Posts Tagged ‘flowers’

Photo Transfers… My Way

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

A new Mini Tutorial!!

I have finally been getting in some productive studio time. I love to incorporate my flower photos into my work, and transferring them onto fabric from transparencies is one way to do that. You can see lots of my flower photos here in my Main Blog. This is the technique I have found that works best for me…. there are many methods that I have tried, but this is the only way that works for me. It might not be the best for everyone, but here is my process.

Transparencies

I begin by printing the photos I want to use onto Transparencies made for inkjet printers. The brand I am using is Hammermill… What I found at Staples. I print with an Epson inkjet printer that uses DuraBright inks. These inks are archival, and I can print directly onto fabric if I want to. This transfer method gives a more antiqued or aged look to the transferred photos. Above are a selection of photos printed according to the transparency directions. I set my printer for “Best Photo” printing and plain paper. With my tests, this has worked the best for me. The printed transparencies are placed over dyed fabrics that I am thinking of transferring the images to. I can see what will and won’t look good before I start anything.

Dyed Fabric Base

Above are a couple of pieces of fabric I dyed that didn’t really turn out just like I wanted, but will make for good backgrounds for the transfers. I lightly dampen the fabric, then apply a coating of very thinned Heavy Bodied Gel Gloss Medium. I am using Golden Brand for this batch of transfers, but I have used Liquitex  Soft Gel Medium with similar results. The medium helps to seal the base fabric so it is not so porous to take the transfers better.

Wax Pastel on Fabric

To add more interest to the pieces, I have added Water Soluble Wax Pastel to fabric while the medium is still wet. I have just scribbled various colors on.

Wax Pastel Brushed Into Fabric

The above photo shows the fabric after I blended the  pastel into the medium.

Dyed Fabric with Chalk Pastel

Here is another piece of fabric… another dyed piece that didn’t have much color, so I added more with chalk pastels this time to start. I decided to play with some wild colors here…. they look really bright on the wet fabric, but will soften after blending and as the fabric dries.

Chalk Rubbed In Wax Added

Here is what the chalk looked like after being blended in. I then added some wax pastel for even more color in scribbles that I then blended in also.

Fabric with Transparency Images

Here is one of the fabric pieces after it dried and was ironed between parchment paper. The photo above shows one transfer already done, and images on transparencies cut out and placed where I want to put them.  You can see how the colors of the fabric will change the image colors.

Soaking Transparency

When I am ready to do the transfer, I soak the image on the transparency in lukewarm water in a shallow container.

Image Soaked in Water

I let the image soak for about 10 seconds, then take it out and hold it over an old towel to catch the runoff. You can see in the photo above, the ink is beginning to “bubble up”. When all the ink has begun to bubble, the transfer is ready to be applied. Darker ink colors seem to take longer than others to be ready for placement.

Rubbing Transfer

I lay the image ink side down on the fabric, then burnish the back of the transparency with a spoon until totally covered.

Removing Transparency

Once the whole back has been rubbed, begin to peel the plastic off slowly. If the ink sticks to the transparency, it may need more moisture and rubbing.

Finished Transfer

Here is the transfer after the plastic backing has been removed, the ink and coating on the transparency sticks to the prepared fabric. On this transfer, some small bits of the image stuck to the plastic, this gives the aged look to the transfers.

Another Transfer

The above transfer is one that didn’t soak long enough… the deeper colors didn’t stay on the fabric very well, so this one really looks distressed.

Group of Transfers

This photo shows the whole piece of fabric that I did with a number of transfers ready to dry. These will probably be used on various covers for mini composition and brag books, or standard sized composition books. I will combine the transfers with different dyed or painted fabrics to coordinate with the images. These will be available for purchase in my Andrus Gardens Gift Items Studio on Artfire when I finish them.

Mammocumulous Cloud Transfer

This is the largest transfer I have tried so far… it is the full length of the transparency, nearly 11 inches. I used the fabric with large yellow areas to pull the color down from the image. I removed some of the ink from the image’s lower edge to help it to blend into the fabric. I then added more pastel for more color below the transfer. This will become a small art quilt based on one of my photos of the stormy skies just over a week ago.

Once the transfers dry, I cover them with parchment paper and iron things well. This flattens any rough edges that sometimes occur from the coating on the transparencies. The image can melt and stick to your iron, so be sure to use the parchment.

Flowers Anyone?? A WIP….

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Here is a quick post of the progress, or lack of it on a piece I have been working on since my QSDS class in June. It has spent more time being stared at than anything else, and I have taken more photos of this while working on it than any other piece I have ever done. My camera and laptop ended up being a great design tools during the process of this piece. In case you haven’t noticed, I love flowers, and have lots of photos I have taken that I want to work into my quilts after I print them onto fabric.

Things Changed

The piece in question is in the upper left of this photo…. an attempt at getting my work out of the box, or frame, etc…. It was pointed out to me that I tend to most always frame or box in parts of my quilts. This has been a huge challenge, to use mainly my flowers without boxing them in!

I took this home as it was, and put it on my design wall, but something really seemed off…. I loved the colors and the flowers, but it just seemed like a “jumble of stuff”…

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I then took a photo of the piece and changed it to black and white in the computer…. It still looked like a jumble to me…. The colors that looked strong to me, fade out when just looking at the values, not colors. The white and pale pink flowers seemed to jump out. The flowers are printed onto cotton fabric that I have backed with Wonder Under. The piece is being arranged on a large piece of backing paper saved from a large piece of Wonder Under that was used earlier for anther project. I keep all of it… you never know when it will come in handy.

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Another idea was to add some bits of color with narrow strips of bright pink fabric, and I also draped some deep colored batik to see what would happen….. I changed this to B&W, and still had problems with values… the bright pink didn’t show at all, and the batik seemed to take over- too dark…. back to the design wall….

I had been tacking flower pieces onto the paper base with the iron, but ended up moving things so much, that I started pinning everything in place- easier to move around on my foam design wall.

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Besides flowers, I have been drawn to old architecture and have taken photos of quite a few old houses, sheds and barns. I printed a couple on fabric, and added them to the corners. I still had the bright pink pieces in the piece….

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In the left photo above, I changed one of the lower pink strips of fabric to white- Too much- yuck!… Right above- lots of moves later… The pink Peony flowers seemed too heavy for the center, so I moved them to the bottom. A bunch of others removed and moved…

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Filling in some of the holes with more flowers.. I began to remove the colored strips and experimented with more changes… The white Iris and Peony switched… Peony is bulkier… I also began cutting out the backgrounds from the flower prints. This makes things look more natural.

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Left above- lots removed, and the white schoolhouse cut into two pieces and moved- it seemed to make things top heavy…… Right above- I thought about having Morning Glory flowers, so I took some new photos one morning while they were still in bloom, and printed them to add. Getting closer to having the space filled…

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Now what to do with the upper left corner….. Sky?? Too stark… Took my Water Road house photo into Photoshop and changed the sky to blue and some added green tree leaves to the photo, printed it onto fabric…might work… Those pink Daisies stick out… the Hydrangeas upper left aren’t working….

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Hmmmm… Daisies at the base of the old shed…. few more holes filled…. Peony flowers don’t grow sideways… cut the flowers apart and repositioned them… added a couple more small ones… Hydrangeas still stick out….

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Hydrangeas kicked out…. Maybe ready for fusing?.?.?  If you look close, you can see lots of yellow headed pins. I now let it sit over night and looked at it the next morning, still looks OK…. later in the day… Time to fuse….

Look MA No Pins

All fused to the backing paper!! No more pins! I had to do a bit of cutting out of fabric pieces under light colored flowers. Now I have to figure out what I am going to do as far as quilting and stitching on it…. Probably clear thread to hide the stitching and not take away from the flowers.

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Still deciding whether I will border this a little or not… A narrow black border photoshopped in. I am running out of time for finishing this… I have entered it into my local quilt guild’s quilt show coming up the last weekend of this month…. just less than two weeks and counting…. hopefully the worst is over…. One problem…. fairly minor, I thought this would end up bigger than it is, but adding more than a tiny border just didn’t seem to look right. I guess I’ll just let the gals in charge of the show know what the final size will be…. I’m not the only one who enters unfinished quilts :) Having the deadline, gives me a reason to keep working on this and not cover it up and forget about it.

Flower Garden Finished

Well, here it is…. The finished quilt.  Bordered with a narrow black border and quilted with clear thread. The photo here may not show the quilting really well, but there is a lot of it!