
Here is what happened in round 2 of flower hammering. I tell you, pansies make great prints! I don’t have much else of substance blooming yet in the garden, but I’ll keep experimenting as the season goes along.

This is what the cover paper looks like after hammering.

I tried hammering this batch of flowers on paper I’d already added color to. It turned out very nice by the end, and the flower prints give great texture. But I was a bit disappointed that the prints did not turn out as well as I had hoped. At least the yellow/orange ones did not. You can barely see the stem I tried, and darker bits where I added leaves.

The poor smashed flowers.

Here is try number 2. You can see where the prints on the previous page soaked through, which is cool. There is some beneath my arranged flowers as well. The bleed through is at least 2 pages worth. This page is all white except for some bleed through. I crammed the flowers, leaves, and stem with the hope of getting plenty of color.

This is how the back of the cover sheet looks after hammering. Things tend to move around a bit. I start out with the cover paper straight, but by the end, it’s all twisted. It’s hard to hold it still and not hammer your fingers!

Oooooh, yes! This is where I’m getting results. Just look at those pretty pansy faces on the white background! You have to gently peel off the petals, or in some cases, just let them dry and rub them off. Bonus: The cover page also has wonderful colors! I’m saving that for another project.

I LOVE this! I haven’t done anything else with this flower hammering page, but the ideas are brewing. Growing? Smashing? ;0

I did go back to the green background page and finished that mixed media project. I LOVE how it turned out! This is one of my favorites so far. The smashed flowers really add texture and the greens tie in so nicely. I saw another creator (several actually) who added circles to their art. So I played with some gold glitter acrylic paint. Wow! Perfect touch. You can see the other materials I used on this page.

Et voila! Stamp pads, rubber stamps, hammered flowers, chalks, washi tape, acrylic paint, colored pencils. Plus a stick for painting and an empty tape-dispenser plastic disc for the circles.
Have you tried flower hammering? Or creating of any kind? What is your favorite trick?
May 9, 2024 at 4:02 pm
Lovely! Looks like a lot of work – but art isn’t work when you love what you’re doing, right?
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May 10, 2024 at 2:38 pm
Yes! It’s actually not too much work-creative fun-, other than all of the “stuff” I spread around looking for that just right paper, tape, stamp, ink, scrap…THAT is work, putting it back where it goes. LOL I usually avoid that part, unless I have a Zoom meeting. The table is in the background, so I have to tidy up. My normal trick is putting everything on the floor! 😉
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May 10, 2024 at 5:46 am
Wow, Angie! I’ve never heard about flower hammering. Do the colors fade over time?
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May 10, 2024 at 2:40 pm
That’s a good question! I suppose if I hung it up on a wall where the light hits it, it would fade over time, like any picture or paper. In the little book I have it, I think it will be fine. I will have to experiment. Immediately, like after it dries, no it does not fade, if that’s what you mean. 🙂 I’m not sure there isn’t a fancier name than “flower hammering,” but that’s what I call it. LOL
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May 13, 2024 at 1:39 pm
Poor flowers! I’d call it flower prints instead. Take care.
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May 13, 2024 at 1:54 pm
Oh, that’s a good name too! You take care too.
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May 10, 2024 at 4:18 pm
This is so fun and clever! I love all the texture the hammering created. I know paints were initially made from plants and minerals. Good to see you getting back to the “roots” 🙂
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May 12, 2024 at 4:29 pm
It is fun! But I can’t claim the credit. I’ve watched several other creators explore flower hammering. Maybe I need to watch again to see what it’s really called! LOL. Maybe you never did this, Danna, but when I was in elementary school down in the Arizona desert, we used to crush rocks at recess until we made this fine powder. I think we were exploring natural paint without knowing it! LOL If only we had water, we could have tested it. Might have been more like chalk. Fun, fun, fun!
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