Daisy Lane In Pool Party

Monday’s Are Hard, Stamping Shouldn’t Be

Daisy Lane Stamp Set

Daisy Lane Card In Pool Party

Monday’s are hard, but with the Daisy Lane Stamp Set and this card making series, I will show you that stamping shouldn’t be. In fact, it’s quite easy. And with minimal supplies and minimal efforts, you can get fabulous results!

Today’s Monday Card features the stamp set, Daisy Lane, item #149325. This stamp set is not new to the 2020-2021 Annual Catalog from Stampin’ Up, but it is current. If you would like to see another easy Monday card featuring flowers, click here.

You can purchase 2 separate punches to coordinate with the Daisy Lane Stamp Set. There is a Daisy Punch, item #143713, for the larger daisy stamp and a Medium Daisy Punch, item #149517, for the smaller daisy stamp. However, since we are using minimal supplies, this Monday Card only uses the stamp set.

Daisy Lane Stamp Set

That’s right, one stamp set, Daisy Lane, two ink pads, Bermuda Bay and Shaded Spruce, and two colors of cardstock, Pool Party and Whisper White. Please follow along!

A Monday Card

The Card Recipe

Pool Party CS: 5-1/2 x 8-1/2″, score at 4-1/4″ for card base.

Pool Party CS: 3-1/4 x 4″, 3/4 x 4″″ and 2 x 4-3/4″

Whisper White CS: 4 x 5 1/4″ (for inside, optional)

Whisper White CS: 2-1/4 x 5″, 1-3/4 x 4-1/2″, 1-1/4 x 4″, and 1/2 x 2-1/2″

Stamp And Assemble

This Monday’s Are Hard, Stamping Shouldn’t Be Card starts out with the typical “fold in half” and score with your bone folder to get a great crisp card base. Let’s not break tradition.

However, my TIP to you is to score once, invert the fold and score again. Your inner crease is now as crisp as the outer one. This makes for a professional looking card base!

Pool Party Card Base and Bone Folder

Create Your Own Designer Series Paper

With the minimal supplies used in this card, we are not adding designer series paper to it. We are making our own! This great background pattern can be used with any stamp sets you own.

I suggest stamping on scrap paper, as this technique has you stamping off the edge of your cardstock. Starting with the 3-1/4 x 4″ Pool Party CS, stamp the fern leaf using Shaded Spruce Ink over the entire surface. Do the same with the 3/4 x 4″ Pool Party CS.

Fern leaf stamp from Daisy Lane Stamp Set
This stamp works well when overlapped, so don’t worry about stamping it as such!

Floral Details

Next, I worked with the focal point flower. I used the 1-3/4 x 4-1/2 piece of Whisper White CS. First, I stamped the stem from the Daisy Lane Stamp Set in Shaded Spruce. Next, I used Bermuda Bay Ink and the daisy flower stamp, stamping off, then on to the top of the stem. This creates a lighter flower image.

Because the flower image was stamped off and is lighter, the sentiment stamp “friend” from the Daisy Lane Stamp Set is well defined when stamped in full strength Bermuda Bay Ink at the top of the stem.

Daisy Flower stamped from Daisy Lane Stamp Set

Sentimental Use

I love to use sentiment stamps in unusual ways, and in this card, they keep coming! To accent my focal flower, I stamped the saying “It’s your time to shine” from the Daisy Lane Stamp Set using Shaded Spruce Ink on the 1/2 x 2-1/2″ white cs.

Cutting apart sentiment from Daisy Lane Stamp Set
Small leftover paper scraps from cutting cardstock to size work perfect for this.

Next, I used my Paper Snips to cut each individual word apart and trimmed them. Lastly, I adhered each word in the proper phrase order to the top of the leaves on my flower stem. I prefer Tombow Liquid Adhesive Glue for small jobs like this.

Adding sentiment to card

For the next bit of stamping, I used the sentiment, “The best moments in my life happen with you”, from the Daisy Lane Stamp Set. I stamped it 3 times in Shaded Spruce Ink on the 1-1/4 x 4″ white cs. I started on the left, stamped in the middle and finished on the right.

Following that, I stamped the medium open petal daisy stamp from the Daisy Lane Stamp Set over each stamped sentiment. For this inking, and to get a very light image, I used the Bermuda Bay Ink and stamped off twice before stamping on my white cs.

Sentiment and daisy stamping using the Daisy Lane Stamp Set

Putting It All Together

With the stamping for the outside completed, it is just a matter of putting the card puzzle pieces together. I began with the leafy background stamped images, choosing the largest one to adhere first. The smallest one fits on the bottom of the card front, with the long sentiment piece tucked in between.

Front of  card assembly

The focal flower piece has additional matting to it. You can choose to omit some of the matting if you prefer. After putting my cardstock together, I added it to the front of the card toward the right . One “best moments” sentiment is clearly visible, while the additional two are only peeking out and implied.

The Insider Job

Your card is beautiful on the outside, now lets make it pretty inside too! I like to mimic some of the outer stamping into a corner of the inside card. This way the card has continuity and there is still lots of room to add your own sentiment or written thoughts.

Here, I used the same technique from the stamping of the stem in Shaded Spruce Ink and daisy flower in Bermuda Bay Ink, to add that inside interest. Because I was not stamping the friend sentiment, I did not stamp off when using the flower stamp. This gave me a bolder inside flower.

Inside stamping

Another Easy Monday

I hope you enjoyed making this easy card on a hard Monday with me. My video tutorial can be found on my FaceBook page, as well as my YouTube channel. If you need any supplies for this card, please feel free to visit my online store, https://www.juliemakson.stampinup.net, at any time. See you next Monday for another installment of:

Monday’s Are Hard, Stamping Shouldn’t Be!

2018-2020 Retiring In Color, Pineapple Punch

Retirement Time For Pineapple Punch

Stampin’ Up! offers trendy In Color collections that are only available for two years. After two short years of use, the In Colors, like Pineapple Punch, are retired to make way for new colors. This gives us a fresh palette of popular hues to work with.

In April, the retired list comes out. This list includes all the products that will not be available in the new Annual Catalog, which is released in June. “Get them before they’re gone” and “while supplies last” is often heard during April and May.

And every year, we have to say goodbye to five In Colors. Whether we are ready to, or not. Some of the colors are so fabulous, we hope to see them in Stampin’ Up!’s color line-up in the future, if we are so lucky, during an infrequent color refresh.

2018-2020 In Colors
2018-2020 In Color Classic Stampin’ Pads, item #147153

This year, we are bidding a fond farewell to the following 2018-2020 In Colors: Lovely Lipstick, Grapefruit Grove, Pineapple Punch, Call Me Clover and Blueberry Bushel.

Punchy Pineapple

So Saffron (left), Pineapple Punch (center), Daffodil Delight (right)

Pineapple Punch is a bright, vibrant color. Like, really vibrant. We are talking neon, safety-vest yellow here. And, full disclosure, Pineapple is my least favorite of the retiring In Colors. Or…maybe it was...I may have just changed my mind.

This yellow is so outspoken it can be hard to figure out how or where to use it. After all, how much loud yellow is too much loud yellow? Yet, when I sat down to incorporate the retiring Pineapple Punch into some creations, I found its sweet spot.

Timeless Tropical

Timeless Tropcial card in Pineapple Punch

Pineapple Punch…the name of this color deems it necessary to create pineapples with it! I pulled out the new stamp set, Timeless Tropical, and coordinating dies, In The Tropics, both from the January-June 2020 Mini Catalog, for this card.

I used Pineapple Punch for the cardbase, then layered a piece of Lovely Lipstick and Coastal Weave 3D embossed Crumb Cake as well. Using my Banner Punch, I flagged a piece of designer series paper from the Tropical Oasis collection. Next, I flagged old olive cardstock as well. All of these elements help to tone down this card, while keeping it tropical.

The pineapple was die cut in Pineapple Punch, then adhered to another scrap of the same color. I then fussy cut around the image, keeping the cutout pineapple in front and the solid cardstock in back. I sponged my pineapple with Old Olive and Soft Suede. The greens were made by die-cutting Old Olive, and sponging the tips with Garden Green.

Winds Of Change

Winds of Change card in Pineapple Punch

If you have been following my blog or FaceBook page, you may know that I love stamping with tulips! When the Winds of Change Stamp Set became available, and it featured tulips, I had to have it. Yellow tulips seem very natural, so here they are using my Pineapple Punch theme.

This time I limited the color selection to Pineapple Punch, Whisper White and Basic Black. Even though the windmill image could have been colored in, I purposefully left it, along with the sky and grass, in black and white. I wanted the focus to be only yellow.

After stamping the images using Memento Tuxedo Black Ink, I used my Stampin’ Blends in both Light and Dark Pineapple Punch to color the flowers. Simple, quick and effective. Additionally, I used some retired 2018-2020 In Color DSP for a striped background. The Rhinestone Basic Jewels do not add color, but enhance this card’s elegant simplicity.

Daisy Lane

Daisy Lane card in Pineapple Punch

When you think of daisies, you usually picture white and yellow flowers, right? Pineapple Punch is yellow, but I wanted something a little different for this card. So then, Balmy Blue and Granny Apple Green were invited to the party.

This card, like my Grapefruit Grove Fox Card, has two layers on it that are embossed. I used Brick and Mortar 3D on Pineapple Punch, and Scripty 3D on Granny Apple Green. I stamped the sentiment using Memento Tuxedo Black Ink directly onto the retired 2018-2020 DSP, then flagged and layered it onto Balmy Blue cardstock.

Daisy Delight and Daisy Lane are two different stamp sets that work with coordinating punches, Daisy and Medium Daisy. I stamped, and also stamped off, every other layer of the flower, using Balmy Blue on Whisper White Cardstock. The daisy center was stamped in Pineapple Punch Ink onto the same color cardstock, then punched out with my 1/2″ circle punch.

I stamped the flower stem and leaves using Granny Apple Green Ink on Whisper White Cardstock before die cutting with the Stictched So Sweetly rectangle. This way, I was able to slip some of the yellow brick cardstock beneath the raised rectangle when assembling. Pineapple Punch enamel dots from Happiness Blooms (aptly named) add embellishment.

Peace Out, Pineapple Punch

As I mentioned above, working with this color intimidated me. Until I sat down and put creative thought and color coordination together, I was not a huge fan of this extreme yellow. Now that we are getting along okay, I am sad to see it go!

Stampin' Up! product in Pineapple Punch

It is not too late to get some of the wonderful products still available in Pineapple Punch, but time is running out fast. If you pick up an ink pad, please purchase the ink refill too. You will stamp far into the future without the ink pad going dry.

While you are in my online store, https://www.juliemakson.stampinup.net, make sure you consider the Stampin’ Blends in Pineapple Punch, as well as cardstock and embellishments. This wild yellow will put a smile on your face as you use it on your next project!