Inspiration: Juliana Michaels Demo + 52 Christmas Card Throwdown (Christmas Critters)
I kept going through my holiday collection to pick the next one I would be working with and I landed on Sugar Cookie from Prima. It was already late, so I just fussy cut a few images from the collection and left it aside until the next day. As I was looking at the recording of the SBC Fest demos I had missed, I saw Juliana Michaels show how to make a mixed media background and I decided to follow her instructions along, picking colours that could work with the Sugar Cookie collection.
I started with Fluid 100 Watercolor Paper and Antique Linen and Tattered Rose Distress inks. I smooshed the ink on the media mat, spritzed and dipped the paper in the ink, dried and layered ink again until I got a background I liked. I then stamped the music sheet from the Music & Advert stamp set (one of my best purchases) in Ground Espresso Archival ink and I overstamped images from the Vintage Holidays stamp set in VersaMark, before adding copper embossing powder. Juliana showed how to use Transparent Gloss texture paste and tint it, so I used Bubblegum Crystal Drops to tint my paste and the flourish stencil from Stampin' Up!'s Plenty of Patterns decorative masks set. I had leftover paste, so I added the same flourish to three of the journaling notecards from the collection. I've raved about this texture paste in the past and I will again, as it's easy to use and adds such a nice shine. It was my first time going for a tint and I love it, so it just renewed my love for the product.
I then used the Stitched Rectangle Stackables dies to cut my panel to a card front size. I was already pretty pleased with the result. (On a side note, I think that Spun Sugar might have been a better match to the paper collection because Tattered Rose is a little more coral than baby pink, but I only have three Distress ink pads, so I used what was the closest match and in the end, with added edge inking, everything ends up still tying nicely together.)
My favorite image that I had fussy cut previously was the adorable reindeer in the wreath. I inked the edges with the Antique Linen ink pad to make the image blend better with the background and then I opened the two ephemera packs that go with the collection to see what I had to work with. I used the wood-pattern tag as my base, I added an iridescent snowflake from the Wonderful Snowflakes pack (cut in half to add to each side) and some greenery also fussy cut from the patterned paper. I wanted to add an eyelet to the tag and the existing hole was slightly too large for regular eyelet, so I glued a scrap of paper underneath, punched a hole the right size and added a copper eyelet.
At the top of the card, I added a rose gold-foiled sentiment block and a little pink heart, both with ink edges. I picked Thick Very Vanilla cardstock for the card base and I added a Petite Pirouette layer using the Deckle Trimmer to cut the edges. I love that thing, especially when working with vintage paper lines as it fits the look so well. The card was starting to take shape, but I wondered if I should add a bit of embellishing. I have recently done a big batch of moulded shapes using paper clay and when my mom visited during the Labour Day weekend, I showed her the result and I did a quick demo of how you can use paint, wax or foundry wax to color the pieces to look how you want. I didn't have any project or collection in mind when I worked on those, so I basically just grabbed waxes willy-nelly and saw where inspiration took me. One of the pocket watch was colored with burgundy wax, with a dab of gold wax over the top to make the details stand out. As I was pulling pieces out of my box, I put that burgundy watch on the card and it was instant love! This is where doing work sessions where you prepare various die-cuts or embellishments ahead of time will pay off when you're later putting projects together. I would never in a million years have thought "hey, let me grab my pocket watch mould and make a piece I'll color burgundy for this card," but I absolutely love the look it gives to the project and how it breaks the all-pink scheme as well, while remaining in the same color family.
I thought the top right of the cluster needed something and I decided to pull the Prima flowers from my stash to see if any would work nicely. I've purchased some on sale and on Clearance in the past couple of years and I rarely ever think to use them, in parts because they are quite bulky. I ended up layering a sparkly vanilla flower that came from the Vintage Burst pack from Fun Stampers Journey (received as a gift from my local store) and a pinkish flower from the Apricot Honey collection (pack #642884).
For the envelope, I used a scrap from my original background, used two petals I had to cut from my vanilla flower to fit it close enough to the tag on the card and another fussy cut wreath image. This is another personal favorite of all of the Christmas cards I've done so far this year.

Here is a picture of what the background looked like before it was turned into a card:

Supplies
Stamps: Music & Advert, Vintage Holidays (Tim Holtz for Stampers Anonymous)
Ink: Ground Espresso Archival, Embossing Ink, Tattered Rose and Antique Linen Distress (Ranger)
Cardstock: Thick Very Vanilla, Petite Pirouette, Fluid 100 Watercolor Paper (Stampin' Up!)
Patterned Papers, Ephemera Pack: Sugar Cookie (Prima Marketing)
Dies: Stitched Rectangle Stackables (Lawn Fawn)
Accessories: Distress Sprayer, Transparent Gloss Texture Paste (Tim Holtz for Ranger); Pocket Watches
Finnabair Decor Mould, Burgundy and White Gold waxes, Apricot Honey Flowers #642884 (Prima Marketing);
Copper Stampin' Emboss Powder, Stampin' Dimensionals, Wonderful Snowflakes, Eyelet,
Plenty of Patterns Decorative Masks, Medium Vanilla Envelope (Stampin' Up!);
Blending Brushes (i-Crafter); Vintage Burst Flowers (Fun Stampers Journey);
Deckle Trimmer, Travel Media Mat (Tim Holtz for Tonic)