On Saturday, Fibrecircle will be showing and selling some of our work at the NSW ATASDA meeting at Epping from 10am. Here's just a taste of what we have to show you.
Bev's beautiful badges, made from old lace, silk snippets and hand embroidery:
Tricia and Nola's scarves, including these new ones that you won't have seen here:
Fat quarters of quilters' muslin
...plus all sorts of other lovely things, like the dyed socks and t-shirts and Nola's hand painted kids' tees.
Helen has beautiful gift tags and embroidered rock paperweights, Carol has bookmarks ...
well, you'll just have to come along and see, won't you?
Wednesday, 27 February 2013
February #1
For the first time since November, we finally had a full house at Fibrecircle this week, which was great! Everyone had plenty of stories to tell and there was a lot of interesting work on show.
Jan brought along her latest explorations in natural dyeing. This scarf was dyed with onion skins and rusty metal. The metal effectively added ferrous to the bath, making the colours darker.
It's so delicate and subtle, so it's hard to photograph, but so beautiful.
Her second scarf was dyed with teabags, red cabbage, in a bath of onion skins and rusty metal.
It's also quite subtle but has a quite obvious pattern on it from the red cabbage.
She also brought along some more naturally dyed cards. The leaf patterns are subtle and lovely.
Maz brought along some dyeing she did recently in a class with Barbara Schey. This cheesecloth was folded and stitched in rows of four, before being dyed in napthol dye.
This piece of 6mom silk had a two-step process. First, it was dyed turquoise with fibre reactive dye and, once it was dry, it was stitched and over-dyed with black fibre reactive dye.
She dyed this piece of 6mom silk with napthol in red and blue baths, after adding various folds, pleats, inverted pleats and stitched semicircles.
Finally, she layered cotton lawn pieces with silk in between and stitches a pattern with the sewing machine. The cloth was dyed in a red napthol bath.
Interestingly, the colour of the silk is totally different than the colour on the cotton. One more example of the alchemy that is dyeing!
Maz was working on a piece inspired by Highways and Byways by Paul Klee, which she's doing with another group of friends.
Jan brought along her latest explorations in natural dyeing. This scarf was dyed with onion skins and rusty metal. The metal effectively added ferrous to the bath, making the colours darker.
It's so delicate and subtle, so it's hard to photograph, but so beautiful.
Her second scarf was dyed with teabags, red cabbage, in a bath of onion skins and rusty metal.
It's also quite subtle but has a quite obvious pattern on it from the red cabbage.
She also brought along some more naturally dyed cards. The leaf patterns are subtle and lovely.
Maz brought along some dyeing she did recently in a class with Barbara Schey. This cheesecloth was folded and stitched in rows of four, before being dyed in napthol dye.
This piece of 6mom silk had a two-step process. First, it was dyed turquoise with fibre reactive dye and, once it was dry, it was stitched and over-dyed with black fibre reactive dye.
She dyed this piece of 6mom silk with napthol in red and blue baths, after adding various folds, pleats, inverted pleats and stitched semicircles.
Finally, she layered cotton lawn pieces with silk in between and stitches a pattern with the sewing machine. The cloth was dyed in a red napthol bath.
Interestingly, the colour of the silk is totally different than the colour on the cotton. One more example of the alchemy that is dyeing!
Maz was working on a piece inspired by Highways and Byways by Paul Klee, which she's doing with another group of friends.
It's hand painted silk, with simple hand stitching so far. The colours are just gorgeous.
More soon!
Friday, 22 February 2013
Summer's end
Welcome back to the sixth year of our textile playdays! Doesn't time fly? It's interesting to look back on what we've done as a group since we first started meeting, way back then. From a group that was mostly experimenting with techniques we hadn't tried, we've become a group of people who make and exhibit work in very individual ways, work collaboratively and challenge each other. Some of us make work for sale. It seems to be that there's a message there, for anyone who's thinking they'd benefit from meeting with other like-minded people: Just try it and see where it leads you!
We've already met a few times this year, but members have been holidaying and travelling, marrying off children and hosting Significant Birthday parties for parents, so we haven't managed a full house yet. Here's some highlights from what we've been doing over the summer.
Helen embroidered these small works for an exhibition, "Two Eyes", later in the year. They look very exotic, don't they?
Here is Jan's Paint Chip Challenge piece. It's a journal cover, which you saw unfinished here at our dyeing day in November.
Maz has painted a background for her challenge piece, another way of getting just the right colours.
She's about to start stitching. Should be good!
Meanwhile, she's been working on some beading.
It's incredibly complex and looks beautiful.
Helen has been reading a book by Ralph Steadman. He's a British cartoonist and artist who, among other things, likes to create bizarre animal figures with whimsical Latin names. You can see examples of his work here. She was so taken with the idea of creating these fantasy animals that she experimented with making some of her own.
Here is her Amazonian Carnivorous Butterfly...
Stay tuned for more! We're all madly creating things for our display and sale of work at the NSW ATASDA meeting in March.
We've already met a few times this year, but members have been holidaying and travelling, marrying off children and hosting Significant Birthday parties for parents, so we haven't managed a full house yet. Here's some highlights from what we've been doing over the summer.
Helen embroidered these small works for an exhibition, "Two Eyes", later in the year. They look very exotic, don't they?
Here is Jan's Paint Chip Challenge piece. It's a journal cover, which you saw unfinished here at our dyeing day in November.
It's a fantastic use of her chip colours, don't you think? It's very subtle colouring.
Nola is working on her challenge too. Her colours were very different to Jan's, and very hard to match. She was able to match the colours in embroidery thread so she chose to embroider the fine pinwale corduroy in a Jacobean style.
This is one side of a bag. Maz has painted a background for her challenge piece, another way of getting just the right colours.
She's about to start stitching. Should be good!
Meanwhile, she's been working on some beading.
It's incredibly complex and looks beautiful.
Helen has been reading a book by Ralph Steadman. He's a British cartoonist and artist who, among other things, likes to create bizarre animal figures with whimsical Latin names. You can see examples of his work here. She was so taken with the idea of creating these fantasy animals that she experimented with making some of her own.
Here is her Amazonian Carnivorous Butterfly...
... and her red Blunt-Eared Rabbit.
She's also been embroidering some more of these gorgeous three dimensional pieces. They come with their own little bag.
Stay tuned for more! We're all madly creating things for our display and sale of work at the NSW ATASDA meeting in March.
Wednesday, 5 December 2012
November
Another year is almost over – don’t you feel they go by
faster these days? We Fibrecircle girls have just one more meeting for the year
before we go our separate ways until January.
Here are the results:
Maz tied red onion skins into her first scarf. Isn’t it
amazing?
Inspired by Maz, Tricia also clamped onion skins into her scarf, using both red and brown onions.
The third pot was Eucalyptus cinerea leaves. Although the leaves give a red colour when clamped in the folds, they give a different colour when boiled in the pot. The colour is a strong orange on wool but it’s much milder on silk.
It’s going to be a book cover. I’m sure we’ll see more of this to come!
Later, Nola boiled up the ironbark bark again, with fresh water, and dyed this scarf, which she’d pinch pleated and tied along the length with green twine.
It looks rather like Arashi, the pleating done on a pole.
This scarf is crinkle chiffon with a silver thread through
it. Tricia dyed it originally in ironbark and then over-dyed it with orange to
lift it.
…and an apron.
Jan has also been doing some dyeing at home, but on paper. She wet the paper and clamped the plant materials between two layers. She dyed the papers with red cabbage, some leaves from her neighbour’s red plant and an unknown hedge plant. Others were dyed with dried eucalypt leaves.
The colours are delicate and the papers are highly textured.
Meanwhile, we’re just as obsessed with colour and pattern as
always. Our biggest event this month was a session of natural dyeing at
Tricia’s. For simplicity, we decided to all use the same silk habutai scarves,
so we spent one meeting preparing our scarves for dyeing in many different
ways, like tying, stitching or clamping with blocks.
Our first pot was avocado skins and pits. We’d read about
people taking the trouble to cut the pits in half beforehand, but that seemed
like a bridge too far for us. In the end, we found they split open in the pot
anyway, so we were quite glad we hadn’t struggled to cut them!
Inspired by Maz, Tricia also clamped onion skins into her scarf, using both red and brown onions.
Bev tucked Eucalyptus cinerea leaves into the folds of her
scarf.
The cinerea leaves give a reliable red quite easily and most
of us tried that technique, in the various pots.
Nola tried machine stitching tiny pleats on her scarf with a
long machine stitch, and pulling up the threads.
The results are interesting but perhaps don’t justify the
amount of work. It was much faster than hand stitching, but still fairly
fiddly.
Our second pot used Eucalyptus pilularis Blackbutt
shavings from Nola’s husband’s workshop. We hadn’t tried dyeing with them
before, but we’ve had good results with sawdust from other trees. We were
slightly disappointed but unsurprised to see we were able to achieve… beige.
This colour seems to be the basic colour for Australia plants and it’s very easy
to achieve!
However, dyeing isn’t just about the colour; it’s also about
the pattern. Maz stitched her scarf by hand down the length, which gave an
interesting pattern.
Carol pulled up small sections and tied hers randomly.
Bev clamped red onion skins in between square wooden blocks
on her first one...
… and prunus leaves between triangle wooden blocks in her
second one.
This one from Tricia was an experiment. She clamped
toothpicks between Perspex blocks along the length of the scarf and it’s give
her some beautiful patterns.
Nola stitched by machine along the ends of this scarf, just
to see what would happen.
She thought the result was pretty ordinary on this one too,
so she later overdyed it with fibre reactive dye with washers clamped in the
folds.
Looks a lot better and the stitched stripes have become a
lot stronger. The interesting thing is that the tiny holes where the needle
went in have been emphasised too.
Nola’s second one in this pot was tied around tongue
depressors with green twine.
Some of the colour of the twine transferred to the scarf in
interesting ways.The third pot was Eucalyptus cinerea leaves. Although the leaves give a red colour when clamped in the folds, they give a different colour when boiled in the pot. The colour is a strong orange on wool but it’s much milder on silk.
Jan created eccentric folds on her scarf, with red cabbage
inside, and tied it with some of the green twine.
The eccentric folds are certainly effective, aren’t they?
Nola tied this one onto triangular blocks.
Maz tied hers onto marbles…
… and so did Bev.
You can see that the kind of tying makes a big difference.
Maz has some traces of colour from the twine, while Bev’s thread was finer and
firmer, which gave a much tighter resist.
The fourth pot was Helichrysum petiolare, a grey-leafed
garden plant which yields a pretty yellow.
Maz clamped grevillea leaves between wooden blocks.
Grevillea doesn’t add much colour but it does add pattern, and her scarf has a
lovely delicate pattern between the bars of colour.
Nola clamped cinerea leaves in the folds of her scarf with
parallelogram Perspex blocks.
Tricia tied blue wooden beads into her scarf. Some colour
came off the beads during the process.
Bev used rectangular wooden blocks to clamp her scarf.
Our fifth pot was the bark of Eucalyptus sideroxylon Ironbark.
Maz clamped cinerea leaves into her scarf with wood blocks…
…and so did Nola.
Tricia did the same but added loose tea leaves, which gave
even more texture.
Maz tried a cone fold with interesting results…
… and Carol tied hers in the same way as her other one, in
irregular bundles.
This one from Bev had red onion skins in a triangle fold,
which gave an interesting radial pattern.
Jan used onion skins, nails and tea leaves in this one…
.. and in this one, she tied onion skins, red cabbage and unknown
plants.
Wasn’t that an interesting day’s dyeing? Eco-dyeing is a
slow process so while we were doing it, Maz was stitching on this piece of
painted background fabric.
Jan was working on her Paint Chip Challenge piece.It’s going to be a book cover. I’m sure we’ll see more of this to come!
Later, Nola boiled up the ironbark bark again, with fresh water, and dyed this scarf, which she’d pinch pleated and tied along the length with green twine.
It looks rather like Arashi, the pleating done on a pole.
Tricia had a couple of scarves in the cinerea pot that she
wasn’t happy with. She had a dyeing day with Nola later in the month and overdyed
this one with orange and red fibre reactive dye…
… and this one with turquoise.
She had another one from the avocado pot also dyed with
brown onion skins, but she felt it needed a lift, so she over-dyed it with
yellow fibre reactive dye.
It really looks great!
She folded this one in triangles and dipped the corners into
fibre reactive dye.
This makes a wonderful radial pattern.
Nola plaited three lengths of tissue silk together quite
tightly and dyed them with pale turquoise and red fibre reactive dye. When she
took them apart, they all had a similar pattern.
She twisted another scarf until it twisted back on itself
and dyed it with pale yellow, pale turquoise and a few drops of red and
rubinole.
She also space-dyed a child’s cotton tee-shirt…
… some socks……and an apron.
Jan has also been doing some dyeing at home, but on paper. She wet the paper and clamped the plant materials between two layers. She dyed the papers with red cabbage, some leaves from her neighbour’s red plant and an unknown hedge plant. Others were dyed with dried eucalypt leaves.
As usual, we swapped postcards this month. This one from
Nola was called Summer Breeze. The background fabric was sun dyed, and she
added hand embroidery.
Helen used some fabric that Nola brought back from Aatuti
Art in Norfolk Island . The shop has a blog
here.
The background fabric is a commercial print.
Here’s the fabric Maz was embroidering during our dyeing
play day, made into a postcard!
Jan’s was made from some of her eco-dyed paper, and sun-dyed
cloth.
Our next meeting will be small, as some members head off for
the holidays. But you can be sure we’ll still be creating stuff!