Copyright Silhouette School 2016. Powered by Blogger.


Chalkboard Style Subway Art Tutorial

Subway art, chalkboard style, Silhouette tutorial, Silhouette Studio, PicMonkeyAlmost as popular as the recent Ice Bucket Challenge is the Chalkboard Style Subway Art.  I've had several people ask how they are made and so today I thought I'd share how you can make one with birth stats, first day of school info, or a milestone birthday.   I'm making one for my daughter's first day of school, but you can do whatever theme you'd like - the process is the same.

There are several programs you can use to create these, but I think the easiest, most user-friendly and best graphics package is PicMonkey. So we're actually going to start in PicMonkey - you can design the entire chalkboard subway art there, but I want to incorporate a few 'extras' so we'll be using Silhouette Studio, as well.  If you're not familiar, PicMonkey it's a free photo editing and design website that offers tons of fonts, designs overlays, graphics and more.  You can get the upgraded Royale version which I think is more than worth it for $33 a year, to gain access to ALL of the graphics and fonts...but it's definitely not necessary for this project.   Royale features are indicated by a little gold crown in the program. 

Start by going to PicMonkey.com

Click 'Design' along the top to open up a blank work area.

Immediately crop your  page size so you don't accidentally create in a space that ultimately won't be printed.   Click on the crop tool at the top left and then pick the 8x10 (or whatever size your prefer) from the drop down menu of pre-sets.

Subway art, chalkboard style, Silhouette tutorial, Silhouette Studio, PicMonkey

Since these are chalkboard style, we want our background to look like a chalkboard so go to the little apple at the bottom of the left sidebar. This is where you'll find all of the themes including the School theme.

Subway art, chalkboard style, Silhouette tutorial, Silhouette Studio, Pic Monkey

Click 'School U' and then scroll all the way down to the Textures/'Boards' tab.  These are some of the options for your background.  For this I'm going to pick the black chalkboard. Click 'Apply'.

Subway art, chalkboard style, Silhouette tutorial, Silhouette Studio, PicMonkey

At this point you can start adding your text.   Because it's chalkboard style, I like to use the chalkboard type fonts which area all under the Text/Penmanship tab still in the School U theme.  you'll see some of them are only available with the Royale, but there are still plenty of options.

Type out everything you'd like on your subway art sign in various fonts, colors, and sizes...just play around with font size and fonts and configurations until you have what works for you!

Some ideas to Inspire You:

First Day of School: 
School Name, Grade, Teacher, Bus #, Favorite Subject, Favorite 'Special, Favorite Food, Favorite Color, Age...

Birth Stats:
Name, Birth Date, Weight, Length, Time of Birth, Hospital, Doctor, Little Brother/Sister, Godparents, Boy/Girl

Milestone Birthday: 
Happy Birthday, Name, Date, Age, Favorites (Color, Food, Action Figure/Princess/Character), Friends, Party Theme

To add banners or other overlays (like the heart), as I did for 'First Grade', click on the Butterfly icon on the left sidebar to go to the overlays. Then scroll down to banners (or find other appropriate images).  The text was added over the banner, by click on the 'T' for text tool, typing out the words and then dragging it into place on top of the banner.  TIP: If an object or text is going 'behind' another object and you need it in front, right click and click "bring to front". 

Subway art, chalkboard style, Silhouette tutorial, Silhouette Studio, chalkboard
Here's how my chalkboard stat sheet looks...it's nice, but not complete yet. This is as far as I can go in PicMonkey right now.   Now I switch over to Silhouette Studio for a few more elements.   There is one VERY important thing you need to remember about PicMonkey: You can NOT save in the program and you are VERY limited by how much you can edit a saved design...so be sure it's perfect or at least be sure you don't close out of your design.

Subway art, chalkboard style, Silhouette tutorial, Silhouette Studio, PicMonkey

To save a design click on SAVE at at the top of PicMonkey. Save the design to your desktop. I would NOT close out Picmonkey yet - if you do you will have NO chance of editing your design.  If you keep it open, you can still move elements around if you need to.

Once you've saved, open up the design in Silhouette Studio then drag and drop the design into the work area.   It will probably come in larger, so you just resize the design so it fits within the printable area on your Silhouette work area.

Subway art, chalkboard style, Silhouette tutorial, Silhouette Studio, drag and drop

The elements I want to add in Studio are: Divider lines, Curved Text for 'Favorite Specials" and the Teacher's Name.

To make the curved text, I'm just going to wrap the text like I normally would when making curved text in Studio. Click here for a full tutorial on text to path.  I use the Fill tool and the Line Color tool to change the font to white.  After the font is converted to a path you can change the size of the curved text to fit your design.

Subway art, chalkboard style, Silhouette tutorial, Silhouette Studio, curved text


Now for the dividing lines.  You could just use a straight line....and that would be perfectly great. Be sure to give your lines a 'weight' so that they print....even if you color them, if they are a weight of "0" they won't print. More details here...

Subway art, chalkboard style, Silhouette tutorial, Silhouette Studio

BUT..I didn't want a straight 'boring' line. I wanted polka dots and the easiest way to get polka dots is to turn those lines into a rhinestone template. Tricky tricky.  You do need Designer Edition for this step.  I went with 10ss and played with the spacing between the dots until I got the look I was going for.  Obviously I'm not going to cut these as rhinestones, but instead just print them as dots.

Subway art, chalkboard style, Silhouette tutorial, Silhouette Studio, rhinestone
I finished up my chalkboard style subway art by adding the musical notes (google images that were traced in Studio and filled with color) and the teacher's name.

I grouped everything together so that I could resize. Now you can print from Studio...which is what I did on my home printer using cardstock. Or you can send your design off to have it printed at a copy center.  Before you do that though you'll want to covert the Studio file to PDF format.

Frame it up all cute and snap those pictures. Create those memories. Cherish these days...

Subway art, chalkboard style, Silhouette tutorial, Silhouette Studio


  Note: This post may contain affiliate links. By clicking on them and purchasing products through my links, I received a small commission. That's what helps fund Silhouette School so I can keep buying new Silhouette-related products to show you how to get the most out of your machine! 

Thanks for coming to class today at Silhouette School.  If you like what you see, I'd love for you to pin it!


 photo 2b820f06-c93b-4b24-929c-96287390140f_zpsf3cd3a23.jpguse twiter photo Twitter_48x48_zps4e06061c.pnguse twiter photo Twitter_48x48_zps4e06061c.pngUse Feed photo Feed_48x48_zps63f27a4f.png photo 2b820f06-c93b-4b24-929c-96287390140f_zpsf3cd3a23.jpgUse Feed photo Feed_48x48_zps63f27a4f.pngUse Feed photo Feed_48x48_zps63f27a4f.png

1 comment

Thanks for leaving a comment! We get several hundred comments a day. While we appreciate every single one of them it's nearly impossible to respond back to all of them, all the time. So... if you could help me by treating these comments like a forum where readers help readers.

In addition, don't forget to look for specific answers by using the Search Box on the blog. If you're still not having any luck, feel free to email me with your question.