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Three Layers of Transparent Wash |
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The first picture in this post is the printed fabric with three overlays of color. It's rather like eating dessert first and then having dinner. What follows is how the wash overlays were accomplished.
If you have been following along with my series of
31 Day Block Writing posts about block printing with foam, please bear with me as I reference earlier steps for those who are just now joining in. To follow along from the beginning link to:
Step #1,
Step #2, and
Step #3 here.
Step 4 of using the block prints in a large work involved using simple tools.
Tools
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Spray Bottle with Clear Water |
I first sprayed the entire piece of fabric with clear water to make it quite damp. In a canning jar I then made a mixture
of Setacolor Lemon Yellow a very few drops of
Setacolor Bright Orange transparent fabric paint, and then mixed it with clear water in a 1:1 ratio of paint-to-water. Then the paint brush was dunked into the paint/water mixture and washed across the entire fabric.
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Partial Overlay of Yellow/Orange Wash |
Once the fabric was completely washed with the Yellow/Orange color, the fabric was quite wet. That actually turned out to be a good thing because it allow the next wash of
Setacolor Cobalt Blue to migrate in a serendipitous manner into the Yellow/Orange wash . I mixed the blue fabric paint in the same 1:1 paint-to-water mixture as I did with the yellow/orange fabric paint. Here it is, ready to use, in a canning jar.
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Jar to Mix and Store Fabric Paint |
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Partial Wash of Setacolor Cobalt Blue over 1st Wash of Setacolor Yellow/Orang |
Here is what the two transparent layers of washes over the block printed fabric looked like.
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Setacolor Cobalt Blue Randomly Added |
Note: My work surface was not wide enough to lay out the entire fabric,
so I covered 2" thick insulation board with a plastic drop cloth, put
that on top of my table and it was a perfect size to work on.
I failed to mention in my earlier posts that because of the to-be-announced theme, I believed that there needed to be intersecting lines. To achieve this, I taped 3 pieces of 8.5" x 11" card stock together lengthwise, cut out a 7/8" strip with a craft knife and used it as a template to paint black strips to visually define the levels
Tomorrow I will blog about the finishing touches to this background piece.
Note: These posts are my participation in the 31 Day Blog
Writing Challenge. If you, too, would like to participate, link to Cheryl Sleboda's: http://muppin.com/…/inde…/the-31-day-blog-writing-challenge/
Until tomorrow...
Always remember, never fear to experiment.
Sometimes wonderful things happen.
© Linda Friedman 2015. All rights reserved