Saturday 9 March 2013

Success at home....

After the disappointment of poor transfer results in the hall during our recent "play-day", we have since each spent a considerable number of hours at home transferring our paper prints to fabrics with great results.
We then had a show and tell in our last meeting, and a couple of us have already used the resulting fabrics in projects.  There are far too many to show here, so the following photos are a selection from each participating member.

Yvonne began by showing her results, along with the project she had made using one of the transfers.  Yvonne further embellished the freezer paper stencilled flowers with paint and stitch before using the flower motif again, as a quilting design on the background.

More of Yvonne's samples above and below using resists to give attractive backgrounds

Next was Jenny's turn to talk about her processes and samples

Jenny cut out hearts from painted papers and used these as a resist to transfer the colours of the hearts as well as more papers for the background transfer, giving a lovely delicate panel of fabric.
Jenny who has used this technique before, went on to demonstrate other ways resists can be used used, with leaves and feathers.


Jill then discussed how she used leaves as resists
and added further paint to the transferred print

Jill also used transfer dyes in a mono-print technique

Helen explored transfer crayons, pens and markers and showed her results expressing that this was the first time she had encountered this technique so her test drawings were quite simple in design, but she was pleased with the transferred results.
Transfer pens

Transfer markers
Helen also tested out transfer paints in a mono-print technique.

Next was Gill, this also being her first introduction to this medium


This sample from Gill had salt sprinkled onto wet dye coloured paper, with the resulting transfer print onto cotton/poly fabric

Although Carol is an artist using regular colouring techniques, this was also her first introduction to using  transfer paints, dyes and crayons.
Carol's sample using the transfer dyes and a foam stamp above, and below making marks using transfer paints

Carol spent some time exploring the use of  transfer crayons on paper over a rubbing mat.  She found that quite vigorous rubbing with a generous application of the crayon gave best results.

I had experimented with transfer paints some time ago and being disappointed with the colours in my resulting transfers, was looking forward to trying out different techniques and also to using the transfer dyes.
This sample shows transfer paints on plotter film, the markings made by laying and scrumpling cling film on the surface while wet, with the resulting print alongside.
This sample used up the dregs of transfer paint from my palette, sponged onto paper, then transfer printed on to poly/cotton fabric with eucalyptus leaves as a resist.  The leaves are blue because they had picked up paint from a previous transfer paper, and I laid the leaves down with that painted side to the fabric.
The centre panels in this pair of cushions are results from using more eucalyptus leaves as resits with black transfer dye painted on paper and coarse sea-salt sprinkled on while the paper was wet.  I was able to get two transfer prints from one paper.  The leaves were then painted with a wash of grey acrylic paint and heat set.

We all enjoyed our experiments very much and intend exploring this avenue further in another Diversity group session in April, though I know some of us will also be spending time before then making more papers and prints.  We hope you will come back soon  to see those results.
                                                                                                      Rachel






















Friday 1 March 2013

After a few hiccups..... our first blog


Welcome to the first blog for our developing group working with textiles and mixed media  

The first Diversity project for 2013, called Lucky Dip,  was suggested by Jenny at the end of last year.  All those taking part chose a subject and colour and wrote them on a piece of paper these were then put into containers.  They were picked out in turn by participating members, along with a technique/medium which had been selected previously by Yvonne and Jenny.  This was a lively and noisy process as the themes, colours and techniques we each pulled out took most of us out of our comfort zones, as was intended of course! The only rules laid down were that the technique picked has to appear in the project somewhere, and that the colour selected has to be used in 40% of the project.  Jenny suggested we work methodically and set us target dates by which to research our themes and recommended we begin sketchbooks to follow our progress, with the intention of these eventually being displayed at our next exhibition.  We would discuss our research at a meeting in January, work on samples to the end of April and have our projects finished by the summer.

The Group meets regularly to discuss progress on current projects and discuss how techniques, new to some members, might be incorporated into their work.  The second week of February saw the first of this year's "play-days", using transfer paints, dyes and crayons to print onto fabrics.
Despite the dismal wet weather we all turned up with cars loaded up with boxes and bags of papers, paints, brushes, irons, heat-guns and hair-dryers etc., everything we might need except the kitchen sink really! Tables were set out with paints in one area and two different mixes of dye solutions on others; a drying area was set aside and a printing station set up.
Helen setting up one of the transfer dye stations

We started with a general overview of the techniques from Jenny, Yvonne and Rachel with samples being shown of the different results using paints dyes and crayons.  Play soon got under way with the suggestion that we first each make a sample sheet of all the colours and types of paints and dyes as a future reference. 
Gill deciding which colour dyes to try out first

We each produced colour swatches for future reference


The girls then produced many sheets of colour trying out different techniques under Jenny's guidance, including using salt on wet papers and cling film. 


 Carol, enjoying her first play session our newest group member, using the thicker paints to produce abstract papers ready to dry and transfer later.





while Yvonne practised using a resist and mono-printing, also stamping with transfer paint onto a previously transfer-dyed fabric.  Yvonne also tried out a stencil she had prepared on freezer paper, using it as a resist, then used coloured paper to transfer onto white fabric.  She envisages maybe adding fabric paints to the flower and using her favoured hand embroidery stitches to further enhance the piece.



The girls were all eager to see how their samples appeared on fabric, but it seems that maybe the damp conditions and the electricity supply in the hall wasn't sufficient to allow the irons to heat up really well so the transfers were a little disappointing.  We decided to continue the transfer process at home later and will have a show and tell meeting the following week to compare results.  We fixed a further date, April 17, to explore more avenues using this medium.

Prior to this day, Diversity held an "experimenting day" at the end of January so that newer Diversity members could see samples and demonstrations of techniques they had not used before, but would be using in their "Lucky Dip" projects.  Yvonne demonstrated screen printing and a couple techniques using Lutrador, Jenny demonstrated methods of making various papers such as silk paper, and tissue paper fabric, Ann showed samples she had worked previously, using transfer paints and dyes together with samples of heat-distressed Tyvek, and Rachel demonstrated free motion embroidery techniques using soluble film and fabrics.  

Gewn heat distressing a piece of Tyvek fabric

Gill trying her hand at paper making watched by Yvonne and Jenny

Jill getting to grips with free-motion stitching on soluble film

Yvonne demonstrating screen printing

We hope you will enjoy following our group as it develops, it is our intention to blog every couple of weeks or after meetings.  If you would like to see other projects both finished and in progress by this fledgling group of ladies, then please follow this   LINK
We hope to see you again soon.