Here's a card I made a while ago and completely forgot about. It's only because I am at home with the dreaded Covid and have been looking through my photos. That's when I realized I hadn't posted it. I can't think how I forgot, I had a lot of fun playing with this technique and made a lot of inky mess trying out different colour combo's.
It's a quick and simple card to make and suitable for a lot of occasions. It doesn't require much in the way of tools or materials either.
You can make this as a single layer card too, so even less materials needed.
I started by folding a piece of copy paper in half length ways and in half again width ways.
On the corner where both folds overlap, measure in, half a centimetre /quarter of an inch and draw a line on both sides. ( I realize it says 1 cm on the photo but when I opened out the paper it gave me a gap 2 cms wide between the panels and I felt that was a little too wide.)
Open and flatten out the copier paper and position it over your card and tape down to prevent any slippage.
Now, I used the pieces of paper I punched out of the apertures to mask of the apertures I wasn't working on, but they did move, resulting in me getting ink where I didn't want, in the end I swapped over to post it notes.
The Post it's, meant I could be as liberal as I wanted with the ink without getting ink where it's not supposed to be.
Once I had applied the ink, I stamped the images over the post it and the aperture. It's best not to stamp the whole image in the aperture, unless it's a sentiment of course.
You can change this up in so many ways. You could do each aperture in a different colour, do the whole card using just one colour in ( see example at the bottom of this post) or use two colours as I have.
You could have the sentiment running between the panels in portrait position or turn it around and have the sentiment running through the middle in the landscape position, depending on the direction and style of your stamped images.
On the Header card and the one below I went a step further and used a stencil to add some subtle interest to the background of each panel.