So we had a wonderful evening listening to Christmas carols and getting creative which always happens with this group!!! We have very little snow and it has been relatively mild so it hardly feels like we are only three weeks from Christmas!!! It was so nice to spend a creative evening with friends and get started on our Christmas!!! Therese
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
November Card Club - Card #3 - starry night background paper with a silver embossed "peace on earth" focal element
Our last card was the fastest and it was good this time around because the stitching on the first card did take longer than usual. I chose black cardstock for this set and added "starry night" background paper. It is actually gift wrap that my sister bought years ago which is so sparkly and multicoloured - it does starry night really well. The little "peace on earth" was stamped on coloured cardstock (2" x 3") and embossed with silver embossing powder. A coordinating layer was cut to back this one to create our focal element. I provided clear gel pens to colour the dove, earth and leaves. I tried shimmery watercolours on the light pink one and that worked well too!! Quick and easy!!!
November Card Club - Card #2 - stamped background embellished with red dots and a multilayered pine cone with a bow
For our second card I worked up this design for the cards. I stamped several finely patterned green decorative paper with two leaf /branch stamps (Peaceful Wishes -SU) in several colours of green ink. I cut them to 4" x 5.25" for the backgrounds and matched them up with coordinating cards. I stamped the pinecone from this set with brown ink on off white cardstock (1.25" x 2.25") and clear embossed them. I provided red cording for the bow which they could stitch on and tie OR tie and add with double sided tape. Both worked well. We layered these onto a gold layer and then to a red layer to create our focal elements. We distressed our edges and added paper piercing as we wished. Before adhering our background to our card front we established our layout (portrait or landscape) so we could detemine where to stamp our greetings. The greetings were stamped with Veramark and embossed with gold embossing powder. With all the pieces ready we added our backgrounds to our card fronts and then mounted our pinecones with 3D foam tape to finish off our cards. Therese
November Card Club - Card #1 - hand stitched snowflake with embossing and vellum with a greeting
It was great to see my creative friends again for another session of cardmaking!!! We were making Christmas cards this month and with any hopes at all we will be able to send them and have them delivered before the season arrives!! Fingers crossed!! We started with hand stitching the snowflake using white perle cotton onto a square of cardstock. You can see below the diagram I created for the holes I would need to stitch the snowflake which we used as a template for making the holes in the cardstock. We used bull clips to hold the template to the square and then laid this onto a foam layer and used a push pin to make holes where we needed them to be. By holding this sandwich to the light it was very easy to see any holes we had missed punching. With all the holes we needed we removed the template, threaded our large needles with about 50" of thread and started stitching. The diagram below gives step by step instructions for stitching one of the branches of the snow flake so we held our cardstock with one branch pointing directly up and started with coming up in hole #1 and continued until we had that one branch stitched. Then we started on the leg that was to it's left and repeated the same procedure. Now it was just a matter of doing it four more times and securing the two ends to the back with tape. Everyone persevered and got their snowflake stitched with some undoing and getting back on track but they all looked great at the end. I did add some tiny snowflakes to mine as I had in my sample. Completely missed that step while we were working on our cards so the other girls missed out on that with their cards.
Therese
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