It will dry clear and textured, with a light shimmer. So, I decided on mixing some Glass Bead Gel with some Lindy’s Stamp Gang Magical in Cattail Copper Brown (a slightly redder darker brown than the teak wood) and applied this mixture over a stencil (TCW5003) using a palette knife and set that aside to dry. I wanted the main focus to be on the game itself, but to create a balanced project I also wanted a little decoration on the teak wood. Then I drew the game lines using a black alcohol marker and a ruler. You can cut off the foam to the right size, using your scissors, when the gel medium has dried. You can also do this with the smaller birch wood slices (I did this later on in the process after adding the color). To not scratch the dinner table I then adhered some black one-millimetre thick craft foam on the bottom of the teak wood slice using The Crafter’s Workshop Gloss Gel Medium and a brush. I primed the birch wood slices using Clear Gesso so that all the color that I will add later on will not all be absorbed by the wood. ![]() At home, I sorted them to size and picked the ones that were mostly equal. ![]() I also found some smaller birch wood slices that could function as my game pieces. ![]() To get my project started I went to the garden center and looked for a nice slice of teak wood. Hi everyone, Heidi here, today, on the last day of 2019, I’m on the Lindy’s Stamp Gang blog with a different kind of project than usual! Since it’s winter where I live and we live mostly indoors I thought of creating a game that you can actually use (not just for decoration)!
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