Fun at Camp Stoneybrook!

We promised it would be on the blog yesterday but due to server issues, we had to go back on our word (sorry, digi fans!)…but here it is, our latest Camp Stoneybrook digital layouts post, pretty as a picture and including tips from the CT team!

Feast your eyes on Donna’s intricate and so cute Stoneybrook layout, which we think features the most gorgeous little smile this side of anywhere.

Donna says she used a transparency over her background paper and set the blending mode of the transparency to “Color burn”, as well as increasing the opacity to 25 per cent.

The black border is also a transparency, from which she erased the bottom and duplicated it, then changed the border layer’s orientation to vertical by selecting Edit>Transform>Flip vertical. This changes the black border, not the entire layout.

For the title, Donna says she erased the ‘s’ from the “Happy Campers” word art and repositioned the exclamation mark closer to the final word.

Just personally, we’re really feeling the flourishes (we can’t remember when we last noticed flourishes used in a layout like this) and the wonky stitching border – not to mention all that rustic-y layering. Donna, we think your gorgeous photos must give you an inspiration overload because everything we see from you is just gold!

Now onto a different kettle of fish by Kathleen, who included a strip of felt down the side of the matting and a series of three very different photos that immediately piqued our interest.

Outdoorsy, au natural and reminiscent of lazy afternoons spent picnicking by the river, this is one layout that takes you back to that special day last spring. Roll on adventures, we say, and show us more of what we love using our mellow Camp Stoneybrook mega kit!

And if you doubted it could be used for scrapping any other kind of photos, guess again…Brittney shows us how the collection can be used for something a little more unusual.

Brittney says she hasn’t been camping in many years so she chose to scrap about autumn (or as US scrappers would say, fall) and football – to quote our resourcesful CT member, “Just because you don’t have pictures to match the exact theme doesn’t mean you can’t use the kit”.

She says she tried to keep her layout fairly simple, first using the quick selection tool in Photoshop CS3 to extract the player and ball from her photo, then copying them and colouring the new image black and white.

Brittney blended it by changing its overlay and capacity as well as adding a large but lighter shadow to make the football player stand out from the page.

For the title she added a white stroke around the letters with a soft drop shadow and then mimicked the main photo with a similar stroke.

Just goes to show, with a little creativity, some know-how and the confidence to think outside the square, any digi scrapper can pull off some slightly left-of-centre ideas for just about any layout using whichever collection takes your fancy!

Check out Camp Stoneybrook here and tell us what you think – which elements and brushes do you like and what else do you think we could have included in the mega kit?

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5 comments

1 crazymumm { 01.14.10 at 10:58 pm }

Some Scout Symbols would have been great… but this sure is one kit that I need to put on my wish list (I have tons of Scout camp photos that need to be scrapped) :)

2 Nina { 01.14.10 at 11:33 pm }

Love your work, Donna girl! =)

3 {leah} { 01.15.10 at 6:08 am }

Very nice girls! They came out great! :D

4 Samantha { 01.15.10 at 11:09 am }

wow! love all the different elements! love how you included the wood forishes, the colour combo is fantasic!
Just wondering Has kasier thought of doing templates?? would be a big winner for beginners

5 Donna E. { 01.17.10 at 10:20 pm }

thank u girls for the comments!

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