Showing posts with label free tutorials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free tutorials. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

Surface Design in Plein Air ~ Rusting Fabric with Maggie Vanderweit!

Carol R. Eaton here for post #3 of the Plein Air Series! I'm excited to share a tutorial on rusting fabric! Maggie Vanderweit is our guest artist who was kind enough to allow us a peek into her outdoor space and share her approach! 
You will never look at old rusting objects in quite the same way again! 
Maggie lives in southern Ontario, Canada so her ability to work outside is limited to May through October. Her studio is in a walk-out basement with access to her garden and a covered stone patio. Maggie says when she started with surface design 5 years ago being outside was much safer and more comfortable allowing her to work freely and make a mess! When Maggie works outdoors she is surrounded by the sounds of birds and the smells and sights of the garden. Everyone's outdoor space will be unique; the goal is to bring your supplies outside into an area that inspires you and allows you the freedom to fully engage your creativity. Maggie created an inspiring space while living in a typical town neighborhood so don't feel like you can't work outside if you don't have access to a large space; it just needs to feel good to you. 
Maggie says when rusting fabric or eco dyeing the heat, steam, fumes, and dripping fabric on the drying racks are much easier to manage outside! She has direct access to a hose for rinsing the fabric and filling her pots. For her eco dyeing projects she keeps oven mitts, tongs and sticks on hand to poke, stir and transport the hot wet cloth. Maggie uses a pea gravel section of her space to soak, rinse and dry things flat because it drains easily. She also has access to a long covered deck with concrete tables so she doesn’t worry about the heat of the hotplates or the vinegar/dye stains damaging anything.
When in full "dyeing mode" Maggie will stay outside everyday for hours at a time. 
To get started find some interesting rusted objects. When I began to look for items I was surprised to find many objects are made to prevent them from rusting - but keep searching and you will find some treasures!
You will also need need fabric, salt, a solution of 1-part white vinegar and 1-part water.  
 Soak the fabric in the white vinegar/water solution.
Wrap the rusted objects in fabric and cover with plastic for a minimum of 24 hours. 

TIP: Maggie will sometimes incorporate botanical materials and powdered dyes in her work. These eco dyeing projects require boiling for long periods of time - all done in her outdoor space! 

The rusting oxidation process must be stopped or it will destabilize the fabric.
Unwrap the objects and place the fabric in a solution of 4 gallons warm water and 1/2 cup of salt. 
Soak for 15 minutes.
Squeeze out excess water and rinse until all the salt is gone - hang to dry.

Have fun with your rusted fabric designs!
Work with the natural design elements to see what they will become.
Try Maggie's tip of eco printing in your outdoor space. There are many blogs to learn more about this process.  
Maggie feels each piece of cloth is unique and says the results are unpredictable. Maggie equates unwrapping each bundle to opening a Christmas gift! Her mantra is to create a space where you feel able to spread out and play with abandon! I agree... I'd love to see photos of your outside space... a condo deck... a picnic table in a side yard - what makes you happy? 

Rusting is a lot of fun... please share your results on the blog! If you have any questions feel free to start a dialogue and we can all get in on the conversation. 

Don’t forget to comment on the blog for a chance to win a pack of fat quarters using all the techniques we’ll discuss over the month of June = swoon! 
The winner will be announced June 30th

All photos on the blog were provided by Maggie.

Maggie is a contemporaneity textile artist, author and travel photographer. She recently published, Stone Threads available from her website at the end of this month. 

To follow Maggie go to:
https://www.facebook.com/maggie.vanderweitmeredith 

Next week mixed media artist Lori Hancock McCown will join the conversation sharing work inspired by working outdoors!


Monday, May 30, 2016

Metallic Foil vs Metal Leaf

On the surface, metallic foil and metal leaf serve the same purpose: to add a metallic effect to your projects. However each material has strengths and weaknesses so there may be some uses that are more appropriate for one over the other. An informed decision will lead to a successful project, so I'll discuss each material in depth below.



Metallic Foil

Pros:

  • Extremely durable 
  • Can be washed by hand or machine
  • Can even be dry cleaned
  • Wide range of colors and visual textures available
  • Simple to use 
  • Easy to sew through

Cons:

  • Slightly plasticy-looking
  • More artificial and less genuinely metallic in appearance

Methods of application:

  • Foil glue
  • Gel medium
  • Any fusible product - fusible web, fusible powder, fusible thread, et al

Care of applied foil:

  • Machine or hand washable
  • Dry cleanable
  • Avoid severe abrasion
  • Do not iron directly on foil

Suggested uses:

  • Art garments
  • Bags and totes
  • Functional quilts
  • Decorative quilts
  • Fiber art





Metal Leaf

Pros:

  • Authentically metallic appearance
  • Lovely organic quality to application (imperfectly perfect)
  • Fairly simple to use 
  • Easy to sew through

Cons:

  • Delicate and more fragile during application and after
  • Can not be washed by machine or dry cleaned
  • Copper and gold leaf will get a patina over time, silver will not patina

Methods of application:
  • Gel medium is most highly recommended on fabric

Care of applied foil:

  • Spot clean by hand only
  • Avoid any abrasion
  • Apply a watered-down coat of gel medium to copper or gold leaf to prevent oxidation

Suggested uses:
  • Fiber art


I hope this helps you make a decision between metallic foil and metal leaf the next time your project needs a metallic effect. If you have any questions that I haven't answered, please ask them in the comments.

If you would like to win a set of 4 metallic foil colors, there will be a drawing from among all of the commenters on my posts this May on Friday, June 3. Please make sure there is a way to contact you in your comment!

~Jane Davila

Sunday, January 31, 2016

And We Have a Winner...

Blue Glue Gel and Freezer Paper

Thank you all so much for your comments over this past month. I put the names (and there were LOTS of them!) in a "hat" (really a paper bag) and had hubby pull the winner...

Congrats to:
CraftALife who commented on January 3rd. Please get in contact with me so I can send off your signed copy of Fabric Printing at Home and 1 yard of Prepared for Dyeing cotton (My email is: threadborn@cox.net).

For those of you who didn't win...I hope that you enjoyed these tutorials. You can find many more interesting fabric printing techniques using materials you have at home in my book, Fabric Printing at Home. Why not pick up a copy? It's a great family-friendly reference!


If you haven't already signed up for my FREE online newsletter, Julie B Booth Surface Design News, hop on over to my blog...the sign up is in the right-hand column. The newsletter arrives in your email about once a month and has lots of kitchen-inspired fabric printing projects.

The "reboot" of The Printed Fabric Bee continues on February 7th with the first post by Susan Purney Mark. Susan will be focusing on using painted fusibles to create texture and design on fabrics. Sounds really interesting!

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

The Printed Fabric Bee Reboots on January 3, 2016!

GREAT NEWS- The Printed Fabric Bee is continuing in 2016!!!!

The Bee in moving in a new direction this coming year...and we hope you'll be as excited as we are about that new direction! Instead of monthly fabric collections for our members...this year the focus in on YOU!

Each month a member of the Bee will post surface design tutorials here on The Printed Fabric Bee blog. Imagine 12 months of free mini-classes from national and internationally known surface design artists and teachers! BUT....that's not all!!! Each month, the artist-of-the-month will offer a fabulous giveaway that will range from custom designed fabric to art supplies to books and DVDs. All you have to do is leave a comment on at least one of the blog posts during that month to be eligible. The artist-of-the month will draw the winner at the end of the month.


Hope you'll join us for another year of fun!

The first tutorial of 2016 is on Sunday, January 3rd with Bee member, Julie B. Booth.