I have used decals before in minis but never printed them myself. What a cool technique 😊 I have printed on fabric before to make monthly garden flags for my miniature dollhouse. Thank you for sharing
You can get tiny nail art caviar beads or flat back beads pretty inexpensively to use on the ends of your suitcase handles to mimic a rivet to make that perfect finishing touch. Heck, even use them on the ends of your straps, too. Your suitcases are adorable.
When you were attaching the "Come Fly With Me" to the suitcase I could hear an airplane flying close to your house. Good timing, Julie!!😊 There are lots of great ideas here. I wondered if, for your WWII house, you were going to add a decal from that era, perhaps an RAF decal onto your suitcase or something. Just an idea. Thank you again!
Beautiful garden Julie, just magical❤ As miniature tack is really what I'm into, theres a Company in the US called Rio Rondo which supplies these buckles in 1:6th, 1:8th, 1:12th and 1:18th scales and perhaps different sizes, its the normal sizes for model horses and they have a huge variety of buckles and D rings and basically anything to do with miniature leather work in gold and silver finishes. There was a European outlet but I tend to make my buckles from wire and jewellery findings so don't buy unless its something really specific and hard to make (stirrups being my biggest bugbear).
Great ideas and video, of course! But I'm always mesmerized by the 'wet glue'. In our extremely dry climate, the dollop would have a skin within minutes. Working time is short, lol.
If I may offer a suggestion . . . most printers will print on standard photo-size papers (4x6, 5x7, etc. here in the US). Specialty papers such as this can be expensive, so making your print page a smaller size will allow you to print small groupings of images with less waste.
I have used decals before in minis but never printed them myself. What a cool technique 😊 I have printed on fabric before to make monthly garden flags for my miniature dollhouse. Thank you for sharing
Hello Mrs. Warren, I love watching your videos!!!! Thank you for sharing 😊 👍
You can get tiny nail art caviar beads or flat back beads pretty inexpensively to use on the ends of your suitcase handles to mimic a rivet to make that perfect finishing touch. Heck, even use them on the ends of your straps, too. Your suitcases are adorable.
Thank you, that's useful to know. :)
Thank you so much, for all the great ideas. Absolutely love it !!!🤗
First ❤...... Very cute 💓 And a fantastic way to decorate. Thank so much for explaining so very well 🙏💕💕💕🤗 hugs from Spain 🤗
You are so welcome!
When you were attaching the "Come Fly With Me" to the suitcase I could hear an airplane flying close to your house. Good timing, Julie!!😊 There are lots of great ideas here. I wondered if, for your WWII house, you were going to add a decal from that era, perhaps an RAF decal onto your suitcase or something. Just an idea. Thank you again!
Haha! Yes, I organised a flypast at that moment! :) Love the idea about the 1940s decal! xx
Lovely ideas, thank you. Cases look amazing and those flowers look really pretty on the jug.
i have just bought water slide paper, for my nails :) not yet tried it...TY Julie!
Very nice! Thank you for sharing how to resize the images!
So pretty, so cute
Beautiful garden Julie, just magical❤ As miniature tack is really what I'm into, theres a Company in the US called Rio Rondo which supplies these buckles in 1:6th, 1:8th, 1:12th and 1:18th scales and perhaps different sizes, its the normal sizes for model horses and they have a huge variety of buckles and D rings and basically anything to do with miniature leather work in gold and silver finishes. There was a European outlet but I tend to make my buckles from wire and jewellery findings so don't buy unless its something really specific and hard to make (stirrups being my biggest bugbear).
Thank you so much for the info. :)
Exquisite!
"Come Fly with Me" was both a song lyric done by Frank Sinatra and used as a slogan by PanAm way back in the 20th century.
Great ideas and video, of course! But I'm always mesmerized by the 'wet glue'. In our extremely dry climate, the dollop would have a skin within minutes. Working time is short, lol.
I have never thought of that! It must be frustrating for you.
If I may offer a suggestion . . . most printers will print on standard photo-size papers (4x6, 5x7, etc. here in the US). Specialty papers such as this can be expensive, so making your print page a smaller size will allow you to print small groupings of images with less waste.
Thanks for the tip!
Just a suggestion - do you mean Beachcomber Street?
That's a question, rather than a suggestion and yes, I realised my mistake shortly afterwards.