Search
English

Ranger Tim Holtz Distress Tiny Blending Foams - 9pcs

Brand: RANGER INK
Set of 9 replacement foams for the Tim Holtz Distress Tiny Blending Tool by Ranger.

The tiny blending foam attaches easily to the tiny blending tool for applying inks and other mediums to smaller areas on your craft projects.
Availability: In stock
€6.90
i h

✓ Free Shipping for orders over 55€

✓ Installments for orders over 80€

✓ Product selected by crafters for crafters

✓ Shipping Worldwide

Set of 9 replacement foams for the Tim Holtz Distress Tiny Blending Tool by Ranger.  The tiny blending foam attaches easily to the tiny blending tool for applying inks and other mediums to smaller areas on your craft projects.

👉 The package contains a set of 9 replacement foams.

Features:

  • Compatible with the Tim Holtz Distress Tiny Blending Tools
  • Easy to clean with soap and water
  • Perfect for repeated use
  • Ideal for blending techniques, coloring with stencils, creating backgrounds, or layers with distress techniques

💡 Directions: Attach the fabric side of the tiny blending foam to the tool base. Tap foam across the surface of the ink pad. Rub the tool along the project surface or through a stencil to blend color. Use one piece of foam for each color or wash foams with soap and water. Allow to air dry.

🎓 Tim Holtz recommends having a different sponge for each color so that it doesn't need to be washed, thus prolonging life expectancy even more!

 

🗂️ 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.