My Tieta Carme loves her cheese. Tieta, is Catalan for an auntie, a familiar form derived from the word 'tia' (aunt), connoting that she is someone that you are quite close to. I am.
It was always a family ritual that when any one of us went away somewhere far from home we would bring back a souvenir for everyone, and she got either cheese or make up, but usually cheese. Even when I was quite small and used to come to London as an unaccompanied minor with my red Iberia bib bag with all my worldly paperwork stuffed into it, I remember going back with a selection of British cheeses for her... In those days when I was the souvenir recipient I was much keener to get the odd airport toy or sheet of stickers myself, but now I have moved to the cheese side, and I totally get her.
I recently discovered that there's a universe full of people out there who collect vintage French or Swiss cheese labels for fun. Well I jumped onto that bandwagon sooner than you can say reblochon, and found a wonderful seller of quirky graphics, Harmonica Godlfish who had just the images I had in mind. Do check out the shop - it is pretty magical.
So in honour of my favourite tieta, I made some cheese label magnets to adorn her fridge.
Resizing the images to fit the 25mm trays was a bit of a technical pain in the proverbial, but we got there. I printed out a sheet full, and cut them to size using a craft punch. Then I coated the images with a bit of hairspray (here Sainsbury's value range, cheap as chips). They were laser prints on good thick paper and I was going to be using epoxy resin stickers, so not crazily worried about the inks running here, but still. One precaution won't hurt.
When dry, I glued the self adhesive epoxy stickers over the top of the images.
I had already cut the images and centering the sticker correctly was nowhere as difficult as I'd envisaged (normally I stick first and then cut the image around the sticker).
Then I ModPodged some blank cabochon settings, and popped the domed images into those, wiping away any excess out of the sides.
Inspect your work. Be pleased at how pretty it turns out. My fingers were stained from a previous project, I do normally wash my hands but that black paint proved a nightmare to clean. Thank the world of science for surgical spirit which removed most of the mess!
I have recently come across some fantastic self-adhesive neodymium magnets, which means they are very strong, but they come with an equally strong sticker that you just peel off and attach to wherever you need. They will be in the shop shortly.
And they went onto the backs with a pretty neat finish (unlike every other time I have used glue and made a humongous mess of the backs)
I like the way they click together...
Hey, I'm easily amused. Even now I can still have great fun with a magnet, much like my five year old does.
Magnets are finished. I love these so much, I'm going to make a set for myself. And maybe for all my cheese loving friends, and perhaps for an ex-boss I am still in touch with, whom we used to call 'le grand fromage'. Apt, methinks.
But these, these are for tieta. x
Showing posts with label Magnets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Magnets. Show all posts
Monday, 30 May 2011
Sunday, 13 March 2011
My First Attempts at Magnets
These were my first attempts at joining glass to paper - with my first bottle of Diamond Glaze I made some magnets that I was (am!) very proud of. They still grace my fridge to this day.
In those days, I'm talking about oh a good couple of years ago, all I could find were these glass drops, they were all uneven, full of bubbles and prone to splintering, but it was a revelation to me how they would transform a simple image into something that seemed to move as my eyes glanced over it - if I moved this way, the image would move that way, if I moved that way, the image would move here - now I know this as the dimensional effect of glass, and certainly round domed glass seems to show this more than square flat glass. There is probably a very good scientific reason for it, but I won't go investigating. I'm guilty of always wanting to know the why of everything, but sometimes it is refreshing to just enjoy without probing.
In those days, I'm talking about oh a good couple of years ago, all I could find were these glass drops, they were all uneven, full of bubbles and prone to splintering, but it was a revelation to me how they would transform a simple image into something that seemed to move as my eyes glanced over it - if I moved this way, the image would move that way, if I moved that way, the image would move here - now I know this as the dimensional effect of glass, and certainly round domed glass seems to show this more than square flat glass. There is probably a very good scientific reason for it, but I won't go investigating. I'm guilty of always wanting to know the why of everything, but sometimes it is refreshing to just enjoy without probing.
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