Today's tutorial video is an oldie but a goodie. I often get asked about the mysterious "Stamp Buddy" included with many of the Art Foamies stamps. What is it? Packaging? Why on earth do I need it? Watch the video for all the answers:
You can purchase Art Foamies direct from their website.
Let me know if you have Art Foamies questions!
Thanks for stopping by!
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P.S. There's an Art Foamies coupon that's good for this Labor Day weekend ONLY: Maple2019.
























I love using the stamp buddies with my art foamies. They’re magic.
I love using the stamp buddies with my art foamies. They’re magic.
I love using the stamp buddies with my art foamies. They’re magic.
I love using the stamp buddies with my art foamies. They’re magic.
I love using the stamp buddies with my art foamies. They’re magic.
I love using the stamp buddies with my art foamies. They’re magic.
I love using the stamp buddies with my art foamies. They’re magic.
Very cool!
Very cool!
Very cool!
Very cool!
Very cool!
Very cool!
Very cool!
These stamps are so cool next on my must have supply list, thanks for showing how to use them
Hugs and Smiles
These stamps are so cool next on my must have supply list, thanks for showing how to use them
Hugs and Smiles
These stamps are so cool next on my must have supply list, thanks for showing how to use them
Hugs and Smiles
These stamps are so cool next on my must have supply list, thanks for showing how to use them
Hugs and Smiles
These stamps are so cool next on my must have supply list, thanks for showing how to use them
Hugs and Smiles
These stamps are so cool next on my must have supply list, thanks for showing how to use them
Hugs and Smiles
These stamps are so cool next on my must have supply list, thanks for showing how to use them
Hugs and Smiles
Pretty amazing!
Pretty amazing!
Pretty amazing!
Pretty amazing!
Pretty amazing!
Pretty amazing!
Pretty amazing!
Thank you so much for sharing this video. I love your Foamier and have just ordered more – why not, they’re on sale – and am excited to play.
Thank you so much for sharing this video. I love your Foamier and have just ordered more – why not, they’re on sale – and am excited to play.
Thank you so much for sharing this video. I love your Foamier and have just ordered more – why not, they’re on sale – and am excited to play.
Thank you so much for sharing this video. I love your Foamier and have just ordered more – why not, they’re on sale – and am excited to play.
Thank you so much for sharing this video. I love your Foamier and have just ordered more – why not, they’re on sale – and am excited to play.
Thank you so much for sharing this video. I love your Foamier and have just ordered more – why not, they’re on sale – and am excited to play.
Thank you so much for sharing this video. I love your Foamier and have just ordered more – why not, they’re on sale – and am excited to play.
I love using your art foamie designs and learned something new and important watching this and ways to use the circles art foamies. So happy about this post. Now I that I have a collection of your art foamies with so many as my favorite, I know know othere ways to use them and the stamp buddy. Thank you!!!!a
I love using your art foamie designs and learned something new and important watching this and ways to use the circles art foamies. So happy about this post. Now I that I have a collection of your art foamies with so many as my favorite, I know know othere ways to use them and the stamp buddy. Thank you!!!!a
I love using your art foamie designs and learned something new and important watching this and ways to use the circles art foamies. So happy about this post. Now I that I have a collection of your art foamies with so many as my favorite, I know know othere ways to use them and the stamp buddy. Thank you!!!!a
I love using your art foamie designs and learned something new and important watching this and ways to use the circles art foamies. So happy about this post. Now I that I have a collection of your art foamies with so many as my favorite, I know know othere ways to use them and the stamp buddy. Thank you!!!!a
I love using your art foamie designs and learned something new and important watching this and ways to use the circles art foamies. So happy about this post. Now I that I have a collection of your art foamies with so many as my favorite, I know know othere ways to use them and the stamp buddy. Thank you!!!!a
I love using your art foamie designs and learned something new and important watching this and ways to use the circles art foamies. So happy about this post. Now I that I have a collection of your art foamies with so many as my favorite, I know know othere ways to use them and the stamp buddy. Thank you!!!!a
I love using your art foamie designs and learned something new and important watching this and ways to use the circles art foamies. So happy about this post. Now I that I have a collection of your art foamies with so many as my favorite, I know know othere ways to use them and the stamp buddy. Thank you!!!!a
Julie, i came across this from an artist i follow. Shes conflicted by trying ti keep up with social media as an art outlet. the following came from her but is from the fellow who writes Humans of New York.do you feel the same?
Around this time, Brandon Stanton (the extraordinary human behind http://www.humansofnewyork.com ) published “A Space To Create” on his Patreon site, where he wrote about social media, and how it is failing artists and people who want what they do to still hold meaning, integrity, authenticity, substance, to be a real contribution to the world.
“…Content has become more bite-sized, more consumable, and less nuanced. In a world of decreasing attention spans, brevity is seen as the only way to compete. Importance is placed on the quantity of output rather than quality. Many ‘social media gurus’ teach that success is frequency of contact. Publish or perish. Either you constantly remind the world that you exist, or you will be forgotten.
I’ve spoken with a lot of artists on the Internet who feel burned out by this dynamic. They feel stifled by the treadmill of daily content…Social media tells you to go quickly. Art tells you to go deep. Social media tells you to replicate what works. Art tells you to experiment. Social media tells you to always be visible. Art tells you to disappear, figure something out, and come back with a discovery worth sharing. It’s not an easy puzzle for artists to solve. Because social media is the lifeline to our audience, and artists can’t survive without an audience.”
Brandon Stanton, “The Space To Create” on http://www.patreon.com/humansofnewyork
Julie, i came across this from an artist i follow. Shes conflicted by trying ti keep up with social media as an art outlet. the following came from her but is from the fellow who writes Humans of New York.do you feel the same?
Around this time, Brandon Stanton (the extraordinary human behind http://www.humansofnewyork.com ) published “A Space To Create” on his Patreon site, where he wrote about social media, and how it is failing artists and people who want what they do to still hold meaning, integrity, authenticity, substance, to be a real contribution to the world.
“…Content has become more bite-sized, more consumable, and less nuanced. In a world of decreasing attention spans, brevity is seen as the only way to compete. Importance is placed on the quantity of output rather than quality. Many ‘social media gurus’ teach that success is frequency of contact. Publish or perish. Either you constantly remind the world that you exist, or you will be forgotten.
I’ve spoken with a lot of artists on the Internet who feel burned out by this dynamic. They feel stifled by the treadmill of daily content…Social media tells you to go quickly. Art tells you to go deep. Social media tells you to replicate what works. Art tells you to experiment. Social media tells you to always be visible. Art tells you to disappear, figure something out, and come back with a discovery worth sharing. It’s not an easy puzzle for artists to solve. Because social media is the lifeline to our audience, and artists can’t survive without an audience.”
Brandon Stanton, “The Space To Create” on http://www.patreon.com/humansofnewyork
Julie, i came across this from an artist i follow. Shes conflicted by trying ti keep up with social media as an art outlet. the following came from her but is from the fellow who writes Humans of New York.do you feel the same?
Around this time, Brandon Stanton (the extraordinary human behind http://www.humansofnewyork.com ) published “A Space To Create” on his Patreon site, where he wrote about social media, and how it is failing artists and people who want what they do to still hold meaning, integrity, authenticity, substance, to be a real contribution to the world.
“…Content has become more bite-sized, more consumable, and less nuanced. In a world of decreasing attention spans, brevity is seen as the only way to compete. Importance is placed on the quantity of output rather than quality. Many ‘social media gurus’ teach that success is frequency of contact. Publish or perish. Either you constantly remind the world that you exist, or you will be forgotten.
I’ve spoken with a lot of artists on the Internet who feel burned out by this dynamic. They feel stifled by the treadmill of daily content…Social media tells you to go quickly. Art tells you to go deep. Social media tells you to replicate what works. Art tells you to experiment. Social media tells you to always be visible. Art tells you to disappear, figure something out, and come back with a discovery worth sharing. It’s not an easy puzzle for artists to solve. Because social media is the lifeline to our audience, and artists can’t survive without an audience.”
Brandon Stanton, “The Space To Create” on http://www.patreon.com/humansofnewyork
Julie, i came across this from an artist i follow. Shes conflicted by trying ti keep up with social media as an art outlet. the following came from her but is from the fellow who writes Humans of New York.do you feel the same?
Around this time, Brandon Stanton (the extraordinary human behind http://www.humansofnewyork.com ) published “A Space To Create” on his Patreon site, where he wrote about social media, and how it is failing artists and people who want what they do to still hold meaning, integrity, authenticity, substance, to be a real contribution to the world.
“…Content has become more bite-sized, more consumable, and less nuanced. In a world of decreasing attention spans, brevity is seen as the only way to compete. Importance is placed on the quantity of output rather than quality. Many ‘social media gurus’ teach that success is frequency of contact. Publish or perish. Either you constantly remind the world that you exist, or you will be forgotten.
I’ve spoken with a lot of artists on the Internet who feel burned out by this dynamic. They feel stifled by the treadmill of daily content…Social media tells you to go quickly. Art tells you to go deep. Social media tells you to replicate what works. Art tells you to experiment. Social media tells you to always be visible. Art tells you to disappear, figure something out, and come back with a discovery worth sharing. It’s not an easy puzzle for artists to solve. Because social media is the lifeline to our audience, and artists can’t survive without an audience.”
Brandon Stanton, “The Space To Create” on http://www.patreon.com/humansofnewyork
Julie, i came across this from an artist i follow. Shes conflicted by trying ti keep up with social media as an art outlet. the following came from her but is from the fellow who writes Humans of New York.do you feel the same?
Around this time, Brandon Stanton (the extraordinary human behind http://www.humansofnewyork.com ) published “A Space To Create” on his Patreon site, where he wrote about social media, and how it is failing artists and people who want what they do to still hold meaning, integrity, authenticity, substance, to be a real contribution to the world.
“…Content has become more bite-sized, more consumable, and less nuanced. In a world of decreasing attention spans, brevity is seen as the only way to compete. Importance is placed on the quantity of output rather than quality. Many ‘social media gurus’ teach that success is frequency of contact. Publish or perish. Either you constantly remind the world that you exist, or you will be forgotten.
I’ve spoken with a lot of artists on the Internet who feel burned out by this dynamic. They feel stifled by the treadmill of daily content…Social media tells you to go quickly. Art tells you to go deep. Social media tells you to replicate what works. Art tells you to experiment. Social media tells you to always be visible. Art tells you to disappear, figure something out, and come back with a discovery worth sharing. It’s not an easy puzzle for artists to solve. Because social media is the lifeline to our audience, and artists can’t survive without an audience.”
Brandon Stanton, “The Space To Create” on http://www.patreon.com/humansofnewyork
Julie, i came across this from an artist i follow. Shes conflicted by trying ti keep up with social media as an art outlet. the following came from her but is from the fellow who writes Humans of New York.do you feel the same?
Around this time, Brandon Stanton (the extraordinary human behind http://www.humansofnewyork.com ) published “A Space To Create” on his Patreon site, where he wrote about social media, and how it is failing artists and people who want what they do to still hold meaning, integrity, authenticity, substance, to be a real contribution to the world.
“…Content has become more bite-sized, more consumable, and less nuanced. In a world of decreasing attention spans, brevity is seen as the only way to compete. Importance is placed on the quantity of output rather than quality. Many ‘social media gurus’ teach that success is frequency of contact. Publish or perish. Either you constantly remind the world that you exist, or you will be forgotten.
I’ve spoken with a lot of artists on the Internet who feel burned out by this dynamic. They feel stifled by the treadmill of daily content…Social media tells you to go quickly. Art tells you to go deep. Social media tells you to replicate what works. Art tells you to experiment. Social media tells you to always be visible. Art tells you to disappear, figure something out, and come back with a discovery worth sharing. It’s not an easy puzzle for artists to solve. Because social media is the lifeline to our audience, and artists can’t survive without an audience.”
Brandon Stanton, “The Space To Create” on http://www.patreon.com/humansofnewyork
Julie, i came across this from an artist i follow. Shes conflicted by trying ti keep up with social media as an art outlet. the following came from her but is from the fellow who writes Humans of New York.do you feel the same?
Around this time, Brandon Stanton (the extraordinary human behind http://www.humansofnewyork.com ) published “A Space To Create” on his Patreon site, where he wrote about social media, and how it is failing artists and people who want what they do to still hold meaning, integrity, authenticity, substance, to be a real contribution to the world.
“…Content has become more bite-sized, more consumable, and less nuanced. In a world of decreasing attention spans, brevity is seen as the only way to compete. Importance is placed on the quantity of output rather than quality. Many ‘social media gurus’ teach that success is frequency of contact. Publish or perish. Either you constantly remind the world that you exist, or you will be forgotten.
I’ve spoken with a lot of artists on the Internet who feel burned out by this dynamic. They feel stifled by the treadmill of daily content…Social media tells you to go quickly. Art tells you to go deep. Social media tells you to replicate what works. Art tells you to experiment. Social media tells you to always be visible. Art tells you to disappear, figure something out, and come back with a discovery worth sharing. It’s not an easy puzzle for artists to solve. Because social media is the lifeline to our audience, and artists can’t survive without an audience.”
Brandon Stanton, “The Space To Create” on http://www.patreon.com/humansofnewyork