Showing posts with label paint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paint. Show all posts

Monday, May 30, 2016

Baby Gift #2 - "Dress Up" Onesies

Hello friends
For the baby shower I decorated some onesies for the soon to arrive Baby L.  Two are similar to ones that I have posted about previously . . . painted necklaces with fabric flowers. Here's the look:


The onesies were washed first to remove any sizing or whatever. The beads were stamped with a pencil eraser (a new flat one) using fabric paint. I drew half ovals in black Sharpie on a piece of paper sized to fit the shirts and then pinned it in place inside the onesie. This provided guide lines for painting and also prevented any paint bleed through to the back of the shirt. 

 I began in the center of the shirt, following the outlines and spacing the dots somewhat evenly to create the necklace strands. (Handmade is not perfect.) The beads were shaded by brushing on a bit of white paint to add dimension. Finally the beads were connected by painting in little lines with a fine tip brush. 

After drying overnight (the bottle says 4 hours), I heat set the painted areas on both sides of the shirt using a dry iron over a pressing cloth. This flattened the bits of fiber that had arisen during the painting process and gave the pieces a nice finished look. 

The flower is simply four 1" circles of cotton print, each folded into quarters and the tips sewn together onto a smaller scrap of fabric. A button found in Annie's button box completes the look.  I sewed this on very thoroughly and tightly so there is no chance of it coming off and becoming a choking hazard. 

The tag made using the little bear from the "Stampin' Up" Bear Hugs set has washing instructions on the reverse and proclaims these to be "Dress Up" onesies. 

Stay tuned for tomorrow's "Denim-Friendly" onesies.

Cheers!

S.



Friday, April 24, 2015

"Painty" workshop with Dyan Reaveley

Sunday, Sunday . . . a fabulous all day workshop with Dyan Reaveley at Papercraft Clubhouse in Westbrook. For someone who is new to painting on paper, I came home with some pages that surprised myself!  [Interview with Dyan can be seen HERE]

We started at 9:30 am . . . and after some basics and introductions, started creating art journal page backgrounds by using Dyan's three basic techniques: painting with baby wipes, painting with a brayer, and a paint block technique using the Ranger blending tool. When all was done, there were seven or eight layers of paint on each page, including the stencil images and spritzes of ink. The paints we used were the new Dylusions paints developed to Dyan's specifications. ("If you stamp your feet hard enough, you get what you want.") Videos of Dyan demonstrating these techniques and talking about her paints can be seen on the Ranger website HERE.

Here's my baby wipe pages before the black stencil accents




I had too much paint on my blending tool :-(

This journal page  is ready for adding words, doodling, stamping, or whatever


And the brayer pages:


Before the black accent stenciling




We removed (i.e. tore out) six pages from the journal, on which we created "accidental" backgrounds by using the paint left over on the palette and on the brayer and painty blending tools after doing the pages within the journal.  I wasn't quick enough to complete all twelve sides of the six pages  . . . I managed five sides in one colorway and the  three sides in another but four blanks remain.  These pages will be taped back into the journal . . . I think I'll have to buy some paints  . . . but not just yet -  I have projects already filling up the craft table . . .


Five clean up sides in the pink, red, aqua, lime combo

Three reverse sides of the five sides shown above

And here is one of the two paint block technique pages I did . . .

Dyan would put more black accents on the page as well as pen doodling.

The star page below is a block technique page that was painted over . . . well actually painted around a solid star shape (the inside of a stencil) that I held in place  . . .  when removed the painted background shows through. The black was softened by some pounced on pink paint from the blending tool. Dyan's style adds words, outlines and images, perhaps using a white pen .  . . but at least four hours of drying time is necessary before adding any pen doodling or journaling. 

The second paint block page . . . covered with black

Next we were told to begin with a white page and a large stencil . . . rubber stamping (with Dylusions stamps) an image within the stencil shape. Then the background was filled with black. I added some pink stenciled stars and a bit of pink pounced paint for contrast.  The purple and lime circles were a clean-up of  blending tools.



The final step in the class (it was a bit after 5 pm at this point) was to decorate the cover of the journal using one of the three techniques we had practiced.  First we painted white gesso onto the kraft color journal cover so the paints wouldn't look like mud . . . I chose to use the baby wipe technique with stenciling for my cover.

Journal cover opened flat

The front cover . . .

Front cover

Hands down this was the best workshop I've attended. It was an honor and pleasure to meet Dyan Reaveley. I can't begin to describe the individual she is and the respect I have for her philosophy of making art. Personally, I stretched well beyond my comfort zone with colors and patterns and the result was pretty good, if I do say so.

The recently formulated Dylusions paints are wonderful for paper painting and I can see myself incorporating painted papers into my own work. Many thanks to Traci at Papercraft Clubhouse for making a great day happen.