Newsletter signup

Features

  • Top (the) dogs
    At its essence, a hot dog is just a mild sausage in a bun. Nothing terribly complicated about that, until geographic preferences are considered, some so strong that they might bring dissenters to blows.
  • Just missing her mark
      Check out the Senior Games video.
  • Planting idea of healthy food
    Something is sprouting at Margy Hooker’s certified organic Tanglewood Berry Farm in southwest Fort Wayne.Children.
Advertisement
On Sunday
•Lara Neel with Crafty Living: Math4Knitters offers a pattern for Behm Cloth 1, the first in series of five. The pattern, along with a podcast interview with Lee Meredith, is available at www.journalgazette.net/craftyliving.
Lara Neel | The Journal Gazette
crafting

Create a patriotic shadow box

3-D effect makes perfect backdrop for any photo

Scripps Howard News Service
The bold, graphic look of stars and stripes create the perfect backdrop for a special summer photo that is enhanced with a 3-D effect.

Stars and stripes seem to signal the beginning of summer, with Memorial Day celebrations and continue into the Fourth of July festivities. But these patriotic symbols need not be relegated strictly to holidays.

The bold, graphic look creates the perfect backdrop for a summer photo that is enhanced with a 3-D effect.

To permit dimensionality, select a shadow box in place of a standard picture frame. It’s important to substitute a sheet of thick cardboard or foam core board for the wood backing in the box to make it possible to stick pins in later. But first, the cardboard should be covered with a sheet of white cardstock.

The red stripes of the flag design are more interesting if they are created with a series of red squares and rectangles, cut from an assortment of papers in several shades of red. As the red paper segments are attached to the white background, it’s fun to raise two or three in each row with foam adhesive. The finished effect looks a little like a flag that is waving in the breeze.

The photo is matted with blue paper and raised with three or four thicknesses of foam adhesive. The final dimensional element, straight pins with colored heads, are poked through blue punched stars. Each star is pulled out so it rests against the pinhead and not against the white background.

The star pins are poked into the white covered cardboard in a pattern that mimics the feel of the star section of a flag.

With the exception of the shadow box, it is likely that the supplies for this project are already sitting around your house. So what are you waiting for? It’s time to get crafting!

Advertisement