The Stampin’ Up! Color Coach is here!! Yay!! Stampin’ Up! has an the awesome Color Coach to help us find colors that easily coordinate with each other for our projects! Click the image…
Title : papion. | Welcome to the arha official site. Minimalism and emotional art works. When we moved, when we feel, when noticed something, We mutter 'Ah'. To all the minimalist.
How to find your skin undertone in order to determine the colors, foundations, blushes and bronzers that suit you best.
Different Skin Tones
Day 12 of our new and returning colour focus, where I’m sharing projects that showcase one of these additions to the Stampin’ Up! colour families and suggesting a possible colour combination. Today we’re using Gorgeous Grape. This is another brand new colour and it’s a rich purple. On this card it’s teamed with our existing […]
Don’t know what make up color to pick? The theory of color matching will help you to create a healthy harmonious make up suitable exactly for your skin tones, eye color and type of appearance. It's quite a basic knowledge in make up theory and practice! Some example charts with celebrity photos are applied to this article. Remember, if your hair has been colored it would be slightly harder to determine your appearance type. Also, while determining you should not wear any make up on your face. It’s better to put on neutral colors clothes without accessory. The best lighting for real colors is a diffused day light. At first you need to examine your skin tone: is it warm or cool? It’s quite easy; just try on some golden and silver textiles near your face. If silver fits you more, so you have cool skin tone. If golden better interacts with your skin, so your color harmony is in warm. Neutral skin tone owners usually have complex colors in their appearance, so they need to determine their undertone also. Do you think your skintone and undertone features look like Amanda Seyfried's? Just have a look on best and worst Amanda Seyfried's make-ups for her light skin tone with cool pink undertone to have your inspiration! It will help you finally to determine your skintone as cool or not. The undertone color looks to shine through your skin. How to determine it? A good piece of something white, towel for example, will help you to test your skin undertone. Test it only with diffused day light because even small amount of artificial light, such a monitor or table lamp, will add hues to your real skin color. Bring the piece of something white close to your face. Does your skin look bluish, greenish or yellowish, or maybe pink? Blue and pink are cool undertones, yellow from peach to golden is about warm undertones, and people with green undertone usually have neutral skin tone. Why does it important to determine your skin tone and undertone? It will help you to choose an ideal foundation, concealer, blush and powder, which will look absolutely natural on your face. Also the undertone is exactly the thing that helps match all make up perfectly by choosing the same undertone in eye shadows, lipsticks and lip glosses. You just need to choose foundation in according to your skin tone taking into account the undertone (blue, pink, yellow or green). The last step would be determining the color intensity of your skin from light to light tan: Light. Palest skin, often with freckles. Doesn’t tan at all or tans hardly, always with sun burns. Have blue, pink or green undertones. For example, Julianne Moore, Amanda Seyfried, Anne Hathaway. You can have a look at the comparison between Amanda Seyfried's light cool skin tone with pink undertone and Penelope Cruz's warm olive light tan skin tone. Fair. Pale skin that tans lightly and looks quite natural with small amount of bronzing. Fair skin tone has yellow, green or pink undertones, for example, Cate Blanchette, Haruka Ayase, Coco Rocha. Medium. Naturally beige or lightly sun-tanned skin with yellow to golden undertones. For example, Takei Emi, Gisele Bundchen, Natalie Portman. Light Tan. Often with a Mediterranean, Asian, Indian and Brazilian descent. Usually known as olive skin tone. Often seems unhealthy without sun because of greenesh undertone. Light tan skin tone goes with green, yellow and golden undertones. Aishwarya Rai, Penelope Cruz, Morena Baccarin for example. You can read about how to determine skin tones from tan to bronze with undertones and celebrity’s examples in next article!
Looking for the best hair colors for fair skin to wear this season? Here are some suggestions you can recreate depending on your mood!
Stamp set and punch bundles are a great way for new crafters to take their skills up a notch, without too much effort or outlay. Punched pieces offer the chance for layers and dimension, giving the card more interest. One of the great new bundles on offer in the Spring Summer catalogue is the Piece […]
The Stampin' Up! 2019-2021 In Colors are SO fresh and on-trend! They will be available in card stock, ink, markers, designer series paper and more starting June 4, 2019, when the new
The Stampin’ Up! Color Coach is here!! Yay!! Stampin’ Up! has an the awesome Color Coach to help us find colors that easily coordinate with each other for our projects! Click the image…
Each year Stampin UP! introduces 5 new colors that remain current for 2 years. These are called In Colors. I have always found it helpful to stamp myself a little In Color Comparison chart to see how the new In Colors work with the other existing Stampin' UP! colors! Below you will find comparison charts for the 2020-2022 In Colors and how they work with our other colors! See all the In Colors HERE. Stampin' Up! Magenta Madness Comparison Chart: Click to Shop the Magenta Madness products in my online Store! Stampin' UP! Just Jade Comparison Chart:
The Stampin' Up! 2019-2021 In Colors are SO fresh and on-trend! They will be available in card stock, ink, markers, designer series paper and more starting June 4, 2019, when the new
As this catalog year comes to a close, I wanted to share a group of color inspiration posts that will include all the current Stampin' Up! colors. I originally wanted to share a color each week of the catalog year with color inspiration and card samples. But life happened, and I was not able to
Copic markers are popular in art circles these days. Clip Studio Paint has the ability to mimic them. LearnCSP will show you what to download and install.
This is day 2 of our new and returning colour focus, where I’m sharing projects that showcase one of these additions to the Stampin’ Up! colour families and suggesting a possible colour combination. Today it’s Mango Melody. This new Bright is kind of midway between yellow and orange. As a bright colour it would work […]
Of the different Color Collections that Stampin' Up! offers, the Brights Color Collection is my favorite! I enjoy all the colors, but these bright colors are usually my go to colors when crafting. This post will give you a look at the 10 brights colors with color comparisons and color combinations. Here are the other
I love Designer Series Papers! Whether they are used as a backdrop or a small element on a card, the printed patterns and colors in these papers can make a big statement. You already know that, right? I'm excited to share a look at the gorgeous Designer Series Paper in
TAKE 5 TUESDAY! Here are 5 different color combinations to inspire your card making and paper crafting projects! Thursday, I will share a creation with one of the 5 combinations shown below. W
A bright mix of colours today for a cheery birthday card. The Varied Vases stamp set and the Vases Builder punch can be bought as a bundle – saving 10% 🙂 Lots of texture is added to the card using the Stitched Label framelits (one of my absolute favourites!). The colour combo is Mango Melody, […]
I love Stampin' Up!'s Designer Series Papers. What a great way to find inspiration for our projects! The colors and patterns pair perfectly with other products we love. Over the past two months, I have shared cards that showcase the patterns in the Best Route Designer Series Paper, and I'm
Some more of my Christmas goodies arrived today! I’d overlooked this DSP the first time around and then found it is has flocking! So cute! The pack of DSP has 12 sheets: 2 each of 6 double-sided designs and there’s white flocking on one side of four of the designs. The piece I used here […]
Spring and Summer are a perfect time to create projects with all of the colors of the rainbow - with the mix of rain and sunshine we've been experiencing, there's a great likelihood we'll catch a rainbow every once in a while. With the symbolism of hope and serenity we
Abstract Prints,Digital Download,Prints Wall Art,Print,Watercolor Print,Abstract Art Print,Wall Art,Print,Printable Art,Decor,Wall Prints We offer SUPER MODERN and FRESH digital DIY Art Prints for your home and office, Easy to Download and print ! This is a DIGITAL DOWNLOAD of a set of 2 matching abstract prints. YOUR ORDER WILL INCLUDE 10 DIGITAL FILES WITH DIFFERENT SIZES . THESE ARE 10 HIGH RESOLUTION IMAGES ( 300 DPI , pixels per inch ) . *Please follow the size chart below to make sure you are using the correct file. - I N C L U D E D - F I L E S - 2x3 Ratio Files for PRINTING on : 4"x6", 6"x9", 8"x12", 10"x15", 12"x18", 16"x24", 20"x30", 10x15 cm, 30x45 cm, 40x60 cm, 50x75 cm. 4x3 Ratio Files for PRINTING on : 6"x8", 9"x12", 12"x16", 18"x24”, 15x20 cm, 40x30cm. 4x5 Ratio Files for PRINTING on : 4"x5", 8"x10", 16"x20", 24x30cm, 40x50cm. 5x7 Ratio Files for PRINTING on : 5"x7", A5, A4, A3, A2, 50x70cm. 11x14 Ratio Files for PRINTING on : 11"x14". We can resize the files for you for no extra charge, please contact us before making a purchase so we can be sure the requested size is available ! You can print the design at your local printing centre or by using online printing services, please see our FAQ for more information ! - KINDLY - NOTE - No physical product will be shipped and the frame is not included. Colors may vary slightly due to different color monitors. This purchase is for PERSONAL USE ONLY. -- SEE OUR ENTIRE RANGE OF ART PRINTS -- https://www.etsy.com/shop/heartsincolors Thank you for visiting our shop.
Last Saturday, I shared some of the projects my awesome InKing Royalty team shared while I was away for Stampin' Up!'s 2019 Incentive Trip to the Greek Isles (you can see those projects here). To thank my team members who completed the challenge for playing along, I mailed out a
TAKE 5 TUESDAY! Here are 5 different color combinations to inspire your card making and paper crafting projects! Thursday, I will share a creation with one of the 5 combinations shown below. SH
I love to collect and use Stampin’ Up!’s Designer Series Papers. What a great way to find inspiration for our projects! The colors and patterns pair perfectly with other products we love. Since the Pr
WH questions seem to be the single hardest skill for many of the students on my caseload. Not only is it hard to start with – there are so many levels that you need to help your students build. Answering questions is difficult for both children with language disability and children who are English langauge learners. It really impacts student's ability to communicate with their friends, family and teachers. An inability to answer WH questions also impacts development of reading comprehension and performance in the classroom. Now that we've had a quick reminder that questions are *important* - what next? Starting with yes and no questions and simple what questions, most students need to be taught to answer each question type individually. What demands a thing, who a person, where a place, when a time and why a reason. For this simple level I like to use the WH Inference Cards by Super Duper Publications. Super Duper has other WH cards that I don't like for a variety of reasons. The basic WH question cards require a simple answer from a student, but to get the answer right they need to know that bees make honey, spiders make webs and cows give us milk. I work with students from multiple linguistic backgrounds and from a low socioeconomic status. Sometimes these little bits of knowledge are really too much to ask. My other main complaint about traditional WH question cards is that during therapy some students memorize the answers to the cards presented, and need to be retaught how to answer the questions in different contexts. WH Inference Cards I like the inference questions much better. To answer the question, the student needs to look at the picture and make a guess as to what the answer is. When I use these cards I can collect a baseline, with out worrying about if I am testing a student's knowledge or their question skills. Because inferencing is a little more difficult, for the baseline, I carefully select which questions to present to have the most visible answers present. If you are regularly using the same cards to baseline and check progress you can always pull out the cards and put them on the back of the ring to separate them from your general use deck. During therapy, my kids are not only practicing answering questions, they are practicing making inferences from pictures and using some higher level cognitive skills. My students are making connections and are generalizing WH questions into a variety of activities sooner because they are really learning HOW to answer the questions, and not answers to specific questions. When working on questions - it is always useful to have a Questions Chart (linked to google docs) to help us figure out how to answer questions. Many of my kids are visual learners or learn best when a skill is addressed through multiple modalities. I have also delivered this into the hands of teachers working on classroom interventions. I use the inference question cards to start working on questions, and from there, a variety of materials exist to help practice. I am a big advocate of using as many things as possible in therapy to promote generalization of their skills. I can't count how many things I've found even in a quick search online, but below are some of my favorite ones to use. WH Chipper Chat by Super Duper 10 boards, each with a list provided list of questions. Some of the questions directly relate to the picture on the board, others are more personal to each student, such as "Do you like..." When working in groups this is a great activity to start to build question asking skills rather than just working on answering questions. After you ask a student a question, tell them to "Find out if ____ likes puzzles too." or to "Ask ___, do you like puzzles?" This helps to remind students to pay attention on everyone's turn and to help build connetions between asking questions and answering questions. Ivan's Iceberg by Linguisystems This game comes with yes/no, what, who, where, why, how and when question cards. Each card has a picture and 3 questions. The students take turns at the game and practice answering questions. The variety of practice materials that come with this game have made it easy to seamlessly switch back and forth between students working at different skill levels and on different question types. What's Happening Photo Cards by Lakeshore Learning I love using any pictures in therapy, not just limited to answering questions, but these are particularly targeted toward answering questions. The back of every card has questions at multiple levels, the kids can grab and read the back of the cards to their heart's content, but still have to use their brains to come up with the answers. One question type that is always particularly sticky to get kids to answer is Why questions. There are several ways to answer the different questions that kids seem to get a little stuck. For one student in particular, I ended up writing out the answers to most of the "Why Inference" cards pictured above in all three ways, showing because, so and to. We practiced sorting the different answers into the correct format, and then practiced generating the answers. We used a Color Coded Chart (why questions) (linked to google docs) and color coded markers to represent the different parts of the question. With targeted strategies used by me, a home intervener and some homework, this student went from responding to ALL questions with "yes" to being able to respond to Why questions in her school work appropriately. Working on question skills is a never ending activity... More ideas later!
This week's Theme Challenge at the Global Design Project takes us to school. We are celebrating school days. For those of us in the United States, it's 'back to school' time while some parts of the world have a different schedule. Either way, we are sharing projects that celebrate education