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Tim Holtz Distress Crayons | Water-Reactive Pigment Sticks for Mixed Media – Halloween 4

Brand: RANGER INK
Distress Crayons Halloween 4 includes three water-reactive pigment sticks with a dark, mystical character, ideal for mixed media, art journaling and junk journaling. Creamy in application, they offer excellent control and blend seamlessly with Distress Inks and Distress Oxides.
Availability: In stock
€13.90
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Distress Crayons by Tim Holtz are water-reactive pigment sticks created for layered mixed media work, shading and dramatic depth. Their creamy formulation allows direct, controlled application and can be used dry or activated with water for atmospheric effects.

They are ideal for aging effects, bold contrasts and enhancing existing backgrounds. Distress Crayons work with fingers, brushes, sponges or stencils and integrate perfectly with Distress Inks and Distress Oxides, maintaining color harmony and texture.

The Halloween 4 set features a dark, mystical palette inspired by occult and gothic themes, perfect for expressive Halloween projects.

👉 Features:

  • Water-reactive pigment sticks for mixed media
  • Creamy texture with a soft matte finish
  • Can be used dry or with water
  • Excellent control for details and shading
  • Fully color-coordinated with Distress Inks & Distress Oxides

🎨 Colors included:

  • Fortune Teller – deep purple
  • Wicked Elixir – dark green with blue undertones
  • Decayed – olive green

👍 Ideal for:

  • Mixed media projects
  • Art journaling
  • Junk journaling
  • Scrapbooking and card making
  • Gothic, occult and Halloween-themed creations

Inspiration Tip:
Use Fortune Teller for dramatic focal elements, Wicked Elixir for mystical backgrounds, and Decayed to add an aged, distressed feel to textures and details.

 

The Tim Holtz Distress range is a complete color system for scrapbooking, art journaling and mixed media. Although all products belong to the same family, they are not the same. Each sub-range has a different formulation and reacts differently on paper and with water.

Below you can see what each Distress product is and how it works.

🎨 Distress Inks

Water-activated dye inks designed for blending, layering and reactive techniques. They absorb into the paper and move with water, creating aged effects and organic backgrounds.

Available as:

🧪 Distress Oxide Inks

Hybrid inks combining dye and pigment properties. They produce a soft, chalky finish and react strongly with water, creating the signature oxidation effect.

Available as:

💦 Distress Spray Stains

Water-activated dye inks in spray form. They soak into the paper, delivering fluid movement and expressive color for backgrounds and mixed media work.

Available as:

  • Distress Spray Stains

🌫️ Distress Oxide Sprays

The spray version of Distress Oxides. Hybrid oxide inks in liquid form, offering chalky oxidation effects with strong water reactivity.

Available as:

Distress Spritz

Translucent shimmer sprays. Not a base color medium, but designed to be applied over other Distress products for shine, highlights and finishing effects.

Available as:

🖍️ Distress Crayons

Solid, water-reactive color sticks. They activate with water and provide intense pigment, texture and control for mixed media applications.

Available as:

  • Distress Crayons (single & sets)

✏️ Distress Watercolor Pencils

Watercolor in pencil form. Water-reactive and ideal for detail work, shading and controlled color application. These are color tools, not inks.

Available as:

  • Distress Watercolor Pencils (single & sets)

🛡️ Distress Archival Inks

Permanent, waterproof archival inks. They do not react with water and are used when a stable stamped image is required before adding wet media.

Available as:

🗂️ How to Properly Organize Your Distress Collection

The Tim Holtz Storage System

If you own more than 10 Distress inks, you’ve already started searching.
If you own more than 30, you’ve probably lost control.

Tim Holtz doesn’t see Distress as “ink pads.”
He sees them as a color system — and organizes them accordingly.

A key tool in this system is the round adhesive label sheets from the Distress line, such as:
Ranger Tim Holtz Distress Large Round Label Sheet White

🎯 1. Lid Organization – Instant Identification

The first step is simple:

  • Apply the round label to the top of each ink pad.
  • If you store them vertically (in a rack or drawer), you see the entire color range from above.
  • No opening. No testing. No confusing Vintage Photo with Ground Espresso.

This alone cuts color selection time in half.

🧲 2. Storage Tin Mapping – The “Parking Spot” System

Inside metal Distress storage tins, Tim takes it one step further:

  • He places a round label at the bottom of each slot.
  • Every color gets a fixed position.
  • If one ink is missing, you see it instantly.

This works as visual inventory control.
It’s not just tidying up — it’s collection management.

🎨 3. Organize by Color Flow

Distress colors are not random. They’re built in tonal families:

  • Shade transitions
  • Warm and cool neutrals
  • Vintage, muted and bold ranges

With labels, you can:

  • Arrange inks in gradient order
  • Spot gaps in your palette
  • Make smarter decisions about future additions

Your rack becomes a palette wall.

📋 4. Swatch Boards & Color Charts

Round labels are not limited to lids and tins. They’re also used:

  • On permanent color boards
  • In swatch binders
  • On planner reference pages
  • On studio wall color charts

This creates a stable, ready-to-use color reference system without re-testing inks every time.

🔁 5. Full Consistency (Ink – Oxide – Spray)

If you own the same shade in:

  • Distress Ink
  • Distress Oxide
  • Reinker
  • Spray

You can apply the same label logic across all storage points.
One color = one visual identity.

This speeds up your workflow and keeps everything cohesive.

💡 Why This Matters

Distress includes many closely related shades.
Without a system:

  • You waste time
  • You accidentally repurchase similar colors
  • You don’t fully use your palette

With a system:

  • You choose colors in seconds
  • You instantly see what’s missing
  • You work with flow

And when color selection becomes effortless, creativity becomes freer.