Here are more gorgeous samples of artwork from all over!
Yes, that's a plate that Susan Sawn stamped on! The main image is from the My Honey plate and is embellished with LennaLines quotes and Medieval
stamps. Of this project, Susan says: "It was actually pretty easy. I stamped
the Medieval Tiles directly on the back of the glass plate with gold and
black Brilliance. I cut a circle out of black paper, glued on the woman's
picture, then stamped with Brilliance and decoupaged it to the back of the
plate. That's it."

"A Full House" by Lenna Andrews Foster. Stamps are from Portrait of a Lady, Shall We Dance, and In the Mood for Love. The lovely words are from Claudia Rose.

Brigid Lally stamped the ballerina from Shall We Dance? and recycled wrapping paper for a background, adding a perfect LennaLines stamp as a companion.

Nina Owens' transformation of a CD put the Petite Playing Cards to good use!

When Lea Everse's husband saw The Star stamp she was using (from The At the Theater) plate, he thought it was an actual photograph!

Gaye Medbury gave
this envelope a touch of the Surreal, using Ophelia's head and one of the
Round Playing Cards coupled with limbs from Zettiology.

Debbie Givens used the Adriana stamp Queen Margaret by Sondra Long
over a mosaic "Beauty" collage.

Inside this card,
which uses a central image from the My Honey plate, Candy Clouston wrote:
"No one had the heart to tell poor Lila that her toga was caught in her pantyhose."
Marla Rosenlieb used
watercolors on glossy
We've got mail, in the form of a great envelope by
card stock and sponged the background with
Pilar Pollock, who also used the heroines.
Luna
Lights to make this card with Portia,
one of the Shakespeare Heroines.

This glittery Queen Margaret on acetate is by Fran Saperstein.

Ann Kingman gave
a 3-D effect to her card, above, using Princess Katherine and the stained
glass windows from the Medieval Ornaments 1 plate (sold on Ebay.)

Linda Reid ingeniously
placed her stamped Italian Playing Cards #3 in a stamped hand (Rubber Baby
Buggy Bumpers), adding rich paper collage elements.

Phyllis Harrison, who owns Stampmania in Berry, Australia, used the Shakespeare heroines inside this stunning box she created.

Shelley Higdon used Ophelia to embellish a journal cover, above left, and Imogen to make this lovely calendar, above right.

Above, Karen Lawton's Titania.

Irene Zanni used
the large card from the Italian Playing Cards sheet and the superimposed
the narrower ones over the larger one's background, adding Italian paper
clips to get this effect.

Above, Linda Reid made these two beautiful cards
using images from the China Ink plate. She combined them
with a Good Luck punch, ribbon and coins.
Below, left Catherine
Latham used one of the China Ink stamps as her centerpiece for this card,
to which she attached a dragonfly charm and a piece punched from the foil
of a chocolate wrapper-yum! Below, right, Glenda Waterworth made a bright
China Ink collage.


With one stamp: Lea Everse used a text block stamp from the China Ink plate to make her mark, above. If you look closely,
you'll see that she strung thin thread around the card, through the
slits made where her corner punch cut.

Jennifer Johnson used
Lady Grey from the large sheet of Shakespeare heroines on shrink plastic,
plus a LennaLines quote (Kindness has influenced more people than eloquence.)
over a serendipity tile background.

Deb McKim-Brown made these lovely dolls
using the Shakespeare heroines heads and taking
off from there!

Above, Gail Sargent sent these cards from Australia that
use some of the logos, animals and other things on the
Aussie plates. The white shape on the top card is the form
of Gail's home state of Tasmania.
HOME List of Plates | Mounted Stamps | Individual Unmounteds | Collage Packs | Opheliaware! | Gallery I | Gallery II | Gallery III | Gallery IV | Gallery V | Gallery VI | Ebay | Domino Art | Attitude! | The Conspiracy! | Mini Books | Art Swaps | Romance | Featured Artists I | Featured Artists II | Featured Artists III | Featured Artists IV | Projects I | Projects II | Projects III | Book Review | Convention Calendar | NY Stamp Show/Nov. '03 | In the News | Printable Order Form