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Tips & Techniques Home



Brass Stencils




Embossing Tips with Brass Stencils - 'Faux Tile' Technique
Contributed by Aldonna Wedge - P.S. I Love You - Brass Stencils


1. Dry emboss the complete tile design on your paper. Leave the stencil on though step 6.
2. Leaving the stencil on the paper, put a second stencil of your choice on top of the first (now on the right side of the paper). This is your decorative stencil.
3. Stencil the second decorative design. Use permanent inks to avoid blurring on the next step.
4. Remove the second stencil.
5. With the tile stencil still in place, dab with clear embossing ink.
6. REMOVE THE TILE STENCIL and sprinkle with clear embossing powder, or Extra Thick Embossing powder. (If you forget to remove the stencil, it will be messier to clean up).
7. Finally, heat to melt the embossing powder. Voila! A 'faux tile'.


Stamp Artist - Lynell Harlow of Dreamweaver Stencils

Embossing Tips with Brass Stencils
Aldonna Wedge -
P.S. I Love You Brass Stencils
Front of Paper: The front of the paper is the side that you put down onto the stencil. You will be tracing on the back.  
What to trace: You only have the trace the edge of the open design. The center does not have to be traced. In fact, don't!
Waxed Paper: Rub the paper with a piece of waxed paper so that the stylus will glide over the paper. Rubbing the paper with your finger will also serve the same purpose.
Masking Tape: If you are just embossing, you may want to tape the stencil to the light box. If you are going to stencil after, you may want to tape the stencil to the paper. Be sure that you stick the masking tape to your clothing several times before you use it on the paper or it will be too sticky and tear the paper when you remove it. Special tapes are available, but masking tape used properly will suffice.
Stylus Size: I try to use the largest stylus possible for a given design. The smaller the stylus, the greater possibility of tearing the paper. If you don't have a stylus, a ball point pen that has run out of ink, a knitting needle, or anything with a rounded point will do.
Paper Choice: Many papers are suitable for embossing. A heavier paper will give a nicer effect. Watercolor art paper which is about 90 lb. weight is wonderful. 100% cotton paper at a lighter weight is also great. Card stock is good, but if the color is dark, it becomes opaque and you must do "blind embossing".
Corrections: If you take up the paper and find that you missed a portion of your design, you can put it down again and fix it. You do have to align the paper up where it had been. I shine a light on the paper to do this.
Variety of Use: You may decide to use only a portion of the stencil. Also, there is no right or wrong side to a stencil, so you simply flip it over to get a mirror image. Perhaps with words and letters you may not want to do this.
Removing a new Stencil from its packaging: I keep the stencil flat on a table and pull the paper and tape away from the stencil. This will prevent the stencil from bending if the tape is especially sticky.
Stencils with points. Some few stencils have points that could snag or tangle with other stencils or objects. I make sure these go into a plastic bag when not in use to prevent damage
Storing Stencils. I have many stencils, therefore, I keep them in heavy poly bags numbered as I assigned them on my web pages.
Completeness of Design. If there is a particularly detailed design, I don't remove the paper to check it. I hold the paper down and lift the paper and look at the design and compare it to the stencil which you can see with the light box shining beneath it. With the very detailed designs, it is very difficult to reallign the stencil accurately.
Stencils as Ornaments. Many of the stencils can be hung as ornaments because they have a hole in them for this very purpose. Be careful not to emboss or stencil that functional/non-design hole.
Partial Use of the Design. If you are making several note cards or other items and using only part of the design, you might want to mask off the part you are not interested in with masking tape. Otherwise, you might forget and just use too much of the stencil by mistake.




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