possibly taken 30
days to get my order. Now in fairness to Blitsy, on their website, in
their FAQ section, under "Shipping", it says:
"Shipping times vary by product. Many of our items ship within 2-3
business days, but others can take up to 7-14 business days. Every
product will have an estimated shipping date posted in the item
description. Please note, your order will ship once all items are
available."
I
did not notice the disclaimer before I placed my order but even at an
estimated 7-14 business days for order fulfillment there is no way my
items should have taken a month to arrive. Especially for items that I
could have walked into Joanns or gone to my LSS and purchased several
times over in the time it took Blitsy to ship to me.
Poor Communication: I
try not to get antsy when place an online order. I know that there
will be a lag between the time I order my items and the time they
arrive, no matter how impatient I am. However, the wait is so much
more tolerable when you know what the heck is going on. Blitsy did not
provide an order update. Not one.
Constant Emails/Spam-
Number of emails I rececived in 30 days updating my on my orde status: 0
Number of emails I received in 30 days urging me to shop at Blitsy: 59 ( I counted)
Seriously, Blitsy, I don't need to hear from you that much. At least ship my order first.
Although my order took about 3 weeks to ship, my credit card was charged immediately:
Different stores handle this differently. Personally, I think the
most appropriate policy is to charge the card only when the item is
shipped, but stores vary. Normally, shipping delays are not significant
enough for this to become an issue for me but you should NOT charge my card and then take 3 weeks to ship.
My verdict?: The
small discount off retail pricing did not make the order worthwhile
especially when the slow shipping time and expensive shipping costs are
factored.
Blitsy
is another entry into an already crowded retail space and they have
done nothing to make me interested in ordering from them. Slow and
expensive shipping for items that are minimally discounted is not a good combination for me. YMMV.
Friday, March 13, 2015
Art Journal Page: Light to Dark
This is a page I recently created using acrylic paint, stencils and stamps. I did not have a vision for the page when I started. I just grabbed materials as they occurred to me.
This page started off as a scrap page. When I use a stencil and have leftover paint or ink on the stencil, I stick it in between some blank pages of my journal. The purple paint is "paint waste". I added the blue using Blick matte acrylics. You can see the stencil I used in the upper left. The foam stamp used in the next stamp is in the upper right.
I stamped the flower shapes with a foam stamp using another Blick matte acrylic. I also added some green paint. The page on the left is the primary page I worked on. If I had any excess paint on the stamp or stencils I used, I "off-stamped" on the right.
I added text to the background with a script stamp. So far so good. However, In the next step, I pretty much ruin the page:
I added Golden Fluid Acrylic paint in Burnt Sienna using a paintbrush. I did not like the result of this step as I think I covered up too much of the blue and green, which I liked. Fortunately, it was not the final step.
Not content to ruin it with a little Burnt Sienna, I added some more. At this point the page was really too dark for my taste so I lightened it by blotting on yellow acrylic paint.
I like to combine different types of paint and ink on my pages. Here I am preparing to add black spray paint using this numbers stencil.
This is the page after I added the spray paint on the left. I blotted off the excess paint from the stencil on the right hand page.
Here is another photo of the final page. I finished it by adding more black paint with the stencil. I also stamped a circle stamp using archival ink in orange blossom. To add more depth and texture to the page, I edged the outer borders with a pinkish red oil pastel.
Thanks for following my process!
Thursday, March 12, 2015
Awesome Lenovo Technical Support !
Photo credit: Venturturlst on Flickr. Pictured computer is not a Lenovo
I really wanted to document my art journal process via a blog in 2015 but just after I published my first blog post my computer died. Fortunately it was still under warranty so after some initial hiccups with customer service via telephone, I was able to send it back to the manufacturer ( Lenovo) for repair. I just received the newly repaired computer in the mail and I am ready to blog!
I have to give Lenovo major credit for the speed and transparency of their repair process. I half expected that Lenovo would invent a reason to tell me that they necessary repair was outside the warranty but they repaired it without question. I was able to track the progress of my machine at their facility from receipt at Lenovo to repair progress update to the day it was shipped back to me. They estimated that the computer would be shipped back to me in 7-10 days and it was shipped back to me in 10 days, exactly. The computer works perfectly and as a bonus they even repaired the CD drive which was broken off earlier. Double bonus: they even repaired it without wiping my hard-drive.
I feel that most large companies focus more about their product( regardless of whether the product actually works) and they seem to care less about making sure their customers are happy. Apple, for example, offers abysmal service and support for most of their products unless you purchase their expensive extended warranty. I own a Silhouette Cameo that I recently had issues with and had a less than satisfactory experience with their customer support line. (In fact, I could not ever get a live person on the phone when I called them, although they did return my call-eventually). In contrast, I was really impressed with Lenovo after this experience. They did an outstanding job and made the process really painless for me, for which I am grateful.
Thanks, Lenovo!
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