Designed by: Leslie Beahm
Ingredients:
- StoryBook Creator 4.0 Software
- Divine Digital Power Palette
- Fonts: Title-Vladimir Script, Journaling-Andalus
Ingredients (Canada):
- StoryBook Creator 4.0 Software
- Divine Digital Power Palette
- Fonts: Title-Vladimir Script, Journaling-Andalus
How to Create:
- Open a new page or project that is 12"x12" in size.
- Insert Divine Paper 30 for the background.
- Insert an empty frame that is 12"wide by 9" tall and aligned with the top of the page. Drag Divine Paper 45 into that spot.
- Insert another empty frame. Make it the same size as the frame below and align the two photo holders together. Reduce the opacity of the picture to 60 percent.
- Flatten the photo holders together. Use the blended cutter to cut off the bottom. Make the cutter approximately one inch tall.
- Insert Divine Paper 7. Use a shaped edge from the default Edge Cutters, Classic3 and make the aspect ratio 100 (really big sweeping curve). Position the cutting edge to make a nice sweeping curve on the page. Apply a light shadow.
- Insert Divine Paper 43. Use the same shaped edge to cut this paper, too, but orient the cutter so that flow of the curve is different than the first one. Apply a light shadow.
- Insert flowers and brads to make clusters around your page. Here, I used all the flowers, resizing them to create interest. I used brads to make the centers of some flowers and used others and resized quite small to make scatters. I inserted various flourishes to simulate leaves and tucked them under the flowers. Add soft heavy shadows to the flowers and light shadows to the brads. Add light shadows to the flourishes.
- Insert another empty frame that is approximately 3.6"x4.6". Add a default frame Classic 3 from the Frames and Mats menu. Fill that with a photo. The frame will make the photo appear with a sepia tone. Rotate this frame to a 5 degree angle and add a heavy shadow. Here, I flattened it with the shadow and then added a light shadow on the opposite angle to create depth.
- Add Divine Ribbons 3 and 8. Locate them behind the frame you just made. Rotate them to be slightly different angles. Use the custom straight cutter to cut the ribbons at an angle. Add light shadows.
- Add some additional flowers and flourishes to the left hand side of the frame. I copied from the ones already on the page, for ease.
- I added a burlap texture to all of the papers, the main photo and some of the flourishes.
- Use the Delight Fancy Text Font2 for your title. Fill that alpha with Divine Paper 21.
- Here, I used Vladimir Script for the secondary title. Right align that with the Primary title.
- Add journaling. Here I used Andalus.
How sweet!
Posted by: Would Love to Scrap on Mac | March 06, 2012 at 09:50 AM
Now, THIS is lovely and makes me want to buy the Divine Digital Power Palette. GORGEOUS page!!
Posted by: Stella | March 06, 2012 at 09:57 AM
Absolutely stunning page. I have an old picture of my son I should use to try to recreate this page. Thank you for the inspiration. Now I need this palette!!!
Posted by: Kimberly | March 06, 2012 at 01:20 PM
Beautiful page but I'm confused, when do you place the photo? Do you put the photo image when you reach step 4? turn the photo to an opacity 60?
Posted by: Natalie Valenzuela | March 09, 2012 at 01:34 PM
Beautiful page
Posted by: Tanis Gunderson | March 11, 2012 at 02:47 PM
I am biased, but I have to RAVE about how gorgeous this page is! LOVE it love it totally!
Posted by: Lori B | March 11, 2012 at 06:14 PM
Wet and dry type can pull wet hair. Wet and dry type of straight hair straight hair, the board must have 8-10 pores, so that water can be turned into steam to emerge from the stomata.
Posted by: Farouk CHI | June 02, 2012 at 03:13 AM
It is probable that the little animals only suck the grossest juice through the pores of the thin membrane which covers the leaves.
Posted by: Source | December 28, 2012 at 01:12 AM
It is probable that the little animals only suck the grossest juice through the pores of the thin membrane which covers the leaves.
Posted by: Nate | December 28, 2012 at 01:17 AM