Thursday, August 25, 2022

Dry Embossed Vellum

What is it about vellum that adds elegance to a card or project? I decided to try dry embossing vellum to see how I liked it. I used a Crafters Companion embossing folder & love how it turned out.

The dies, bee image (colored with Copics) and sentiment are from Honey Bee Stamps.

I added a strip of gold washi tape on one edge and some Clear Wink of Stella to the flower center and the bee wings to add some shine and festivity. Hopefully, you can see it in the second photo.



I’m linking this to the following challenges:

Simon Says Stamp Wednesday Challenge-Shimmer and Shine

Through the Craftroom Door-ATG

Dies R Us Challenge #199-Summer

Time Out Challenge 221-Festive

Edit to add: I forgot to link this to:

Sketch-N-Scrap-Card Sketch #224-turned the sketch a bit




Monday, August 22, 2022

Blog Hop for Honeybee Awareness

🐝 World Bee day is May 20. In the United States, National Bee Day is on the 3rd Saturday of August.🐝

I’m linking this to a Bloghop for World Honeybee Awareness. It starts Here on my friend Milka’s blog.

We all depend on the survival of bees. Here are some facts from United Nations

Bees and other pollinators, such as butterflies, bats and hummingbirds, are increasingly under threat from human activities.

Pollination is, however, a fundamental process for the survival of our ecosystems. Nearly 90% of the world’s wild flowering plant species depend, entirely, or at least in part, on animal pollination, along with more than 75% of the world’s food crops and 35% of global agricultural land. Not only do pollinators contribute directly to food security, but they are key to conserving biodiversity.

To raise awareness of the importance of pollinators, the threats they face and their contribution to sustainable development, the UN designated 20 May as World Bee Day.

The goal is to strengthen measures aimed at protecting bees and other pollinators, which would significantly contribute to solving problems related to the global food supply and eliminate hunger in developing countries.

We all depend on pollinators and it is, therefore, crucial to monitor their decline and halt the loss of biodiversity.

How can we do more?

Individually by: 

  • planting a diverse set of native plants, which flower at different times of the year;
  • buying raw honey from local farmers;
  • buying products from sustainable agricultural practices;
  • avoiding pesticides, fungicides or herbicides in our gardens;
  • protecting wild bee colonies when possible;
  • sponsoring a hive;
  • making a bee water fountain by leaving a water bowl outside;
  • helping sustaining forest ecosystems;
  • raising awareness around us by sharing this information within our communities and networks; The decline of bees affects us all!
                         
Here’s the card that I made for the bloghop


The Coneflower dies & word dies (NBUS), bee snd sentiment stamp are from HoneyBee Stamps. I used an embossing folder from JoAnns to dry emboss the background. I then inked it up with Distress Oxide inks.
I heat embossed the sentiment using black ink and Wow Clear embossing powder.

I’m also linking this to the following challenges: