I was working on the piece in the last post and decided there needed to be some kind of mask / face / head somewhere. I started creating one on a separate, smaller hoop and about a month later I was finished and ready to add it. However the face / head that I ended up with was just too big. So, I decided to use it as the 'center point' of an entirely different work. I stitched it to some larger fabric pieces but it looked a bit naked all by itself, so I added some collage elements around it. I started with a few small scraps of black fabric and eventually added pieces of velvet, lace, trimmings, and other odds and ends including stitched over shapes, not unlike the star shapes I have been doing in previous work. My inspiration was African and Indian clothing and fabric I have seen adorned with various different items. I wanted to keep everything black on black as I have been doing, and of course a photograph does not capture this well.
The face / mask / head was made with metallic floss - both 'pointillized' and also stitched over with smoky monofilament floss, and white cotton floss.
Showing posts with label floss. Show all posts
Showing posts with label floss. Show all posts
Monday, June 10, 2013
New Work - "Mask / face / head"
Labels:
african art,
art,
black on black,
face,
floss,
hand made,
head,
indian art,
mask,
pointillism,
stitch,
thread,
tribal
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Making multicolored floss
I love multicolored floss (sometimes called painters floss), but I could
never find any that had the extreme color variation that I really
wanted. What I really wanted was to have a single piece of thread that
gave a different color for every single stitch. Eventually I realized I
just had to make my own.
I bought some white cotton floss and a set of fabric colors and started to experiment.
I found the best method was to simply paint the colors right on the floss with a thin brush. I also found that it really helped to hold the floss taut and in place. I used tape for this.
I painted one side then flipped it over and did the other side and also filled in any little remaining blank spaces that needed it. This took several days since drying time for each color was needed.
I was happy with the result. I get a different color for almost every stitch, and as a bonus many of the stitches have multiple colors in them - some with different colors on each end or sometimes split horizontally down the middle.
I used this 'homemade painters floss' with this piece and this one.
Hopefully this is just the beginning.....
I bought some white cotton floss and a set of fabric colors and started to experiment.
I found the best method was to simply paint the colors right on the floss with a thin brush. I also found that it really helped to hold the floss taut and in place. I used tape for this.
I painted one side then flipped it over and did the other side and also filled in any little remaining blank spaces that needed it. This took several days since drying time for each color was needed.
After it was done I un-taped it all, put it in a
small pouch
and tossed it in a dryer for about
20 minutes or so to set the colors.
I was happy with the result. I get a different color for almost every stitch, and as a bonus many of the stitches have multiple colors in them - some with different colors on each end or sometimes split horizontally down the middle.
I used this 'homemade painters floss' with this piece and this one.
Hopefully this is just the beginning.....
Labels:
art,
DIY,
dye,
dyeing,
embroidery,
floss,
hand embroidery,
homemade,
how-to,
multicolored,
paint,
stitch,
thread
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)