It started life as a coffee tin and I had fun trying out a different colour combo for a more silvery/gunmetal style finish. I added some detail like a line of glue at the "shoulder" for a welding seam and cheap Christmas bead chain in the groove around the top of the canister where the original lid would screw on because I decided that one looked too heavy on it once I'd done all the decorating. I made a new lid that just rests inside the top rim (it's several circles of cereal packet board glued together - the texture is scrunched up tissue stuck over the top - with a little wooden knob glued into place).
Coffee tin
Die cuts
Flat back pearls
Bead chain
Deep midnight blue and Prussian blue Americana acrylic paints by DecoArt
Shimmering Silver metallic acrylic paint by DecoArt
Texturizing medium by DecoArt
Cardstock
Wooden knob
Tissue paper
Gosh - no stamping! It's been a while since that happened.
Thanks for stopping by!
Another stunning piece of work...and no stamping! Wow!
ReplyDeleteWowser! I love your inventiveness, Joanne, and it looks totally amazing.
ReplyDeleteThis is amazing Joanne, I love it all and want to make one myself! x
ReplyDeleteIt's fabulous!I love the steampunk snowflakes!
ReplyDeleteThis would make a great gift for a chap.
ReplyDeletethats great joanne:)
ReplyDeleteWOW!!!! I would never have thought you could use snowflakes for stemapunk but this looks incredible Joanne! ell done! xxx
ReplyDeleteThis is so cool!
ReplyDeleteThis is fabulous Joanne, what a great idea a steampunkery snowflake - how cool is that!!!
ReplyDeleteSam xxx
Who would ever have guessed this started life as something mundane. Brilliant :)
ReplyDeleteLynn x
This is absolutely brilliant and totally disguised the coffee tin. I love the attention to minute detail too
ReplyDeletewow great recycling going on there Joanne. Love the colour too.
ReplyDelete:)
Great piece of work and that workshop seems to be really interesting and setting you off on a new style
ReplyDelete