Showing posts with label eco printing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eco printing. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 June 2016

Finally beautiful printed scarves

After 5 months of experimenting, I was confident enough to purchase some silk scarves and begin eco printing them with the idea of selling my work. Since I showed them at Thames Creative Fibre last week and uploaded some to my Felt shop they have been selling like hot cakes.
Using only pigments found naturally in the plants, the printed scarves have fine details and mostly delicate colours. I plan to make more soon that give pinks and purples.  What I like the most are the surprises when a new colour emerges from a leaf or petal and the gentle impact of this craft on my environment. Leaves return to the earth via the compost, mordants are simple like rusty nails and seawater. I use steam to extract the pigments and I gather the plants on walks or sometimes I spot them on road verges or in friend's gardens. I've even knocked on doors and asked if I could gather samples. No one has ever said "No". I've used metres of silk testing plants and always there are surprises.
These have all sold but I will put more photos in more recent blogs.










Silk eco print experiments


After eco printing paper I was keen to start printing on silk. I bought India Flint's books Eco Colour and Second Skin and was stunned by he possibilities. I didn't know where to start. I tried printing using frozen flowers. These are morning glory flowers with an old rusty nail.







I tested many kinds of leaves. Here are peach.


These are eco prints of red canna lilies. They gave 2 pigments, a blue purple as well as a red violet.

During a visit to Rotorua I collected 5 bottles of water from steaming pools but none of them gave me good prints. However some leaves that my husband and I gathered in the dark gave the print below. I used seawater with rusty nails as the mordant. I was thrilled with the detail.













Finally I tried boiling up some fronds of the male fern ( an introduced weed) to make a dye. I was rewarded with a lovely green.

Tuesday, 7 June 2016

Eco printing on paper

I came across  Cassandra Tondro's blog on leaf printing and became hooked on the concept of transferring leaf prints directly onto paper by steaming. The process appealed to the scientist in me which loves to experiment as well as the conservationist. Here was a sustainable way to dye paper that used only steam, leaves and flowers.  Here are 2 pages with some of the plant material still in position. Can you spot the individual bottlebrush flowers - even the detail of the stamens and pollen shows.

Above are frozen morning glory flowers with bottlebrush florets and canna lily flowers.

 The set up with the paper tied between cardboard sheets, the scallops provide a flat surface for the weight. The water is under the rack.