Sunprints

Sunprints
Sunprints I made in the summer at the family cottage

Monday, 9 November 2015

Stamped fabric

I made a few more foam stamps using the Magic Stamp blocks pressed onto some natural plant material that I found.   The top one is made of dried up Echinacea flowers and the one below it is made of a pine branch.   I used opaque textile paint on navy blue fabric.  These stamps are a lot of fun to make because they are your own unique design and the great thing is you can use them whenever you want on whatever surface you want.  I sometimes stamp on recycled tea bags to make greeting cards!


Piece for Stittsville Library show

For the last few years in November Out-of-the-Box has had a show at the Stittsville Library.  This year the show theme is "A Way with Words".  I made a piece using the word " Bird".  I sewed together hand painted fabric scraps and printed the white fabrics with my hand carved stamps.  The show will be hanging at the library until the end of November.  At the bottom you can see my new Cardinal stamp which I just carved.  I used a photo and carved it using Speedycarve rubber.   My piece measures 16 X 20 inches and is mounted on a painted canvas.



Here's a closer photo of my machine stitching.


New stamps

I made a few new stamps the last few months.  These are both made using the Magic Stamp foam blocks and pressing them onto a surface while the blocks are heated up. Natural shapes make wonderful stamps.  For the background fabric I often use fabric that I've coloured before using leftover textile paint.  The first stamp is made from a pattern on some packaging material.  The circles are about three inches in diameter. The second stamp is made from the brown fiddleheads left in the fall after a fern has grown in the summer. My collection of stamps is growing...



Thursday, 20 August 2015

Eco printing in August

I hadn't done any eco printing since the workshop in June so when we had a cool spell earlier in August, I did quite a bit of eco printing on watercolour paper.  I bought a roast pan at Canadian Tire and got to work.  I collected some plants in the woods nearby and at a friend's place outside Ottawa.   I printed them on 90 lb and 140 lb watercolour paper.   Here are some photos of the results.

 This one is a Purple Aster plant.  Colours came out well.

This one is Wild Raspberry leaves.

 This is Wild Grape leaves on a branch.


more in August

Next I took a zen doodle and transferred it to fabric with a Sharpy marker.  I plan to add pink borders and continue the piece into the borders.  It took a lot of time to fill in all the details but it has potential I think.  It measures 18 X 24 inches so far.


August art

On the August long weekend I starting working on a few things.  First of all I took out my Rayna Gillman book called Create Your Own Free-Form Quilts.  In it she teaches how to cut up fabrics and sew them together into strips and then sew the units together into beautiful quilts.  There's something so freeing about just sewing together strips and seeing where it takes you.   I have a lot of my own hand painted fabrics so I cut up some of them and made a small quilt top.  Here is the result of that.  It measures 19 X 20 inches right now.


Wednesday, 17 June 2015

Eco printing

It was a busy week!  On June 11 and 12th we had an eco printing class at Wabi Sabi with Wendy Feldberg.  We learned the wonderful process of preparing papers and protein (silk and wool) and cellulose (cotton and linen) fabrics for printing with plant materials and rust and then doing the printing.  Wendy is a wonderful teacher.  We learned a huge amount in the two days.  Here are some photos of my eco printed fabrics.

This one is of a silk scarf I cold printed before the class.  It was done on silk with red onion skins.  I left the bundle rolled up in a jar for a month.  I actually didn't do any preparing of the fabric besides washing in Synthropol.



This is a print on 90 pound watercolour paper.  You can see the rose leaf which I made more distinct by putting iron water on it.



Here are another couple of prints on watercolour paper.  You can see the red hibiscus.



Here is a piece of rusting done by putting rusty bits on the paper, sprinkling on some black tea and vinegar.  Afterwards I brushed some prereduced indigo on it.


This is an eco print on Japanese shoji paper bought at East Wind in Ottawa.  This paper is fine yet tough.  Some of the class members got silk-like prints on it.



This is an eco print and rusting on linen fabric.  You can see how the iron rebar made very dark marks.  There is a faded red flower print in the middle.


This is also on repurposed linen with mostly yellow onion skin and some rusting.


This is a silk crepe scarf eco printed with lots of red cabbage and coreopsis and other plants.  The crepe silk worked quite well.



Another silk crepe scarf eco printed with rusting and plant materials.  Looks even better in person!