Several weeks ago I had a really wild and crazy Saturday night. I was drinking a glass of red wine. And watching Angel. And tweeting about how much I love the theme tune for Angel. And then (here's where it gets really wild) I bought the Red Velvet Art Journal All Year Course!

I know, I am a wild and crazy gal, aren't I? Buying craft e-courses on Saturday evenings? That is stuff best left to the youths.
Going through Elsie and Rachel's course has been really fun. At first I thought the instructions were a little too simplistic for me to really learn anything or push bounderies in my art journalling, but I have come to realize that simple is effective in this type of class. The learning comes not from the instruction, but in the experimentation while creating the pages. In short, I am very pleased with the pages I have been making. Want to see a few? (click on the images to see them bigger)

I used three rings to hold my art journal together because I want to be able to shuffle my pages around for a more cohesive story as I add to my journal. This page is currently at the front. I love my background paper- it was part of a hoiday catalogue I got from a card company (It think it was Tiny Prints).

I made this heart with a bit of left over wire and tulle a few years ago and it has been hanging on my bulletin board ever since. I still really like it, so I deided to slip it in my journal. I've been holding onto this dreamy bedtime picture (from an anthropologie catalogue) for a few years too. Session #3 was the perfect opportunity to finally do something with this pretty picture.

This page is my favorite so far. I used up all kinds of goodies, including a page from a calendar that had a picture of a Welsh castle, a page from Anne of Avonlea with a romantic quote about dreams on it, a gift card holder from Starbucks, a paint chip with a dreamy name, and a little tear off piece from a strip I got when I signed up for an anthropologie loyalty program.


I loved hiding my daydream journaling in my Starbucks giftcard holder, and I love how all the bits of this project came together to portray the ethereal excitement of budding daydreams and quietly thrilling hopes.
Do you art journal?