October 19, 2008

New Home For My Buttons

White ButtonsSo last month, I bought three of these old mason jars at a antique boutique for only $2.50 with the intention of putting my buttons in them… I quickly discovered that I did not have nearly enough to contain all the buttons! It was serendipitous that a friend at work had six more jars that needed a good home and I was the lucky recipient! (Thanks!) A few days later, I found the three sweet little pint-size jars a the thrift store on half-off day, and they were only 60 cents each! No lids, unfortunately, but I still love them. The blue glass is so appealing to me.

The huge amount of white buttons was purchased from a thrift store in three old crusty tupperware containers, and they were the start of this collection. “Look at all the white buttons!!” I shrieked to my husband as I snatched up the containers. He rolled his eyes. :) Visions immediately popped into my head of a collage of buttons in every shade of white stitched onto linen. I can imagine them bound together for charming necklaces and bracelets. They would be cute sewn onto handmade purses and accessories. So many buttons, so little time! haha

All the Buttons

2 Jars of ButtonsAfter the white buttons, I later encountered a gallon-sized Ziploc bag full of mixed vintage buttons at an antique fair for $5.00! I sorted those out by color. There were many black and white buttons in there, lots of colored ones, and some neat leather and wooden buttons too. And THEN, after that find, I found ANOTHER huge bag of mixed buttons at the thrift store for $2.50! I better start making things with buttons…

Filed under: antiques,collections,thrifting — Rachelle @ 8:47 pm

September 29, 2008

Fun Weekend Finds

Click to zoom in! I spent the weekend at my Grandma’s house and we did a little antique/boutique shop crawl! I didn’t go too crazy, but found a few great deals. The Golden books were $1 each. I seem to be collecting books with old cat illustrations now. I got the entire spool of heavy red pet leash-type material for $5.25. I have no idea what I’m going to do with it, but it seemed like such a good deal… The old blue canning jars were $2.50 each – I think I’ll be using them for craft supply storage! As for that bag of beads, when I first spied it, I immediately thought they were plastic due to the bright colors. I poked the bag, and was surprised to find that it was rather heavy. A big bag of Czech glass beads for $2!! The yellow depression glass sherbet glasses were $5 each. They are in a desirable parrot pattern, and I was informed by my father-in-law that they are worth $30 a piece. :) The pretty clear cut glasses were only $2 each.

Filed under: antiques,shopping — Rachelle @ 7:39 am

September 22, 2008

My Toon Vector Art Process

I was charged with creating a Halloween-themed image of our company mascot to put into the monthly newsletter. This was probably the most exciting thing I did all day, so I thought I’d share a little bit about my creation process. :)

Chicken SketchThe art starts with a sketch on a crappy lined notepad that came from the office supply room. I didn’t draw very large, or get into much detail on this one. Sometimes I do, sometimes I don’t.

Making Chicken Line ArtThe sketch is scanned and brought into Photoshop. I use my Wacom pressure-sensitive tablet to draw line art on a new layer atop the sketch. I’ve decided to add in a bucket-o-treats, so I made the canvas a little larger to accommodate it.

Chicken Line ArtWhen the lines are done, I drop out the back layer and save it. Then I open up Adobe Illustrator and place the Photoshop file into the Illustrator file. I use the trace feature in Illustrator to vectorize my line art. I expand that and ungroup it. Then I use the magic wand to select and delete all the white areas.

Color ChickenI create a new layer underneath the line art layer. Then I lock the line art layer and start adding in the blocks of color underneath using the pen tool. And, that’s about it. The company mascot is a rubber chicken, BTW… hehehe I made him look a bit too lively, I think.

Filed under: design — Rachelle @ 10:30 pm
« Newer PostsOlder Posts »