Friday, December 31, 2021

Quick projects


 

 

I've done a few of these extra sparkly kits lately as quick projects. The reason they are extra sparkly is because rather than being a solid colour the dots have a silver backing and are opaque - more like rhinestones. 

 


These projects are on a sturdy plastic backing board and one of the issues I've found is that the whole of the board is sticky but the design doesn't cover the whole board, meaning the edges are likely to attract dust and pet dander. You can see in the image below the middle gnome's hat only has diamond dots to be stuck on the red area but the clear plastic around it is also sticky.


With the singing gnomes design I attempted firstly to cover the blank spaces with glitter but that distorted the image. Because I sprinkled it on some of the glitter ended up where it wasn't wanted, so for example one of the gnomes has a pinkish face because some of the red glitter ended up on the silver area.

In the image below you can see where I first tried using glitter on the right hand side. I used blue glitter on the gnome's hat and green on the gnome's slove so the colour is denser but the outline is not as sharp. On the left-hand side where I've used mineral powder eyeshadow, the background colour is faded. This design has diamond dots only on one side.


For the gecko I poured silver coloured pearlescent mineral eyeshadow all over which worked really well but a little too well in that it also covered up the backing colour on the design.


For the bee, I just dabbed on some gold eyeshadow on the areas where it wouldn't cover the design - mostly just the wings and legs - especially as the bee had some extra details which were non-dotted. These suncatchers are double-sided with designs and dots on both sides. I'm very happy with how the bee turned out.

I love these little projects, they are quick to do and make great gifts but if anyone has tips on how to handle the excess sticky areas I'd love to hear about it.

Thursday, December 16, 2021

What to do with leftover drills

 


So I still haven't transitioned back to knitting yet, despite El Nina creating some good knitting weather. Instead I've been looking for ways to use up some of my ever-increasing stash of leftover diamond dots (leftover drills are as much a cluttering nightmare as leftover yarn).

I am not talented enough to do anything freestyle so using a book that came with a kids window art painting set I created this cyclops angel. The plastic is from a sheet protector, the outline was done with paint pen and dots were stuck on using Diamond Dotz adhesive.

Angel ornament hanging on tree 

It all worked out so I ordered some heat resistant acetate sheets because I wanted to try doing a heat embossed outline which, as it turned out, didn't work that well but everything else did.

So my resources used to create this were a heat emboss acetate sheet, a template (Christmas Holly), some diamond dots corresponding to the template colours, a Wow embossing pen, white glitter embossing powder, embossing tool, and Diamond Dotz adhesive. Optional paintbrush to remove excess embossing powder.

 

First step was to trace the outline with the embossing pen, sprinkling embossing powder as I completed a section so it didn't dry out. After removing excess powder I used the heating tool to set the powder. Next step was to apply the adhesive to each section.

The bottle of adhesive recommends using a spatula to spread it out but I like using an old chopstick to get right into the corners.

The adhesive goes clear as it dries, leaving the surface sticky. Then it was just a matter of adding the dots. I did find the surface was stickier than a regular diamond painting canvas, it was a lot harder to remove a drill if I dropped it or put it in the wrong spot. Attempts to move dots sometimes resulted in the embossed outline being dislodged. I don't know if the glue interacted with the embossing somehow or if I just didn't adequately heat some sections of the outline.

Ultimately I'm pleased with how it turned out and I will be making more. I've got a strip of the acetate sheet leftover from this one, and because the dots seem to stick well I may try making a bookmark. I like using the window art book because it provides a legend of colours to use but you could just print any template / colouring in picture of the internet to suit what leftover drills use you have.