Paper Talk With Paul Jackson
You lucky PaperCrafter readers have the chance to win one of five copies of Cut and Fold Paper Textures by Paul Jackson we have to give away. Enter here before...
To kick off your summer, we’ve got 5 craft ideas that are guaranteed to make sure your hols get off to a flying start. To try these five fabulous craft ideas, you mainly just need a good stash of paper and sharp pair of scissors — plus the usual PaperCrafter enthusiasm!
1. Create paper cut artwork
* The templates take you through beginner, intermediate and advanced paper cuts
2. Make a washi wall
Credit: Transform a plain wall into a delightfully crafty memo space
* Simply cut lengths of washi tape to form different borders to frame photos and pretty papers
3. Try journalling
* Try this classic book-binding technique and we promise you’ll never go shop bought again
4. Elevate your envelopes
* Don’t let your cards down with tatty envelopes, use your favourite papers instead
5. Prep for Christmas
Credit: Pick up issue 74 of PaperCafter (on sale 15th August)
* Make a variety of festive and non festive makes with the stunning kit and designer papers that come with issue 74
It’s also a great chance to start building your stash for the great Christmas countdown. Try these craft ideas and make sure you have a fantastically crafty time this summer and spend some valuable me-time with your copy of PaperCrafter.
* Make a variety of festive and non festive makes with the stunning kit and designer papers that come with issue 74
You lucky PaperCrafter readers have the chance to win one of five copies of Cut and Fold Paper Textures by Paul Jackson we have to give away. Enter here before...
Smashbooks are our new favourite thing here at PaperCrafter HQ, we really can’t get enough. Cross between a scrapbook and a journal there’s no limits. Whether you want to stick in memories,...
There’s a new book on our crafty radar and we can’t get enough of it! We caught up with the multi-talented photomontage illustrator, and author of Cut, Paste, Create, Eleanor Shakespeare, to find...