Summer Pool Party | Kaisercraft for The Wholesaler.

With the end of the year around the corner, more and more teenagers are planning some fun activities – especially the class of 2016. So instead of letting them head out on their own why not plan a fun and festive pool party for them complete with pink flamingos and lots of cool snack and sweet tubs? Today we share some fun ideas with you using a gorgeous range of scrapbooking paper as inspiration.
Start off the party with a fun invitation with a hint of the theme – complete with pink painted flamingos and lots of bright colours.

step 1 - Print the invitation onto white cardstock. Die cut flamingo out of white AC smooth cardstock. Use your Memento inks and All Purpose inks to add colour to the die-cut
step 2 - Use your Memento inks and All Purpose inks to add colour to the die-cuts. Add the ink to your craft sheet, then lightly mist with water. Use your Fantastix to pick up some ink and colour the die-cuts. Leave them to dry.

step 3 - Add some Brilliance gold ink to your craft sheet. Mist with water and pick up some of the ink with your Fantastix. Paint a layer of gold shimmer over your coloured flamingo die-cuts.

step 4 - Adhere a strip from the sticker border to the top of the invitation. Adhere the flamingo to the printed invitation. Use the same ink colours as before and a small paint brush to add ink splats to your invitation for some fun coloured effects.
step 5 - Punch leaves from your patterned paper and adhere to the side of your invitation. Scatter diamanté in between the leaves to finish off the invitations.
To minimize snack wastage, use small bamboo cups for small portions of food and chips. Decorate them with stickers, ribbon and die-cuts for a visual feast.
Use bright coloured paper straws and die cut flamingos to serve cold beverages. For the straws you can create a fun decorative element that won’t break the bank, but will certainly add to the festive feel and look.
 step 6 - Punch small circles from paper scraps.

step 7 - Fold the circles in half and adhere them together. Adhere 5 punched and folded circles together.
step 8 - Adhere the circle element to the top of a drinking straw for a fun festive element.
step 9 - Create your own umbrellas instead of buying them. Punch large circles from your patterned paper.
step 10 - Cut a slit into the side of the circle to the middle.
step 11 - Add some Tombow adhesive to the one edge and fold it over the other edge to form the umbrella.
step 12 - Die cut some flowers and assemble them using some fun brads.
step 13 - Adhere the brads to the umbrella. Use a bamboo toothpick as the umbrella rod and use large beads to decorate the top of the umbrella. Add them to some of the drinks, food cups and even cupcakes to add to the theme of your party.
A healthy and easy dessert option is to make coloured jelly in recycled glass jars. Fill the top of the jars with coloured sweets and treats. Decorate the jars with cut out flowers, stickers and twine. Serve with funky wooden spoons.

Happy new year if you are here!

This has been an unusually long absence from the blog for me - my apologies if you have been hanging out! Life has been busy and quiet at the same time and still recovering from the blows that 2015 dealt. But just wanted to pop in and say Happy 2016! May it be an amazing one. I will be back soon!
With LOVE and appreciation for the love and support! Without blog readers and followers - blogs are just meaningless words hanging out in space!
Here's to an absolutely amazing God filled new year!

Hello crazy beautiful world!

well what can I say - I have had a whirlwind month of October and then November started off with a fabulous teaching trip meeting some beautiful creative souls and ended up with a car accident that has left me well....a little fragile, bruised and just plain hurt! So needless to say I have neglected my posting on the blog and have fallen way behind on things that I have to do. But I am fine and will just keep on going. So my apologies for leaving you high and dry without any new reading material - I promise I will do better!

To start off I am on the Imagine Crafts Blog today with a fun Vintage inspired Christmas card.
So head on over to the blog for some inspiration using the amazing products by Imagine Crafts and Tsukineko!
I truly love how versatile their products are - and the world of creativity it inspires!
and if you are in South Africa, remember you can get all your Tsukineko inks from The Wholesaler or your nearest craft store!
#TheWholesaler #Tsukineko #JowilnaNolte #Scrapcouture #CoutureCreations #ImagineCrafts

Tomorrow I will be back with a Christmas inspired Bunting - and if you can't ait head on over to
The Wholesaler to view it today!

20 Things Only Highly Creative People Would Understand.

and so it is and going to be.... the truth about creative people by Kevin Kaiser

There’s no argument anymore. Neuroscience confirms that highly creative people think and act differently than the average person. Their brains are literally hardwired in a unique way. But that gift can often strain relationships. I’ve seen it firsthand while working with New York Times bestselling authors and Grammy-winning musicians.
If you love a highly creative person, you probably experience moments when it seems like they live in a completely different world than you. Truth is, they do. But trying to change them isn’t nearly as effective as trying to understand them.
It all begins by seeing the world through their lens and remembering these 20 things:

1. They have a mind that never slows down.

The creative mind is a non-stop machine fueled by intense curiosity. There is no pause button and no way to power it down. This can be exhausting at times but it is also the source of some crazy fun activities and conversations.

2. They challenge the status quo.

Two questions drive every creative person more than any others: What if? and Why not? They question what everyone else takes at face value. While uncomfortable for those around them, it’s this ability that enables creatives to redefine what’s possible.

3. They embrace their genius even if others don’t.

Creative individuals would rather be authentic than popular. Staying true to who they are, without compromise, is how they define success even if means being misunderstood or marginalized.

4. They have difficulty staying on task.

Highly creative people are energized by taking big mental leaps and starting new things. Existing projects can turn into boring slogs when the promise of something new and exciting grabs their attention.

5. They create in cycles.

Creativity has a rhythm that flows between periods of high, sometimes manic, activity and slow times that can feel like slumps. Each period is necessary and can’t be skipped just like the natural seasons are interdependent and necessary.

6. They need time to feed their souls.

No one can drive cross-country on a single take of gas. In the same way, creative people need to frequently renew their source of inspiration and drive. Often, this requires solitude for periods of time.

7. They need space to create.

Having the right environment is essential to peak creativity. It may be a studio, a coffee shop, or a quiet corner of the house. Wherever it is, allow them to set the boundaries and respect them.

8. They focus intensely.

Highly creative people tune the entire world out when they’re focused on work. They cannot multi-task effectively and it can take twenty minutes to re-focus after being interrupted, even if the interruption was only twenty seconds.

9. They feel deeply.

Creativity is about human expression and communicating deeply. It’s impossible to give what you don’t have, and you can only take someone as far as you have gone yourself. A writer once told me that an artist must scream at the page if they want a whisper to be heard. In the same way, a creative person must feel deep if they are to communicate deeply.

10. They live on the edge of joy and depression.

Because they feel deeply, highly creative people often can quickly shift from joy to sadness or even depression. Their sensitive heart, while the source of their brilliance, is also the source of their suffering.

11. They think and speak in stories.

Facts will never move the human heart like storytelling can. Highly creative people, especially artists, know this and weave stories into everything they do. It takes longer for them to explain something, explaining isn’t the point. The experience is.

12. They battle Resistance every day.

Steven Pressfield, author of The War of Art, writes:
“Most of us have two lives. The life we live, and the unlived life within us. Between the two stands Resistance.”
Highly creative people wake up every morning, fully aware of the need to grow and push themselves. But there is always the fear, Resistance as Pressfield calls it, that they don’t have what it takes. No matter how successful the person, that fear never goes away. They simply learn to deal with it, or not.

13. They take their work personally.

Creative work is a raw expression of the person who created it. Often, they aren’t able to separate themselves from it, so every critique is seen either as a validation or condemnation of their self-worth.

14. They have a hard time believing in themselves.

Even the seemingly self-confident creative person often wonders, Am I good enough? They constantly compare their work with others and fail to see their own brilliance, which may be obvious to everyone else.

15. They are deeply intuitive.

Science still fails to explain the How and Why of creativity. Yet, creative individuals know instinctively how to flow in it time and again. They will tell you that it can’t be understood, only experienced firsthand.http://www.lifehack.org/articles/communication/20-things-remember-you-love-highly-creative-person.html?dgs=2#

16. They often use procrastination as a tool.

Creatives are notorious procrastinators because many do their best work under pressure. They will subconsciously, and sometimes purposefully, delay their work until the last minute simply to experience the rush of the challenge.

17. They are addicted to creative flow.

Recent discoveries in neuroscience reveal that “the flow state” might be the most addictive experience on earth. The mental and emotional payoff is why highly creative people will suffer through the highs and lows of creativity. It’s the staying power. In a real sense, they are addicted to the thrill of creating.

18. They have difficulty finishing projects.

The initial stage of the creative process is fast moving and charged with excitement. Often, they will abandon projects that are too familiar in order to experience the initial flow that comes at the beginning.

19. They connect dots better than others.

True creativity, Steve Jobs once said, is little more than connecting the dots. It’s seeing patterns before they become obvious to everyone else.

20. They will never grow up.

Creatives long to see through the eyes of a child and never lose a sense of wonder. For them, life is about mystery, adventure, and growing young. Everything else is simply existing, and not true living.

life and passion.

As i read Heidi Swapp's blog post today, tears were rolling down my face. It hit home!
as memory keepers we have a responsibility to tell the stories - the good, the bad the ugly. I have had my fair share of the not so pretty stories in life, have had more brushes  with death than i care to experience in one lifetime and i am sure there will be many more. for a long time, just like the Swapp family now, i have had a passion for those struggling with life in general and people affected by suicide. it's a silent struggle - a struggle people don't know about and very few will ever understand. they think they do, but in fact we never will truly understand it. I am so thankful that Heidi and her family have peace and hope in Jesus Christ their Savior...the Prince of Peace. people think they know, but in the end only GOD knows. One thing i klnow to be true is....we are all fighting our own battle...
in closing these wise words....Cory is not gone, he has just gone AHEAD!
for now...this is me at my happiest! teaching, interacting, inking, stamping and making a mess - making and keeping memories, telling stories. I truly love this stuff, and am thankful that God smiles upon me and blesses me with this life.
 i am truly blessed and honoured to be able to do this! God is faithful!
Thank you to Annemarie for getting me in some decent photos - part of my journey - telling my story!

Scrapping Blog tour.


Goodmorning and welcome to the weekend! Today i am off to spend some time with friends doing something i haven't done in 20 years....taking a class, before i am off giving a class this afternoon. But today you are here as part of the blog tour that bloggers and creative people all around the world are taking part in - just for fun.
The wonderful and ever so talented digi guru Brynn Marie nominated me...

I have know Brynn for a few years and all i can say is - if you are looking for anything digital she's you girl! she is so talented kind hearted and a sometimes life gets in the way and my kids crack me up kind of girl! kind with a huge spirit for creativity. so please visit her wonderful blog and support her by shopping her digital goodies - oh and did i mention she can rock a mean traditional scrapbook page as well! now that's talent! and so back to the blog tour and my questions i have to answer....
 
1. What am I working on right now .
several things, but mostly design wise - waiting for a box of new goodies to get me excited or not - who knows!then i am also working on my Project Life album and some inking goodness to submit to an international company.



 2. How long does it take to create a project .
it depends - sometimes i can cut a set of papers and throw a basic idea together in 30 minutes, then finish it off in about 3 hours, but other times when life is tough it can literally take days - ugh! I find that the quick oh why don't i try this idea is the stuff i love most - just messing around makes for my best work - always. wish i would learn from that....


3. What are my fave things I love to create with at the moment
ink, ink, stamps, and die....and as of last week my Silhouette Cameo


4. How does my writing/creating process work
i normally grab a bunch of stuff that i like - a total mush mash of things that work together but with a strange twist if it may not all go too well together - i like the element of surprise and putting things together that other people won't. then i start cutting and position everything before adhering anything down. once things are placed i leave it for a few hours walking past it every now and again tweaking as i see fit, and sometimes even totally changing the original idea. then usually it all falls into place and i can fiddle and add the finishing touches.


5. How do I become inspired and stay inspired .
i shop decor stores and magazines - mostly window shopping - the colours textures and the different perspective gives me ideas on what to try. design websites are my best - always learning new things about design, composition, balance, trends etc keeps me inspired. and the one person in the industry that always inspires me is Ali Edwards - her motto of being real and just having fun while being creative always inspires.


6. What is my signature style .
 difficult to say - clean and simple with a lot of inky bits and something odd thrown into the mix to balance things out. i hate working with a single range of papers - so predictable....so at the end of the day i am not sure what my style is - i just do what i love!

and there you have it....
i nominate Cathy Sanders ....


have a super weekend filled with creativity!

The Creative Block – how to get your mojo back without spending money.

It happens to all of us - when hours and hours of staring into space wanting to be creative and nothing happens. When everything you touch turns to a big old mess and you end up destroying more projects than what you actually create. Sound familiar? Yes it does – and I am honest enough to admit it happens to me too. Here’s some of my top tis of how to overcome my creative block without any fancy trips to the mall or spending loads of money on stuff I will never use or create with. Re-organize and clean The first thing I do is clean my work space and organize all those bits and pieces that have been accumulating over the last couple of weeks. A clean work space enables me to start something new anytime I am ready, while a big mess clutters my mind and creative vision. I also often discover things I have been looking and rediscover product I have forgotten about. I also like to change some of my décor items and even re-decorate my work space at times. I keep this minimal and only use things I already have on hand or paint that is in the store room already
Purge when you buy I have set this new rule into motion in my life both personally and creatively. When I buy something new I have to give something else away – this avoids clutter and also cleans my mind and workspace at the same time. If I buy something I really want I have to give something to someone else that either needs it or can utilize it better than what I can. I have been wanting some storage trays and what lucky enough to be given some by a friend, and in exchange I could offer her something that she needed and wanted to organize her work space. This all happened through conversation and without spending money.
Rest and re-store Creative block happens when you are tired and worn out – it’s as simple as that. Knowing that you will be creative again is sometimes not enough and we try and force the issue. Just walk away…for now. Take a well-deserved break and watch a movie, vegetate on the couch, go for a walk, flip through magazines or take cat naps. Trust me your body tells you what you need and if you obey your creativity will be back in no time at all. You need time away from it all and it doesn’t have to cost money – sitting outside and just enjoying God’s creation will do wonders. 

Do something different When I get into a creative slump I usually need to paint something, anything! I always have paint at hand be it for furniture or canvas – but I can always throw paint at something and just let it be. The beauty is that even if I fail at the outcome I can always go back and paint over it again or try something else – nothing ventured nothing gained. Just get out of your comfort zone and try something else for a change – it sparks other ideas and creativity with little effort – it just happens.
Use your senses Pick up a magazine and flip through it! When was the last time you touched and felt paper in ink together instead of flipping through pages on your tablet? Instant gratification has become such an integral part of our lives that we have forgotten most of where we come from. Magazines can and still is a huge source of inspiration. It slows us down and makes us think and read and wonder – rather than speeding up your life take a moment and reflect rather than rush, create rather than just turn things out because you have to. Venture outside and just slow things down a bit.
 
“art washes away from the soul, the dust of everyday life” Picasso 

These are simple things, but it is the things we tend to forget. I hope that in the coming weeks you will take it slow, focus on the little things because in the end they really are the big things! May your art really wash away the dust from the everyday stuff we collect along the way – may art and creativity triumph over all things negative in your life.

grow.

Happy new year to everyone!here's wishing you a wonderful new year - one filled with all good things. my word for 2014 is grow - for lots of reasons. this past year was as good as it was difficult. so grow i will in many different ways. i see growth in my business, i see growth in my faith and personal relationship with God, i see growth in making it work for me, growing in confidence, to flourish in life, friendship, relations and career, to evolve and move forward from the pettiness that surrounds me. it's a positive start, a step in the right direction of growth as i set my mind on it all.
and as i grow in getting more organized and set into routines completed my cover page for my 2014 Project Life album. i am so not a green person so this was a challenge for me. but with growth comes green and life and organizing - the green paper is the inside of a Kate's Paperie bag from New York that i cut up and used. it's time to get rid of those things gathering dust and prohibiting growth and this was a good start to it all. to mix things up i added pink, red, avocado and black into the mix for fun. so now with all good intentions i am on track with my album and hope to keep it up and not fall behind. How's your album coming along?
wishing you a creative day week and year! thanks for stopping by!

busy.

why is it that guilt creeps up on us so easily..even when we try and avoid it it has a nasty way of just being there. anyways i am still trying to catch up on things, ticking of to-do lists, and trying to be creative at the same time. yet it seems that i have no energy for anything and am feeling rather flat at the moments. so no updates and no new posts on the Cuttlebug, which i promise i will finish and continue with as soon as i am caught up! 
one thing that i managed to do this weekend is paint the one bedroom wall which was actually 3 walls counting the huge *blunder* of a grey wall i conveniently or subconsciously forgot about - anyways it IS DONE! and it feels really good. it took me most of Saturday and then i did the antiquing liquid on Sunday to get rid of the "off" paint smell.
funny thing that - when you leave paint to stand for months on end it tends to go rotten and get the most horrific smell! anyways a quick stir and off we went. thankfully the strong oil smell covered the paint odour and all is well in the household again! *note to self...use paint and do not store!
after said paint and oil layer was dry i got to hang the crystals and finish off my chandelier! oh my heart is well now - and i am in love. i do think that i may have to have another one of those beauties - so save some moolah and find a spot and just maybe it may happen in this coming year.
and not to bore you too much below is a sneak peak of a design team layout i completed and uploaded
creativity = 1 messy kitchen = 0
wishing you an awesome Monday. i am trying to clean the kitchen and throw out some mismatched and odd glasses, mugs and general crap that tends to collect over time, then some creative play and writing an article! how are you keeping busy?

travelling and teaching.

I am off tomorrow morning to Cape Town - the oh so beautiful mother city with the big mountain and even bigger blue beyond.i am excited and at the same time i so wish that my better half could come with - he is from Cape Town and so  misses being there. who wouldn't right!
i am excited to see my brother and his wife and kids - they must be so big and my photos of them are seriously dated and outgrown! but i am traveling for work - to teach at the Scrapping4Cahrity event - such a worthy cause raising money for the 'aged'. those who have kids and never see them - those who have outlived all their kids, or those who never had kids.
i am also teaching a card class at The Scraphouse - so looking forward to that as well - meeting longtime cyber friends and getting to meet more new and enthusiastic scrappers and crafters. I love my job! below is a little peak at one of the cards i am teaching - love how they turned out!
it's been a hectic week and i still haven't worked through the to do pile - which has to be done before i can actually get onto the plane. in the meantime i am hoping my kits arrived safely at their destination - always a bit of a worry - bags are triple checked and even then you still think you have forgotten something! oh well....then we just make do! thanks for stopping by - i won't promise to blog from the road - it's Cape Town people!!!
see you next week with some more exciting and crafty news and projects! love you madly!

does my star sign make me weak in your eyes...

this is not a pretty post - it's just reality. Some people have very strong personalities, some not so strong yet they have gone through more tough times and have endured a lot more than the so called 'strong personalities'. they thrive on their strength and they prey on the weakness of others. they think so much more of themselves, they think they accomplish so much more, they boast more, they think they rule the world and everyone in it. they don't have much time for the rest of humanity - they might pity them but they have no time for them. in reality they are the ones that should be pitied. the only question that comes to mind is - what would Jesus do? did Jesus think He was better than the rest of those mere humans He found Himself having to save, did He think that He was too good to be amongst the lessor species - or did He accept that God the Father did not make everyone the same, did He understand that some people don't need to be the best and most important or popular, did He get it? Was Jesus humble and went about His work without boasting, or belittling others, or jumped onto His high horse in a second? Did God equip each of us differently to face and deal and handle life differently - then who are YOU to judge people because they do not have such a strong personality. What would Jesus do, and how will you accept others who was made in God's image - and if you think less of me - are you not thinking LESS of God too - in whom image i was created?
this is just a post about how different we all are - it's my personal opinion and view - it's not aimed at anyone specific. i just find it hard to believe that those who claim to be Christians are so quick to judge others - are they not judging God at the same time? afterall i Never asked to be here...
"I don't want to die, but i aint keen on living either" (Robbie Williams) 
excuse me....oops here comes someone to judge me again for being weak.
PS i am an Aquarius 
edited to read - i am not an astrologer nor do i believe in it or make it my religion
society depicts that i am born in January and therefor i am classified as an Aquarius.

my scrap space aka studio.

Welcome to my little piece of heaven. It may not be perfect but it’s mine and I love it. I don’t have a dedicated craft room where I can make a mess and shut the door – reality is that my work space is in my living room. Yip! In your face all the time! You see my real craft space is built attached to the garage and house, but it lacks the very important part of uhm a roof and a door. So let’s just leave it at that. Instead here’s a little tour of where I spend most of my days…
 I have a large work table that used to be joined by another vintage huge table until I recently split them up because the more space I had the more I would fill it up. So now I am confined to scrapping on the one table and have dedicated the other table to my Cricut machine. in front of my desk is bench my brother made years ago with fluffy pillows and a nice soft comfy seat and throw – it forms part of the lounge area and also conveniently hides the mess sunder my desk (blush it’s true). Behind my desk is another large cupboard filled with my other most used stuff and overflow stuff like adhesives, melt art, chipboard letters, ink pads and plastic packets. To the left of the cupboard is a small unit with my printers on and underneath my buttons sorted by colour in jars and a large tin box with my punches in. My laptop is towards the left of the table on the edge – I am able to do what I need! And if I look to the right from my computer I am in the lounge. Very convenient!
On my desk are 3 jars of washi tapes sorted by colours of course for visual prettiness. I only keep my most used tools on there and that includes my paper piercer and sewing stuff and a basket of my favourite and most used stamps. The rest of my stamps are stored in our bedroom in a chest of drawers. My acrylic and cling mount stamps now live in the unit you will shortly see.

this ugly and hopefully soon to be painted and distressed unit and its friend houses my most used stuff. I have acquired a couple of recycled and repurposed vintage ammunition (yes as in bullet) crates. I added pretty handles to them and tied a descriptive tag to each of them with the contents. They hold my inks, Mister Huey mists, AC embossing powders, microbeads, glitter glues, 6x6 paper pads, distress ink pads, blank tags, adhesives etc.


I love how the wooden crates enable me to pull it out of the cupboard and place it on my desk – once I am done it all goes neatly back – out of sight! Since everything is always in your face it is important for me to try and keep everything nice and neat! Did I just say that? Let me assure you – it doesn’t always happen!



In the opposite corner of the lounge is a drawer unit also on wheels (I move stuff around a lot). On top is a pretty display with my paint brushes. In the drawers are my Cricut cartridges and other random stuff that still needs to be sorted. 
for more photos and info on my scrap space you can head over here 
hope you are having a wonderful creative weekend and thanks for stopping by!

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