Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Marbelized Card Tutorial




I first saw some marbelized paper craft on one of my favorite blogs Skip To My Lou and I was immediately intent on doing it. So, I did.

The Basic Recipe:
  1. Alum
  2. Liquid starch
  3. Paper
  4. Casserole sized pan
  5. Acrylic paint
Turns out, Alum isn't the greatest thing in the world for you, so bear that in mind if you've got some little ones running around the house. You won't want them sniffing/playing with it....it is something that is used in making pickles and Big Macs, but the jury is still out on whether is is okay for regular consumption (because pickles and big macs are irregular consumption....right?? **fingers crossed**). You can find it in your local Hannaford's spice aisle. The liquid starch was by far the hardest thing to locate on the list. I spent a lot of time zipping up and down the detergent section with no luck. I ended up making some of my own from cornstarch and hot water and it did some FUNKY stuff to the results. A few days after I tried the homemade starch, I found the liquid starch at our Renys store in town. The paper I got at A.C. Moore (it was a set of 50 ivory colored blank cards and envelopes). I buy those sets religiously every Christmas to make my cards. I found a cheap aluminum casserole pan at the grocery store at well. The acrylic paint was already at the house in great quantity.

The FUNKY Starch Recipe:
  
  1. 1/2 cup Cornstarch
  2. 1/2 cup cold water
  3. 2 cups boiling water

I mixed it all really well and added 2 tsps of alum, mixing it again. This was then poured into the disposable casserole dish.  The acrylic paint, I had read in many places, should be watered down or it will sink to the bottom of the starch mixture.  So I watered it down and put several different colors each into their own small bowl. To get the paint onto the surface of the starch I just used a large paintbrush and tapped it high over the mixture to get some little droplets to fall down. Once I had all the colors I needed, I used some toothpicks to swirl the paint on the surface and make the marbelized design. But, I hit a snag. Somehow my homemade mixture didn't want to work the way that I had intended it to. The paint wouldn't swirl....it just stayed chunky and congealed on the surface. I decided to try putting the paper on it anyway and I actually really liked how it turned out!!

 

Here is an image of one of the cards from the basic recipe made with liquid starch:



When placing the paper on mix, you put the side you want marbelized down and let it float on top for a minute or so. Then you rinse off the excess paint quickly (and easily) under the faucet. Lay it on some newspaper to dry and when it is completely dry you can flatten each folded card and pile them together and lay something heavy over them to "iron" it out. Or, you could do the real thing and actually iron. (I know....people DO THAT?!?!?)
I used these for some very funky holiday cards this season....and I was thrilled with the results. It's a fun, messy, marvelous project for those of you who like to get your hands a little dirty.







5 comments:

  1. Holy hell, woman. You made all those cards?

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  2. These are awesome. Thanks for the alum tip because my first thoughts went to how my oldest would love to help on these. And...you mean big macs aren't for regular consumption? (note to self)

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  3. Those are beautiful!

    (Happy SITS Saturday Sharefest!)

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  4. how pretty,great job!
    stopping by from Sits Saturday Sharefest

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  5. Thanks so much for sharing this - I wanna try - I have liquid starch - and I bet I can find the alum. Thanks for posting the tut.

    BTW I love this in your bio "I'm crafty. I'm unorganized. Therefore: I am one big clutter pile waiting to happen."

    Sounds like me.

    Melissa (my Uncle Melvin used to call me Messy Missy actually).

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gimme dat comment.