Tea cup card with teabag


I made another tea cup!
This time I did remember to document the whole process, I believe :D
I began by taking pictures of the embossing,
I was quite thrilled by the water discovery so I took pictures to show how it happens.
I used a paint brush to “paint” the shape with the water, the first one to the left has already broken through the water, I used a tool to outline it and pushed it gently. The second one did soak in the water but is just there without further prodding. The third one is just a fat drop of water that has not yet been absorbed by the paper.
I found out that adding some regular white glue or PVC helps to strengthen the paper, and I’m hoping it makes good filling material as well so the embossed area isn’t too fragile.
The next step was to keep on outlining and gently rubbing the design from the back or inside. I do this placing it over 3 napkins, just regular paper napkins, otherwise the embossing can’t “grow”.
I have no idea what the tool I use is called, I found it in my mother’s stuff too many years ago and never heard it’s name or where she got it from. If anyone knows I’d really love to find out so I can get others and replace this one since one end comes off, although I’m not complaining since the inside part of the metal tip comes in handy sometimes! :)
And here I turned the paper around so this is the front or right side of it and went all around the design with the small ball tip of my tool so it would become defined. I removed the napkins from underneath so it was on a flat and hard surface, a glass would be ideal, I just used my cutting mat.
So, after I was done I lined the embossed part with pink bond paper and cut the back of the cup shape and glued them all, leaving a big pocket inside the cup. For the embossed part of the cup I used thick paper, in México we call it “papel marquilla” and I’m not sure what its English name is or what its components are, but I remember getting blocks of that paper through my entire schooling years for art lessons, and I loved it back then as much as I do now!. Specially because it came in a rather large size and it’s great for water colors, gouaché, ink and coloring pencils.
And it was time for my favourite part! The little teabag tag. Can you tell how tiny it is from the picture? In my country we use the metric system, so I’m not too familiar with inches yet!.
The white paper on the left is the actual tag and it’s made of coated paper, as well as the “tea bag”. The little square to the right is -well, at that point was going to be- a little paper cut out silhouette, I cut through 2 papers at once so I could have them on both sides of the tag.
I felt so happy cutting paper that I made a flower for the front of the tea cup
Time for some music!
I was very happy that Alice asked me about Philippe Jaroussky yesterday on her comment, actually she asked about counter tenors. I love this video!
OK, back to the card. I needed to attach the string to the teabag so that it would stay put if it got pulled out from it, I was wondering how to do that and I remembered seeing this hand at Elsita Mora’s blog that I liked very much so I decided to make one to hold the string in place.
Click on the picture to go to the original post where this image comes from.
So I made a tiny hand similar to the one on the picture
But that didn’t go too well as the fingers in the middle became distorted so I started a bigger one
I traced a design on it using the same tool I use for embossing, come to think of it I call it a burin sometimes, and began cutting. 
 
 
At one point I had to use my thread counter to see some of the details on it.
 
Then I realized it needed some backing so I could actually glue the tag’s string to it, so I added some.
And here is the teabag finished. I made some tea with the tip of a paintbrush and paint :) It actually has a 3rd fold not visible on this picture, so it’s a triptych. Everything else on it is blank so a note can be written on it.
And here at last is the finished tea cup with its teabag inside it
Do you like it? :)


8 responses to “Tea cup card with teabag”

  1. Clap, clap, clap!!!
    Un aplauso, como me sorprendo cada vez que veo lo que haces… como buscas soluciones, ideas… me encantan los procesos y eso es difícil de ver, por lo general de los artistas solo se conoce la obra terminada, y cuando tengo el privilegio de conversar o como contigo, de leer como fue tomando cuerpo la obra… ahhhh… que placer! y acompañada de la música que pusiste, doble gusto! Gracias y felicitaciones!

  2. ¡Hola Alice! Muchas gracias :) A mi también me encanta ver los procesos que siguen otras personas cuando hacen cosas :D

  3. Wow Claudia, you are so talented! I love the papercutting and embossing you do, these are techniques I would really like to try someday and your tutorials are very inspiring.
    The stack of teacups is simply stunning.
    Will follow you!
    Pia

  4. Thank you so much Pia! :) It's a bit more of a documentation of my experiments rather than a tutorial!

  5. Claudia that is just lovely. And I enjoyed following your process, even the music inbetween – tho I couldn't tell you what he say about, what an amazing voice and such joy in the performance.

  6. Thank you Roanne! ^^
    Jarowssky rules! <3
    Here's a translation of the lyrics:

    Ah me, I am falling, ah me! My feet stumble as they did before, and my withered, fallen hope must be watered once again with fresh tears.

    Weary of my former ardor, I nonetheless recognize its traces in my breast; for the charming face, the beloved glances have shattered the adamantine covering with which cold thoughts had armored this wretched man.

    I was a madman to believe
    I had a shield safe against a naked archer!
    And now I, the great warrior, am a coward,
    and do not wish to resist the beguiling blow of a single glance!

    O immortal champion! I scorn the fact that he flees so weakly back.
    I am bewitched and wandering, with weapons of glass; and you, O unfaithful one,
    have led me against a cruel spear of hard diamond!

    O, how well tyrant Love is able to punish the passion of a rebellious soul, a sweet word, a lovely countenance, a charming glance can always recapture an escaped heart.

    O fair eyes (if virtue were always fair, pity always just!) ah, do not deny me your glance, your laughter for a prison, entered for so fair a reason, would be Paradise.)

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