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Pinkfresh Studio Double-Sided Scrapbooking Paper Pack 12" x 12" - Happy Heart

Pinkfresh Studio Happy Heart 12"x12" gives you double-sided papers with florals, butterflies and quotes for clean, easy layering. Perfect for scrapbook layouts and mini albums when you want coordinating patterns that mix effortlessly and help you finish a page fast.
Availability: In stock
€17.90
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Distress inks were designed as a color system — not random individual pads.
If your collection is growing, your storage needs to grow with it.

The Tim Holtz Ranger Distress Ink Pad Tin (TDA68075) is a durable metal storage tin engineered specifically for full-size Distress Ink Pads. More than simple storage, it forms the backbone of a controlled Distress organization system.

Why it matters

When inks are stacked loosely in drawers, creativity slows down.
When colors are visible, structured and logically arranged, you design faster.

This tin allows you to:

  • Store full-size Distress Ink Pads securely in one structured unit
  • Arrange shades in gradient order for visual color flow
  • Keep your collection protected and travel-ready
  • Maintain consistent placement for every shade

Pair it with official Distress label sheets and create a fixed “parking spot” system inside the tin. Each color has a permanent position. If one shade is missing, you see it instantly.

That’s not just storage — that’s visual inventory control.

👉 Features

  • Durable metal construction
  • Designed specifically for full-size Distress Ink Pads
  • Structured interior layout for organized placement
  • Compatible with Distress Label Sheets for slot mapping
  • Stackable and workshop-friendly design

👍 Ideal for

  • Medium to large Distress collections
  • Studio and workshop setups
  • Structured color palette organization
  • Creators who want faster shade selection

Inspiration Tip

Organize your inks in tonal transitions — light to dark within each color family — and place coordinating Oxides or Sprays nearby. Your tin becomes a working palette rather than storage. When you see color relationships clearly, layering becomes intentional instead of accidental.