Monday, 24 May 2010
further experiments
Spent this morning working with the injet printed fabrics I made last week ( Heaven forbid that I should ever have to go back to fulltime work!!!!!)
I embellished some threads and fibres on to a commercial felt background
added some clipped bits of printed fabric
a few stitches -
not bad .....(excuse the unclipped joining threads)
This has some potential.
By the way - I hot ironed, then washed an offcut of this fabric.
the blue colours were NOT fixed - but it made an interesting negative image
Just after I wrote the above the post arrived- and with it my copy of Stitch -Page 26 had an article with this - it could be what's needed.
Monday, 17 May 2010
messing about with expensive equipment
I had an idea in the back of my mind to try inkjet printing on fabric. The ready- prepared fabric you can buy is good but limits the type/texture/colour of fabric you can use. So I thought I'd have a go at preparing my own.
All the information on this I could get from the internet recommended using freezer paper which cannot be purchased locally for love or money. Now, the whole idea of the freezer paper is to stick to and stiffen the fabric enough for it to go through the printer rollers without buckling and snagging. So this morning I assembled a whole group of products to see what else would work .
Bondaweb, fabric glue, spray on photomount glue....( and some screwdrivers in case I had to dismantle the printer to unclog it)
Long story short..... I didn't even try the other stuff
this won hands down!
I sprayed a very light coating on to ordinary printer paper and stuck it to the very well ironed cotton fabric. I smoothed it out so there were absolutley no bubbles or wrinkles, trimed the fabric to the exact size of the paper, and spent a moment pulling off any stray fraying threads etc. I made sure the leading edge ( the one that will go into the printer first) was securely stuck to the paper,
put it in the printer fabric side down ( most printers work like this) and ....... clicked Print
well- this was not a bad first go. I tried again and
Brilliant!
Dizzy with sucess -I tried slubbed silk
muslin- gave a beautiful ghost image
and some rather nasty blue polyester lining fabric
which gave a really crisp print that was equally clear on both sides of the fabric
I was really getting into my stride when the printer ran out of ink!
The fabric peeled off the paper with ease , leaving the glue on the paper not the fabric!!!!.
The feel of the fabric isnt affected, and I am assured that a hot iron will fix the ink.
I haven't tried washing it yet, though.
Off to Cartridge World- did I mention that the only fluid more expensive than vintage champange, pint for pint, is inkjet printer ink?
All the information on this I could get from the internet recommended using freezer paper which cannot be purchased locally for love or money. Now, the whole idea of the freezer paper is to stick to and stiffen the fabric enough for it to go through the printer rollers without buckling and snagging. So this morning I assembled a whole group of products to see what else would work .
Bondaweb, fabric glue, spray on photomount glue....( and some screwdrivers in case I had to dismantle the printer to unclog it)
Long story short..... I didn't even try the other stuff
this won hands down!
I sprayed a very light coating on to ordinary printer paper and stuck it to the very well ironed cotton fabric. I smoothed it out so there were absolutley no bubbles or wrinkles, trimed the fabric to the exact size of the paper, and spent a moment pulling off any stray fraying threads etc. I made sure the leading edge ( the one that will go into the printer first) was securely stuck to the paper,
put it in the printer fabric side down ( most printers work like this) and ....... clicked Print
well- this was not a bad first go. I tried again and
Brilliant!
Dizzy with sucess -I tried slubbed silk
muslin- gave a beautiful ghost image
and some rather nasty blue polyester lining fabric
which gave a really crisp print that was equally clear on both sides of the fabric
I was really getting into my stride when the printer ran out of ink!
The fabric peeled off the paper with ease , leaving the glue on the paper not the fabric!!!!.
The feel of the fabric isnt affected, and I am assured that a hot iron will fix the ink.
I haven't tried washing it yet, though.
Off to Cartridge World- did I mention that the only fluid more expensive than vintage champange, pint for pint, is inkjet printer ink?
Saturday, 15 May 2010
finding things
I've been test driving the new workspace.....Very pleased with it- particularly the way I can find things when I need them. While sorting it out I found a number of half finished projects I'd forgotten about, and it turns out I own 5 pairs of scissors and about a dozen stitch unpicks!!! not to mention a packet of fabric carbon paper -Strange - don't remember ever buying the stuff .
A book from the 1920s on how to draw trees turned up and a badge that declares us members of the "Cloud Appreciation Society"
I also came across a bit of layered felt and fabric snippets that I'd embellished.
A sunny and cheerful thing
So with a few hastily freehand stitched"sun" sketches and an off-cut of brown velvet
I 'll have a case for my sunglasses I can actually find in the depth my bag - when I sew that button on....
A book from the 1920s on how to draw trees turned up and a badge that declares us members of the "Cloud Appreciation Society"
I also came across a bit of layered felt and fabric snippets that I'd embellished.
A sunny and cheerful thing
So with a few hastily freehand stitched"sun" sketches and an off-cut of brown velvet
I 'll have a case for my sunglasses I can actually find in the depth my bag - when I sew that button on....
Thursday, 6 May 2010
Like buses , 3 at once......
I know that I've been a bit slack about posting, but I've dedicated this evening to clearing the backlog!
-the reason for my slackness???? Home improvements......
Have a look at this sheer lovelyness! my adored brother William ( well, he is now!) put up shelves and levelled desks and rebuilt my cramped workspace into this - a proper working studio
all my threads and drawing materials readily accessable, behind me my fabrics and books are neatly ranged on bookshelves.....
All I have to do now is find the time to work in it
Bloody computers!
After a brisk tussle with this damn machine technology I managed to open several little packets of e- mailed wonder sent by Olive
First- the missing collages from Saturdays workshop
Olive went to the Embroiderers Guild weekend at Drumalis which this year was tutored by Angie Hughes. She really enjoyed it – foiling techniques – made what ended up as a stitch sampler which she's quite pleased about. She said " It wasn’t really what it started out to be – but you know how it is – go with the flow and all that."
Once Olive gets started she's hard to stop- I know this because she also sent pictures of one that she made later with the same techniques
Beautiful work !
Create and Play
Olive lead a session of creative play on Saturday. She had us cutting and tearing , rearranging and sticking on...Then it became a game of artistic pass the parcel as we made a drawing, passed it to our neighbor, tore it up and made a new piece using bits of the old one. It was fun designed to make you think again about the possibilites of shape and form ....
Ruth and Alma concentrating hard
Carol and Lila carefully arranging things.....
there's a lot of potential in these things.
Many thanks to Olive for leading the fun, and to Ruth for letting us mess up her office space like that!
Apologies if I didn't include your piece in this post- I appear to have a lot of camera issues at the minute, and some of the pictures came out all fuzzy....
Carol gave us the details of the Dromore Cathedral exhibition- don't forget to get your entries to her on time!
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