Curing Pigment Painted Fabrics
Four different earth pigments were used in combination with soy milk to color this piece of cotton cloth.
I'm often asked "how long do I really need to allow for my soy painted fabrics cure before I can wash them"? The anwser is depending on your climate/humidity a minimum of three to six weeks.
Tape was use to create resist patterns on the fabric.
The real anwser is how long can you stand to wait? The longer you wait the greater the permance of the dyes and pigments on the fabric. Yes the hand of the fabric will change the longer you wait, the piece in the top photo has been curing now for about 10 years, and it's stiff enough after all of this time to almost stand by itself unaided! I just found it this afternoon while sorting through a pile of fabrics that I had misplaced.
Getting Started with Natural Dyeing
I spent the day rewriting some old workshop notes on getting started with natural dyeing. They are now available in my store for $1.99
Organic Soy Beans
Organic Soy Beans, I'll be demoing how to make soy milk in an upcoming online class via The Natural Surface Network More information later this evening.
Sizing Paper with Soy Milk
Sizing Paper with Soy Milk
In Anticipation of Dyeing Paper with Natural Dyes.
Yes contrary to popular argument you CAN dye paper with natural dyes, the immersion method however doesn't work nearly as well as simply painting your papers with natural dyes.
You will need to prep your sheets of paper with soy milk, as shown in the previous post, and allow to dry. Soy milk acts as a sizing, or binder, for the dye and/or pigment molecules. A single layer of soy milk is suffecient for painting your papers/fabrics. You need to paint your papers/fabrics with your natural dyes and/or earth pigments within a realitively short period of time. John Marshall suggests less than 2 weeks. If you live in a very dry and/or hot region I would suggest even sooner, and making test samples is very important with this process, make sure you take good notes. If you wait longer than two weeks all is not lost you can resize your paper/fabric with soy milk again, once it's dry you can proceed to paint your paper/fabric with the dyes and pigments of your choice.
NOTE: I use commercially prepared soy milk, natural undyed and unflavored and have had no bad experiences using commecially prepared soy milk.
You can also make soy milk fresh by soaking your beans overnight in water, genearlly 4 cups water to 1 cups soybeans (yes ordinary field soy beans). The beans will absorb most if not all of the water, if need be add an additionaly cup of water to the beans the next day.
Take your soaked beans and grind in a blender or food processor. You want to keep the liquid that comes off the ground beans, strain your ground beans preferably through a coffee filter or a panthose leg so that you don't have bits of bean floating around in the resulting liquid. You now have soy milk. You can make more soy milk by adding more water to your ground beans and soaking them overnight again. Repeat the straining processe the next day.
This soy milk should keep for about two weeks in the refridgerator.
Prepping Fabric with Soy Milk
Zine Update
I will update the Zine tomorrow, I was supposed to do so today, my pupils were dilated by the eye doc today and it's still difficult to read.
First up making soy milk binder (and an explanation of why it's NOT a mordant) and then dyeing handmade papers and the like with natural dyes!
First up making soy milk binder (and an explanation of why it's NOT a mordant) and then dyeing handmade papers and the like with natural dyes!