I've created a facebook page. I'm trying to find out which works best for me a blog or a more instantaneous presence. Perhaps a mix of the two. But right now the blog alone isn't doing it.
https://www.facebook.com/herebesnapdragons/
Enjoy.
Thursday 12 November 2015
Tuesday 10 November 2015
Paul Klee's notebooks online
How wonderful that Paul Klee's annotated notebooks have gone online. 10 years and 4000 pages. What a precious resource.
I heard about it here:
http://robadadisegnatori.com/2015/09/10-anni-4000-pagine-di-appunti-di-paul-klee-liberamente-consultabili/
This is the actual resource:
http://www.kleegestaltungslehre.zpk.org/ee/ZPK/Archiv/2011/01/25/00001/
Enjoy!
I heard about it here:
http://robadadisegnatori.com/2015/09/10-anni-4000-pagine-di-appunti-di-paul-klee-liberamente-consultabili/
This is the actual resource:
http://www.kleegestaltungslehre.zpk.org/ee/ZPK/Archiv/2011/01/25/00001/
Enjoy!
Saturday 7 November 2015
Rust Dyeing
I've been doing a bit of rust dyeing.
1:1 water:white vinegar. Soak with some old nails or keys for a few weeks - you'll see the colour change and intensify. I put a copper pipe on top but it didn't have much effect. It's useful to put things in a transparent container so you can see underneath.
Hey presto:
Looking forward to take this further in the future.
1:1 water:white vinegar. Soak with some old nails or keys for a few weeks - you'll see the colour change and intensify. I put a copper pipe on top but it didn't have much effect. It's useful to put things in a transparent container so you can see underneath.
Hey presto:
From underneath |
Love how the screws show up |
Looking forward to take this further in the future.
Saturday 24 October 2015
Sun Printing
I did some sun printing during the three days of sun we had this summer. Absolutely loved it and will be repeating it the minute it's sunny and hot again.
Here are some useful resources:
And these ones explain the science behind it:
Here are some useful resources:
- a video showing sun dyeing in speeded up version.
- a video explaining sun dyeing in more detail and shows some interesting techniques including swirl and scrunch effects.
- sun dyeing with acrylics instead of special paints.
And these ones explain the science behind it:
- http://www.pburch.net/dyeing/howtodyewithlight.shtml
- http://www.pburch.net/dyeing/dyeblog/C557981556/E20130702081959/index.html
I used Colourcraft Silk Paint.
My results were very pleasing
Some learnings:
My results were very pleasing
Various trials on the go |
This one came out well and I love the blue |
This one didn't come out so well in the end, not enough definition |
Curling soft leaves |
The stripes from the John Lewis bag showed through to the print |
My scrunch effect |
- it needs to be hot as well as sunny
- when the conditions are right the prints will dry really quite quickly - especially on thin silk
- soft leaves curl up in the heat
- this might seem obvious but the sun moves around a lot so you may find things end up half in the shade in no time, keep budging them around unless you have a huge garden
- something light/dark in the background will have an effect - dark makes the colour more saturated
- don't wet the fabric first and then try to lay it out on plastic - it's worse than treacle
- masks that are absorbent will pull the dye away from the surroundings leaving a halo effect
- acrylic paint doesn't work at all well
Saturday 17 October 2015
My West Dean Summer
This summer I treated myself to two back-to-back residential courses at West Dean College near Chichester.
The college is located in a stunning house set in huge grounds that used to belong to Edward James, a surrealist poet and philanthropist. He was a double inheritee (from his father and his unlce) patron of Surrealist artist and there are several original Dali pieces at the house. There is an interesting documentary about him on YouTube
The courses I took were Jeanette Appleton's Exploring Colour and Transparency in Felt Making and Cas Holmes' Tracing Shadows - Dyed and Stitched Textiles. Both tutors were superb and I'd highly recommend them. As well as the location of course.
From Jeannette we learnt a softer much less messy and energetic way of felting. She advocates a pre-felting technique that uses none of this 100 rolls one way and then the next. And much less water that I was used to. You are left with a delicate, diaphanous piece of felt that has a handle I was not used to - not the thick stiff stuff, more like nuno, felt that falls like fabric. One of the best things about it is that you can do as much as you can/want, take a break and come back to it later.
She encouraged us to think in 3s - e.g. coarse, soft and something else - what is that third thing? Texture, contrast, colour, dimension? She also drew attention to the mark-making properties of felt.
Something that has had a great impact on me since is that she encouraged me to hang my pieces in three dimension in front of each other so you could see through. She also suggested looking at a space like a museum or an exhibition hall and thinking: how could I respond to it with my art?
I was rather prolific and came away with lots of resolved pieces - although my first piece was 'permanently borrowed' by someone!
Here's some of my work in Jeannette's class:
Cas Holmes is a fan of recyling, reuse and repurposing - use what's around. In her first tutorial she used a fish skin from supper! We did heat transfer printing which I have totally fallen in love with. Lots of block printing and a little bit of sun printing because the weather was not at all condusive.
Cas encouraged us to build up a 'stock' of semi-worked pieces and audition them for resolved work which I am doing lots of now. The drawback is that I'm finding that things that would be samples are becoming 'stock' and I'm reluctant to stick them in my sketchbook.
I'm also a bit precious about taking next steps with 'samples' in case I mess up. Cas' philosophy would be that anything 'messed up' can be repurposed and auditioned for new work at a later time.
And this is what I came up with in Cas' class.
The college is located in a stunning house set in huge grounds that used to belong to Edward James, a surrealist poet and philanthropist. He was a double inheritee (from his father and his unlce) patron of Surrealist artist and there are several original Dali pieces at the house. There is an interesting documentary about him on YouTube
The courses I took were Jeanette Appleton's Exploring Colour and Transparency in Felt Making and Cas Holmes' Tracing Shadows - Dyed and Stitched Textiles. Both tutors were superb and I'd highly recommend them. As well as the location of course.
From Jeannette we learnt a softer much less messy and energetic way of felting. She advocates a pre-felting technique that uses none of this 100 rolls one way and then the next. And much less water that I was used to. You are left with a delicate, diaphanous piece of felt that has a handle I was not used to - not the thick stiff stuff, more like nuno, felt that falls like fabric. One of the best things about it is that you can do as much as you can/want, take a break and come back to it later.
She encouraged us to think in 3s - e.g. coarse, soft and something else - what is that third thing? Texture, contrast, colour, dimension? She also drew attention to the mark-making properties of felt.
Something that has had a great impact on me since is that she encouraged me to hang my pieces in three dimension in front of each other so you could see through. She also suggested looking at a space like a museum or an exhibition hall and thinking: how could I respond to it with my art?
I was rather prolific and came away with lots of resolved pieces - although my first piece was 'permanently borrowed' by someone!
Here's some of my work in Jeannette's class:
Felted pieces - one texture based and one colour based |
Cutting things up to assemble |
Felting the back |
The piece coming together |
A bit of rolling |
The final piece that someone liked so much they borrowed it |
The next piece coming along |
Nearly finished |
Detail of the mark-making capability of felt |
Tacking threads left to show through |
Hanging my finished pieces in a row |
Two more finished pieces |
Cas Holmes is a fan of recyling, reuse and repurposing - use what's around. In her first tutorial she used a fish skin from supper! We did heat transfer printing which I have totally fallen in love with. Lots of block printing and a little bit of sun printing because the weather was not at all condusive.
Cas encouraged us to build up a 'stock' of semi-worked pieces and audition them for resolved work which I am doing lots of now. The drawback is that I'm finding that things that would be samples are becoming 'stock' and I'm reluctant to stick them in my sketchbook.
I'm also a bit precious about taking next steps with 'samples' in case I mess up. Cas' philosophy would be that anything 'messed up' can be repurposed and auditioned for new work at a later time.
And this is what I came up with in Cas' class.
Preparing heat transfer paper |
Some fabrics for 'audition' |
Preparing mono printing |
Applying wallpaper paste to pieces so that they run under the sewing machine easily without a hoop |
Imaginative use of block print sources |
Heat transfer results |
More heat transfer preparations |
Heat transfer results |
Sun printing, but without much sun |
Resolved (mostly) piece containing heat transfer, block printing and sewing |
Sunday 11 October 2015
Making Tyvek Lace
I saw this short video on making lace with Tyvek and had to immediately try it.
Results not too shabby:
I used the printing blocks/stamps I'd made in my August post on visual exercises.
A few learnings:
I love the randomness of the results even when you get the technique under control.
Really exited about the possibilities.
Results not too shabby:
Not terribly successful but you learn from mistakes |
Shown under the baking parchment |
Shown still stuck to the stamps, cooling |
I used the printing blocks/stamps I'd made in my August post on visual exercises.
A few learnings:
- set the iron between wool and cotton
- use rubber stamps (try one out beforehand) - I used this Super Soft Lino Block
- use baking parchment above and below
- be fast and press hard
- let the stamps cool after a few uses before carrying on
I love the randomness of the results even when you get the technique under control.
Really exited about the possibilities.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)