Monday, 15 July 2013

Chapter 3 – Yarn Dyeing

Along with dyeing fabric I also dyed some yarns too.

(As an aside I have the TV on in the background as I type this post and Neighbours just came on.  What have they done to the theme tune?  It’s terrible!  Just saying).

Image 1 - Some natural yarns drying in the sunshine.  These ones were dyed using the microwave method:

Chapter 3

 

Image 2 - Some more yarns drying in the sunshine.  These ones I found in a yarn stash box so didn’t microwave them in case they were man-made.  Instead I soaked them in the dye for about an hour or so giving the pots an occasional swoosh around:

Chapter 3

 

Image 3 – here’s my final ‘stash’ of fabrics, yarns and buttons ready for stitchery (there’s more green fabric than is visible - honest):

Chapter 3

 

I had some left over dye and decided to see what happens to melon and other seeds if I introduced them.

Image 4 – seeds having a soak in the dye:

Chapter 3

 

Image 5 – I left the seeds in the dye for hours and then eventually washed them off.  I’m really pleased with the results and they have a lovely sound when you swish them around (they had that sound before they were dyed but anyway):

Chapter 3 - Dyed Seeds

 

So now onto Chapter 4.  And here’s a sneaky peek for Sian!

Sneaky Peek !:

Chapter 4

 

Sneaky Peek 2:

Chapter 4

Chapter 3 – Monoprinting on Dyed Fabric

I got out my trusty picture frame that gets used a lot for monoprinting and investigated my acrylic paint section.  I have hundreds of those little tubes but I have recently seen the benefit of getting some big mamma tubes.  Anyhoo I decided to work with what I have (Must. Stop. Spending. Money.) and mixed a colour with a little fabric medium and a tiny weeny bit of water (to make it more fluid but not so much to make it seep through the fabric in a sloshy mess).

Image 1 – glass plate ready to apply fabric to:

Chapter 3

 

Image 2 – fabric after three prints:

Chapter 3

 

Image 3 – This time I lay down a thin layer of paint and then swirled in it with the corner of a credit card (the paint isn’t as dark as it looks in the image):

Chapter 3

 

Image 4 – And again (the paint is lighter than the photo depicts):

Chapter 3

 

Image 5 – Another one with lines painted on the glass:

Chapter 3

 

Image 6 – And again (the paint is lime green I promise):

Chapter 3

 

Image 7 – Having a play:

Chapter 3

 

Image 8 – Thicker paint this time (as it was more fluid in tube it was easier to paint without having to do anything much to it):

Chapter 3

 

Image 9 – Double printing:

Chapter 3

I wanted to share with you a print that I took at the Distant Stitch Summer School this year where I used acrylic paint which had already had textile medium mixed in (the paint was creamy and delight to work with).

Image 10 – I have painted onto the underside of a glass cutting plate (a kitchen accessory) as the top side is not smooth.  There are vague spirals in the pattern so I can justify adding the photo here!:

Distant Stitch Summer School 2013

 

Image 11 – the print on white fabric (it’s very vibrant):

Distant Stitch Summer School 2013

Chapter 3 – Fabric Dyeing

I bought some Dylon hand dye this morning from Wilkonsons.  I almost got carried away and bought four different sachets but remembered my black dye disaster from the last Module so erred on the side of caution and just got ‘Tulip Red’ and ‘Tropical Green’ to see how I get on.

Image 1 – Dylon Dye:

C&G Work - Chapter 3

I looked on the Dylon website for more information and discovered in the FAQs that you can microwave dye using Dylon!  Eh?  Do what?  MICROWAVE?!  This excited me because it somehow sounds quicker…  A few more google searches and I found instructions on how to do this!  Amazing!  Instructions and due credit here:  http://www.jennierayment.com/?q=node/5

I experimented and got some amazing results.  Although my fabrics are more crazy cerise pink than tulip red I like that am going to stick with them.

There aren’t any fabric shops in my hometown (ahhh!) so I sourced a 100% cotton bed set and chopped that up for fabric.  I then proceeded to dye dye and more dye.  With the weather being so hot my fabric dried really quickly.

Image 2 – Until I was more confident I made up little batches (although did find it sometimes difficult to get everything dissolved):

C&G Work - Chapter 3

Image 3 – A square of fabric tied up:

C&G Work - Chapter 3

Image 4 – I wore gloves to begin with but soon got fed up with them.  So now I have red and green hands!

C&G Work - Chapter 3

Image 5 – Another square of fabric, tied and with dye sploshed on

C&G Work - Chapter 3

Image 6 – In the beginning I did some straight forward dyeing to see how it all worked.  The red turned out more like cerise pink but it’s very striking:

C&G Work - Chapter 3

Image 7 – I like how the stitching remained white (it must be synthetic thread):

C&G Work - Chapter 3

Image 8 – Another tied one:

C&G Work - Chapter 3

Image 9 – Tie dye!

C&G Work - Chapter 3

Image 10 -  A mixed colour tie dye:

C&G Work - Chapter 3

Image 11 – And another

C&G Work - Chapter 3

Image 12 – A very striking tie dye:

C&G Work - Chapter 3

Image 13:

C&G Work - Chapter 3

Image 14:-

C&G Work - Chapter 3

Image 15:

C&G Work - Chapter 3

Saturday, 13 July 2013

Chapter 3 – Beads

Chapter 3 is a bit meaty so I’m going to report back in bits!  So me being me I ignored everything else and went straight to the beads bit first.  You see I have a ‘thing’ for beads.  And sequins.  But especially beads (and buttons).  I have this habit of going into charity shops and buying cheap necklaces simply to chop up.  In fact I did the very same on Thursday and bought a lovely necklace with three different strings of red beads on it for £1.  I do this a lot really.  It’s a compulsion.  Lately I’ve had to put a ban on stepping foot in a charity shop because I keep buying things I don’t need.  I am vaguely impressed with my own self-restraint!

So as a result of previous charity shop rummaging I have quite a collection of beads and so forth in curious shapes.  I began by looking through it for green and red beads and then other interestingly shaped ones (that I would be happy to sacrifice under a layer of paint!).  It was quite difficult really because I kept getting side-tracked with a lot of “oooooooh what a lovely string of beads” followed by "no no I can’t paint that” and so forth.  In the end I initially ended up with:

Image 1 – Beads

Collection for Chapter 3

In my tutorial with Sian at the Summer School we discussed other types of bead which explains the keys.  I have other ideas but think I’ve got enough to be getting on with (one must draw the line somewhere!).

I also discovered in my hunt for green and red ‘things’ that I have an excess of green beads and sequins!  I suspect I’ll be doing a lot with them.

Image 2 – Boxed beads and sequins

Sequins and Beads Chapter 3

With quite a lot of the non-boxed beads being neither red nor green I then got out some paint that has this plastic quality to it.  I don’t know what it is but I bought it from Sainsbury’s many years ago in the kid’s art section.  It’s really great stuff actually.  I put a blob of red in one pot and a blob of green in another, popped in the ‘things’, put on the lid and shook like I was doing some kind of crazy dance.  As you do.  I poured the beads out on acetate sheets so that they would be easy to peel off when they were dry.

Image 3 – wet beads on acetate

Paint Drying for Chapter 3 a

Image 4 – The paint coats unevenly and leaves patterns on some of the beads

Paint Drying for Chapter 3 b

I painted these a few days ago and now have a box of red beads and a box of green beads.  They sit there taunting me because I can’t play with them for a few chapters yet.  I keep considering skipping forward and then coming back but I’m exercising restraint. For a change.