Tips on Tuesdays #008 Mixed Media Collage

I often say that Christmas brings out the blue in me—no, I don’t mean holiday blues—I mean in reaction to the proliferation of all things red and green, I am drawn to the color blue. Which is perfect for this, my final ToT for our International Mail Art Celebration of Sapphire which falls during the holiday season!

My holiday themed idea was to create two mixed media collage tree ornaments on a postcard using found painted papers, specially created painted papers (because, of course), and snippets of blue culled from magazines. To draw the ornaments onto white card stock, I used a circle template, choosing two sizes which would fit on the 4”x6” card. Next I drew in the top hangers. Once the ornaments were cut out, I began searching through my stash of painted papers and old magazines for just the right shades, patterns, and textures of blue to create the ornament collages.

In a lovely moment of serendipity (during which I exclaimed aloud and woke Luna from a sound sleep), I found this Van Cleef & Arpels “Treasure Island” advertisement, which included the word Sapphire, in blue!!

On the back of this image in the magazine, there was a blue outlined version, which suited my needs PERFECTLY!

Of course, I HAD to use this, and it formed the basis of the larger of my two ornaments. I also found a satellite view of the Earth which fit the smaller ornament exactly (also magical, right?!), which became the anchor for that one. Everything else fell into place, and once the elements were glued, each ornament contained a combination of painted paper scraps and magazine finds. For a final flourish, I added Posca Metallic Blue pen details to accent the ornament tops and hooks.

I didn’t have a pre-painted paper in just the right shades of blue for the postcard background, so I created one. I sponged a layer of DecoArt Metallic Peacock Pearl over a Lumiere Pearlescent Emerald overall background. Once those layers were dry, I swiped swaths of almost dry paint from the center to each side with Golden Fluid Acrylic Anthraquinone Blue, to suggest evergreen (or everblue?!) boughs.

Once I placed the collaged ornaments on the painted background, it was clear that something was missing—the various blues complimented each other, but in some areas, the ornaments seemed to disappear. Black Sharpie pen to the rescue! I ran the side of the fine point nib around the edges of the ornaments, and voilà! The thin rim of black defined the edges just enough; subtle but effective.

I added a bit of black Sharpie fine line detailing on the ornament tops too.

So, check your paper and magazine stashes for shades, textures, patterns, photos, or advertisements for your own Sapphire serendipity…who knows what treasures you’ll discover!

And, there’s still time to join the fun: the deadline for Celebration of Sapphire postcards to be postmarked is December 31st.
Need a refresher on the ‘rules’ and where to send?
Click here for our original post.

Penny will round out our Tips on Tuesdays posts soon, so stay tuned!
Until next time,
Michelle


Celebration of Sapphire | Have Paper, Will Travel

Greetings, gentle reader. This is a Celebration of Sapphire Field Report from Penny. Yesterday (11/07/2025), I had the great good fortune to be the Guest Presenter to the Craft Club at Harnett County Early College. For this appearance, I brought along a heap of mixed media (no-mess) art supplies* and shared the wonder that is The Celebration of Sapphire International Mail Art Call with a group of almost 20 eager creators.
*Sharpie markers, gel pens POSCA markers, Art Markers, colored pencils, collage fodder, glue sticks, magazines, circle punches, washi tapes, and a stack of postcards cut from 140# watercolor paper.

After a brief introduction and an overview of the project, they descended on the arrayed materials with laser focus. Markers were grabbed, magazine pages were removed, washi tapes were selected, and the scrap bag of miscellany was plundered. Armed with scissors and glue sticks, the young creators rapidly got to work - crafting their visions in hues of blue….

Let me tell you: 45 minutes was GONE in the blink of an eye! They did lovely things in that short amount of time. My only regret is that I did not manage to get photos of all the works in progress. However, I did manage to gather the group for my standard “circle-of-hands” shot before they dispersed from Craft Club back into their day.

Not everyone finished during our time together. After these lovely creations are completed, they will wind their way to HQ to be added to our online exhibit. Didn’t they do a wonderful job? My sincere thanks to the other Ms. Weaver (Tatum M Weaver, History Teacher extraordinaire) for the invitation and the opportunity to work with her lovely students. Thanks for having me!

…and if that wasn’t enough, I enjoyed a gorgeous drive back home under beautiful puffy clouds with vibrant pops of autumnal color. Truly a wonderful way to kickoff the weekend! I hope everyone gets to enjoy some fall color and some unbridled creativity this weekend! Hey, why not send us a postcard to commemorate your endeavors?

Until next time,
- plw