Each year when the winter snows fly, I make Valentine's Day cards to give to friends and family.
The process always starts with experimentation, ideas, & splashes of brightly colored paint. I try out a variety of ideas and choose one to make multiple copies of.
This is the final design. The tri-fold card has hearts cut out with an X-acto blade so you can see into each of the interior pages.
Creating Multiples of the Design
Using 12" x 18" pieces of cold pressed watercolor paper, I measured off four-inch strips of the paper and creased it to make it easy to fold the cards after painting.
I painted the whole paper with the design -- permanent rose watercolor paint and dioxazine purple. Once the watercolor paint was dry, I added white "snowflakes" in the pink area using white acrylic ink.
Next, I cut each larger sheet of painted paper into three segments (6"X12") and folded each one at the crease marks to make a 4"x 6" card.
I traced & cut a large heart shape from the front page, and a medium heart shape from the middle page.
I painted the final, interior page on all of the cards, beginning with splashes of warm, Azo yellow. I traced a third, smaller heart in the center of that page before painting.
While the yellow paint was still wet, I mixed Alizarin crimson and permanent rose, and filled the rest of the page, letting the colors run together.
I played with splattering paint, too.
Once the paint was dry, I inked in the center heart, and added some finishing touches with a white Posca pen. I wanted to repeat the white of the snowflakes.
I gave myself the luxury of experimenting with final decorative marks. I let my intuition lead the way, and discovered that adding wobbly black marks around the purple heart-window set off the white stripes, making them look bolder.
In the center heart, I used an extra-small permanent marker to make playful, vibrant designs. I loved the result! I discovered that the secret was to slow down and let myself play rather than trying to be perfect.
In fact, I made a mantra of telling myself that wobbly, wonky art is human art. It's authentic and real, and the antithesis of plastic, AI "creations." Every time I made a mark in the wrong place, I celebrated my humanness.
I finished up each card by writing the greeting in the inner page, being careful not to let the words show through the heart cut-outs.
A pencil line traced from a yogurt cup gave me a guide for the words.
I wrote the greeting on the line and set it aside to dry. The last step was erasing the pencil marks.
Now my Valentines are ready to sign & mail!
Wishing you happy creating and a happy Valentine's Day!

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