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Left over stamped images and elements that are piling up
Does anyone else have piles and baggies of extra stamped elements, die cuts, and partial stamped backgrounds that are just piling up? I usually stamp at least one extra image each time I stamp, and often stamp multiples if I'm heat embossing or trying a new technique. My plan is to use them on future cards but then I end up tucking them away.
As I'm cleaning and reorganizing my room, I'm finding baggies, boxes, and drawers FULL of these...eek! I'm busy sorting them by color, and then organizing them into a large tub. I plan to keep that tub under my craft table so that I'll remember to rummage through it as I plan my cards.
Am I one the only one who keeps all this stuff? If you do as well, how do you make yourself use it? It's hard for me to start with something that was already stamped and colored, and to design a card around it. That's why I almost never use pre-made or printed embellishments...because I can never coordinate papers and colors. It's easiest for me to custom color the card bits after I start with a card base and patterned paper.
Any tips? My husband says I should just throw it all out of course..haha! Some images were so old that my tastes have changed completely (as in 15 years ago) so those were tossed. I still have enough to make cards for the next 2 years though.
Just wanted to add that I take many of those extras with me to the Senior Center, where I work with a card making group, but these are the odds and ends that really don't make a full card. We're talking random flowers, distressed tags, stamped border strips, metallic embossed fancy corners etc. The seniors wouldn't know what to do with these either!
Karen
Ooh! I’ve been there I don’t make multiples anymore or even color too many extra images because of it. I seem to better when I start a card from scratch. However, there is a lady I watch on YouTube sometimes who keeps a couple of mugs (bowls?) on her desk. One has images to get used the other has sentiments and die cut words. Whenever she makes a card she goes through there and tries to find elements to use before making something else. It’s helped me to use some things and also feel better about tossing their items. Maybe try that for a while and see how it goes?
I’m there with you. I find that when I’m chatting on the phone and at my craft table I like to play around with those pieces. Sometimes I find new ways to put them together and make some simple cards. Other times I find it’s just fun to put ridiculous pieces together. (I can spend a bit of time on the phone with some family and friends as I’m a long way from most of them. They know I’m playing!)
Sometimes 1-3 extra die cuts are kept in their pocket with the die behind a cardstock separator. Strips of CS and patterned paper are kept for strip cards, not a lot. And I keep a fair number of backgrounds in a small bin to flip through for card fronts or die cuts.
But I don’t keep any extra stamped images other than if there’s no index sheet I might stamp one to put in the pocket. Since I don’t enjoy traditional coloring of images, plus images could end up in a variety of locations on a card front or on an already prepared background, there’d rarely be a use for extra ones.
Taking them to a senior center is lovely; I bet they’re popular and useful.
I keep them in a plastic box, and I bring them with me when I go to my mom's to make cards with her. I bring some white and off-white cardstock for bases, and I get creative.
I have an entire Alex drawer full of just images and bits. I started when I was pregnant and couldn't stamp so friends would send me images to colour. (I was on bedrest.). My kids are now teenagers and I am still trying to use up some of the images... The scary part is I will use about 50 a year and I still have a drawer full. Some get used and then people will save pretty cards for me or wrapping and more goes in.
Yes, many of the embellishments were originally made for tags, so they're pretty small. I think I should start with another tag and just start layering. Maybe it will turn into a card...but even if it's a tag in the end, that's better than a bunch of baggies, right?
Karen
I have an entire Alex drawer full of just images and bits. I started when I was pregnant and couldn't stamp so friends would send me images to colour. (I was on bedrest.). My kids are now teenagers and I am still trying to use up some of the images... The scary part is I will use about 50 a year and I still have a drawer full. Some get used and then people will save pretty cards for me or wrapping and more goes in.
The stamped images that people have sent to me are not a problem for me to use, because they're different from the stamps that I own. The problem is that I never think to use the pre-stamped ones that I made because I just stamp another image from the set I have. I don't even remember that I have an extra one, or two, or three extra images in my stash! I should probably go through and put those extra images with the actual stamp set so I use them. Duh...
Karen
I keep them in a plastic box, and I bring them with me when I go to my mom's to make cards with her. I bring some white and off-white cardstock for bases, and I get creative.
Great idea! I should start doing that when I go to my daughter's house to help with the grandkids once the shut down is over. Hmmm, maybe throw in some embossed backgrounds too.
Karen
I'm glad to see that others have done the same thing, and have them piling up as well. I'm trying not to cut or stamp extras anymore, because it's better if I just stamp or die cut as needed for a particular project. It always seems easier to stamp or cut extras when everything is out...but then I don't end up using them.
Karen
This is my prefer way to stamp and die cut. I make everything ahead of time and then dig through my baggies. If I have to set down with my dies and stamps to make a project I am just over it before I started.
I love my baggie pre-cut-stamp system so much that I have one day each month I set down and just cut and stamp. It's a good way to get rid of scraps.
I have/had the same problem. When I started organizing clear stamps in the plastic sleeves a la Jennifer McGuire, I started storing embellishments in the same way. If I make extra stamped images, I now adhere them to cardstock with repositionable adhesive and put them in plastic sleeves by subject, such as all hearts together, etc. Then I put the sleeve behind dividers by category. Now, when I am looking for an embellishment that I might be able to use without making a new one, I can simply flip through the sleeves and see what I have very easily. BUT.... I don't save all of them anymore, otherwise it would be hard to keep up with this system lol. I store stickers this way too.
I often take my extra images to the nursing homes I work at, but I also take them to the local elementary school. They have a maker's space in the library and even tiny images are a hit as they use them to make bookmarks.
I have put a lot of my extra images (ready to use) in the box of supplies I have for my grandkids' artwork. They like to make cards and oftentimes they grab those images to make cards for their friends.
I keep all my extras(images-both colored and uncolored,) , dies, sentiments, and purchased embellishments I am so over using in clamshells labeled with season/occasion. These my grandsons use generously when they want to make their mom or dad a card and I let them with no restrictions. They are ages 7, 6 and 4 and 4(twins)....I keep glue sticks and kid safe scissors in a clamshell as well. When they want to make "cards" I score and fold white bases and then clear out of their way...I also have a grab and use box of DSP they are allowed to use. It helps keep the leftovers from overwhelming me with guilt for not using.
__________________ c-mouse-If you can't say nuttin nice--don't say nuttin at all. Thumper. Pansy
Card Sketch Challenge 1-227 done only 396+ to go to be caught up!!!!!
Maybe an idea would be to do a focused use of them? Dont wait...just start making some general kind of cards you can pop a sentiment onto later? Better some blank cards than endless bits around?
I once had hundreds of pre cuts frames that I never got around to using (before I had dies a friend loaned me hers and I spent two weekends just cranking) so I donated those to a charity here.
The only pre-cuts now I have around are sentiments. I will cut extra of those and share some with friends and have a few around.
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Maybe an idea would be to do a focused use of them? Dont wait...just start making some general kind of cards you can pop a sentiment onto later? Better some blank cards than endless bits around?
I once had hundreds of pre cuts frames that I never got around to using (before I had dies a friend loaned me hers and I spent two weekends just cranking) so I donated those to a charity here.
The only pre-cuts now I have around are sentiments. I will cut extra of those and share some with friends and have a few around.
Good idea. I think I'll start with plain card bases with solid cardstock, so I'm not distracted with trying to match patterned papers and colors. You're right that basic cards are better than a bunch of random bits and pieces! Who knows...I may even have fun!
Karen
I keep all my extras(images-both colored and uncolored,) , dies, sentiments, and purchased embellishments I am so over using in clamshells labeled with season/occasion. These my grandsons use generously when they want to make their mom or dad a card and I let them with no restrictions. They are ages 7, 6 and 4 and 4(twins)....I keep glue sticks and kid safe scissors in a clamshell as well. When they want to make "cards" I score and fold white bases and then clear out of their way...I also have a grab and use box of DSP they are allowed to use. It helps keep the leftovers from overwhelming me with guilt for not using.
Isn't it fun when kids get creative?!! I have a whole case that I take to my grandkid's house when I spend the night, and also added glue sticks, scissors, washi tape etc. I fill it with card blanks, solid and patterned papers cut to size, and extra stickers and images to color. The items that I have piling up are usually intricate dies or small images that are too difficult for them to glue, or color. The larger stamped images are good for them, but the 6 year old prefers to draw her own, haha!
Karen
I had the same problem so a couple of years ago I separated it all (stamped, cut, stickers, etc) into zip bags by category. Those bags are now in a large basket by my desk and I have made it a habit to look there when creating. Organization and developing the habit were key to reducing the "pile".
The other thing that helped me use my bits is journaling. Whatever kind you do, these bits are useful treasures. Be it a planner, art journaling, junk journals...like I said anything can be used in some way or another.
I belong to a stamp group so every once in a while I bag up my extras and give one to each of the ladies. Great way to keep my stash down and new fun for my friends (actually it is a good way to get rid of my problem and let them deal with it! LOL)
Thinking of you/Miss you is very good for right now.
We all keep talking about never having enough sympathy cards and maybe not feeling like making one at the time if we know the person and are sad ourselves...
Go for it! No pressure....just spread 'em out on the dining table and see if they "talk to you"--and want to get paired up with another one, or a design idea, or a sentiment idea, or a color theme...if you have backgrounds hanging out too, they may match up
Kind of a variation of the card game concentration-not an exact match but a good pairing.
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Reading everyone's ideas got me to thinking. And cleaning. I have a large gallon sized ziplock (okay, maybe 3), full of elements and leftovers from various projects, paper pumpkin kits, Hero Arts kits...you name it. I contacted a co-worker who has young children (aged 5 and 8 ) to see if he'd be interested. He was really happy to take them off my hands. Since the shelter in place with the kids home, he had run out of things for them to do. They're going to make cards for some of the elderly folks in his church who don't have anyone and I thought that was nice. Plus, now I have more space! ;)
__________________ "I have cats, but they don't smoke or associate with dogs...."
When I need to make a card I sometimes go through them to spark my creativity. Much quicker for me to work with them and design a card around them than to think about a new design with all the stamps and dies I own.
I send my extra stamped images in happy mail to a group I am in. They always are appreciated and not many of the members have the same stamp, so it works out beautifully.
I bought one of the Iris Photo boxes, with 16 small photo cases in it. I have labelled the small cases and sort my "extras" into those - eg Christmas, Hallowe'en, Children, Misc Shapes etc. I find I do go to those to check what I have before I start re-inventing the wheel. Every so often I go through them and discard those that I haven't used and have been there for a while.
I do the same! Recently our 9 year old granddaughter has started making birthday cards for her friends and thank you notes for us. I picked out some things that I think she would use, and sent them on to her, along with some blank cards, some die-cut sentiments, etc. She was thrilled!
Just to be contrarian for a moment, it can be a gift to yourself to actually let all of the scraps go. If having them around takes up space you need for other things, makes you feel like you should spend time organizing them rather than making something else, and if you have learned that you easily forget about them, do yourself a favor and give them away or recycle them. It might feel wasteful and terrible, I get that, but it might also be the right choice.
I've discovered scraps that are easily 15-20 years old that I was sure I'd use until I tucked them away, forgot about them, and went on to the next thing. Recently, I've started going through the scraps and turning whatever I can into elements for pocket letters. The rest are going. It's actually a relief for me to not have them and no longer feel obligated to use them!
I have a tall plastic set of storage drawers that are 11x14 ish. I keep like colors in each drawer; yellows/oranges together, pinks/reds together, blues/purples together, browns/blacks together, greens, beige/sand/whites together.
When I stamp, I go to my scrap bin first and then to my full pages. The bins are clear so the colors are easy to find.
I find that my paper gets used and my paper orders are less and less.
I cherish my scraps. I will say that I rarely make an extra to store but will keep any leftovers or second thoughts.
This has worked for me for the last 15 years and yes some have faded but still usable with just a nip and a tuck here and there (like me).
__________________ Don't always insist on:
The right of way, being right or turning right.
Just smile as you turn left every now and then (just for drill).
Just to be contrarian for a moment, it can be a gift to yourself to actually let all of the scraps go. If having them around takes up space you need for other things, makes you feel like you should spend time organizing them rather than making something else, and if you have learned that you easily forget about them, do yourself a favor and give them away or recycle them. It might feel wasteful and terrible, I get that, but it might also be the right choice.
I've discovered scraps that are easily 15-20 years old that I was sure I'd use until I tucked them away, forgot about them, and went on to the next thing. Recently, I've started going through the scraps and turning whatever I can into elements for pocket letters. The rest are going. It's actually a relief for me to not have them and no longer feel obligated to use them!
You have all spoken my language but I have found that Joanna has really spoken to me. I have so many different butterflies, heart, stars, squares, rectangles...you get the picture! However, I'm a SU demo and blog every day so I really should be using current colors, etc. I'm cleaning drawers, bins and boxes this week. I hope I don't weaken. I need to carry through with this plan...lol. I have no problem with my scraps as I have them in with full sheets of cardstock by color. Wish me luck! Karen, let us know what you end up doing in your predicament!!
I don't make duplicates of elements unless I'm making multiple versions of the card. However, I often use scraps of the DSP or watercolour background inside the card. Still end up with baggies of bits and pieces that I can't seem to toss!
I do save them up for awhile and then at some point I decide to sit down and use as many as I can for donation cards. Before I found SCS, I would donate to our local cancer center, nursing homes and some sites I found on-line. Depending on the item (background, flower, etc.), I might continue to save it, but sometimes I would just let it go into the trash. So, I guess I do both. Someone above mentioned using your elements for tags. Another idea, Jennifer McGuire just did a post on adding removable bookmarks on a card. I am sure there are groups who would love to get cards with a "gift" on the front. Here's the link to her blog post:
I recently had to downsize when I moved to a smaller place, so all this had to go. I donated them plus leftover Class kits I made for classes to a local nursing home
I have this basket on my desk so when I need an image or sentiment, I check what I have stored before making something new.
__________________ My Blog- Trusting in the Lord for Everything Proverbs 3:5-6 Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him and He will make your path straight. My Stampin' Up WebsiteMy Gallery, BRAK New Member Mentor. New Grandmother to Mia Lou. 1st Grandchild.
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I just checked out your Pinterest postings. Your cards are SOOOO cute!
I want to make a ALLLLLL of them. Thanks you, thanks you for posting them!!!
Richell
__________________ Don't always insist on:
The right of way, being right or turning right.
Just smile as you turn left every now and then (just for drill).
I belong to a stamp group so every once in a while I bag up my extras and give one to each of the ladies. Great way to keep my stash down and new fun for my friends (actually it is a good way to get rid of my problem and let them deal with it! LOL)
Haha, too funny! None of my local friends stamp or make cards at all. They only scrapbook, and don't use any handmade embellishments. I'm pretty sure that people would run in the other direction if I tried to give away my left overs, because they don't even coordinate. The stamped images aren't the problem as much as the small stamped extras like one random stamped image from a set. Sane people would just toss those little doo dads, but many of those left overs are heat-embossed and inked, and really pretty. It makes me want to use them instead of toss.
That being said, I did manage to throw away a handful of those useless bits the other day. Small steps.
Karen