Sunday, July 14, 2013

LUCKY DAY!

     Scrapbookers are always looking to scrap major events in their lives and nothing could be bigger than being just plain “lucky”. This layout was my “Lucky Day”.  

     I happen to live in the beautiful Pacific Northwest in the wonderful Skagit Valley. Home to the 2nd largest salmon river in Washington State as well as fertile, productive farmland, mountains, hiking trails, parks and communities that pull together.

     On May 23rd, our beautiful Skagit River made international news when the I5 Skagit River Bridge collapsed shortly after 7 pm. What could have been an awful tragedy, turned out to be a very lucky day. Only 3 people and 2 vehicles ended up in the river atop the bridge that carries over 71,000 commuters daily between the Canadian Border and Seattle. No serious injuries and NO LOSS OF LIFE! Now that's lucky. 

     Even luckier for me as I crossed the bridge about 10 minutes earlier than usual on my way home due to getting off work a few minute earlier than normal and I wasn't the only one.  My brother and his wife decided to go home a different way, a friend's daughter-in-law crossed just minutes before it collapsed and there are many other stories of why the bridge was almost empty at that time of night. In other words, it was a very lucky day.
 
  
 To create this layout, I drew a small sketch of the collapse of the bridge. Then I added the characteristics of a bridge such as the bolts, rust, twisted and bent metals. Then I recreated it on a piece of 12 X 12 paper and traced it on my background paper. I cut and distressed each strip, then added adhesive, twisted and folded the strip and attached to my drawn design.
 


 
       Then with a black marker I added the bolts and with a q-tip added copper accents  to create the rusty parts of the bridge from copper mist bottle.  Matted my picture on black and added it the center of the “collapsed” bridge.  

     Across the bottom, I  cut a film strip die using a QuiKutz die and added it to the bottom with journaling and pictures of the bridge. I also edged the layout with 1/4” strips of black to complete the polaroid effect.

      The title was created with American Craft Thickers  sprayed with Copper Mist until the color was dark enough and added to the layout.
 
     Page 2 of this layout was again designed to look like a polaroid with the edges and the film strip across the bottom with pictures of the bridge through reconstruction. (The last picture is from the DOT web  showing the bridge's progress). The before picture is  taken on the east side of the bridge,  the collapsed picture is taken the day after it collapsed from the west side and the after picture is taken from the NW side of the temporary bridge two days after it re-opened. The bridge was re-opened on June 19, 2013, just 26 days after it collapsed.
 
     The permanent bridge is being built right beside the temporary bridge and will be rolled into place and operational by October 1 according to the WA State Department of Transportation and before it's in place, we'll spend another month without the bridge and lots of traffic until the permanent one is installed.
 
    Happy Crafting till next time!
 
                                                                                           Crafty Aunt Dee

Products used:  Core'dinations, American Craft thickers, Reflections lettering stickers, Quickutz Die, Americian Craft light grey paper, Illuminaire Copper Mist, Quick Quotes Midnight Magic Chalk Ink and Xyron adhesive.

2 comments:

  1. Great page - the bridge collapse was and still is a big deal here. Not looking forward to the detoured traffic in the fall.

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  2. Great to see this finished (your pages AND the bridge *;)* )!
    Awesome job—I love your creativity!!

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