14.1.09

Bush Walk

I hope that the Christmas break was just what you needed. I have spent time at the lake, just swimming and lazying about.
I want to try some “Sun Dye-ing. Dye the fabric, place object on the fabric, secure and leave in the sun. The dye wicks from under the objects so the dye appears around the objects.
Picked up lancewood leaves and leaf skeletons while walking up Mt Ngongotaha. Made up a green/blue textile ink solution and painted half the fabric. Then mixed in some more blue to make it darker green and a splash of red, which I didn’t fully mix, and I wanted to see “what would happen if”.

The leaves and skeletons were pinned in random manner to the painted fabric, and left it in the sun to dry. Amazing, the fine leaf skeletons work and look so delicate. The solid lancewood leaves had blurred edges, due to the wind, so need to pin more surely. Tried the technique on woven flax with ponga fern, but the ink absorbed straight into the flax – it didn’t work.
To add texture to the sun dyed fabric, I made a stencil with leaves with freezer paper, and rubbed gold, copper, silver and green paint sticks around the stencil, and brushed the paint inwards, to create a translucent effect.
I hand quilted leave shapes with gold metallic thread, and variegated green around the leaves.
Couched some “jazz” yarn in 3 meandering lines, creating a vertical composition.
I know you can buy some special Helio (sun dying) paints, but for my experiment the textile ink worked okay. Will consider using this technique again.

1 comment:

PAMELA said...

Ruth, it's fabulous! Your shapes, colours, and texture work well. Keep experimenting - I will be interested in seeing them.

From a fellow AusNZquiltarter.

Pamela
www.craftyquilting.wordpress.com