Welcome to Hell

I have one half dead cat - and all of the local vets are closed until Monday, one completely dead computer (this is my main business computer I'm referring to with all of the order information on it) 37 orders that are Missing in Action via the USPS and tomorrow is Turkey Day.

Happy Holidays everyone!!! Here's hoping yours will be much better than mine. If I get my bathroom cleaned I'm going to take a long hot soak in the tub.

And this is why

I have to keep my studio cleaned and organized! I've spent the better part of four hours looking for a pile of a fat quarters to execute my new ideas with and cannot find them - anywhere!!!

I know sigh, take a deep breath and keep looking. Who knows where I put them at this point, I've looked everywhere for this pile of fabric - it's compost dyed fabric and the colors/patterns are to dye for, and I really wanted to use them in a project this afternoon. They must be hiding intentionally hoping for a better project in the future.

Xmas Exchange



This is what I recieved from Von Biggs for the Surfacing List Xmas Exchange. My camera just doesn't do his fabric justice~! There are two absolutely to die for silk scarves, a hank of yarn/fibers and two seperate pieces of fabric equalling a fat quarters worth of fabric, and a vial of glass beads.

I'm not used to this intense of a color palette, though it does remind me a lot of the sunsets here. Thank you so much Von!

I'm off to corral a tabby cat now.

Of Squirrels and Men

Ok this is more excitement than what I need in one day, let alone a week. I went to the attic with hubby to help install the newly created attic window - we have found that after a hundred years they start to fall out of the house.

Anyway... I hear some rustling behind me, I turn around, and there in one of the hanging wardrobes, envision plastic vinyle closet and you are there, and there is a squirrel looking at me. Well actually it was leaping towards me. It's amazing how fast a person with bad knees can move when a rodent is flying at you! I moved it hit the newly installed window and proceeded to bounce everywhere in the attic. I screamed and fled the attic. Feed me fish head stew anyday but squirrel wrangling and I'm outta here.

So as I speak the neighbor is up in the attic helping hubby to chase said squirrel out of our attic. And what a ruckus they are making.

Of Men and Fish Head Stew

Or of Mice, Men and Chicken Feet Soup, either way I grossed my husband out to no end. My mother used to make fish head stew for us kids when we were little, and guessie what I've got cooking up right now! Yep fish head stew!

Anyway hubby was even further grossed out when he found out what chondroitan was really made of, various collagen bearing parts of chickens, cows, pigs and whatever else they can get their hands on. I'm thinking making chicken feet soup is a lot better, blanch the feet and peel the skin off first and then boil up with onion and garlic. Or turtle soup, boiled down until coagulating, to get the same exact affects, and at least you know where your collegan came from!

One of those weeks


Ok so it's going to be one of those weeks! I've felt like I have been wading through a heavy fog all day, after being up sick as a dog last night, now hubby is very ill, same symptoms yada yada yada. So I guess that makes it official we have a bug of some sorts. I actually got a lot done today, shipped out a bunch of orders and the like but this heavy icky feeling could go away and I'd be all the happier. I did get the chicken veggie soup fixed for dinner, maybe this will help push it through our systems faster.

Maybe the picture will post tonight, I tried last night but blogger wasn't cooperating. Here's a pic I took of the leaves a few weeks ago.

One of those days

I seem to have misplaced some fabrics, a HUGE pile of fabrics I might add. This is really frustrating as I was planning on using these fabrics in my classes as examples, they will pushed even further surface design wise.

In other news the weather changed here, the temperature dropped about 30 degrees in an hour, the wind is blowing a good 30+ mph hour now making my allergies scream. More later from the studio front.

So aside from the above I got to sleep sometime after four o'clock this morning. The city in it's infinite wisdom decided it needed to work on the sewer last night, starting sometime around 10is pm, right outside our front door. The equipment they used was noisy, and this is an understatement. Couple that with the weimeraner being very ill with an infected dew claw, I didn't sleep a wink. The dog is doing better, good enough to be tearing at her bandages. I have to go out and get some bitter apple to put on the bandage to keep her off of it for another day.

Embroidery

There's a part of me that thinks I should do something with that piece that is on the frame first, but if I do it needs some paint, foil, possibly some dye and other surface design BEFORE it is stitched. Even then it may look different than the original. The fabric was already attached to the frame so I have to deal with that before I can put my fabric for beadwork onto the frame.

Rust Dyeing a Primer

You can purchase the book with complete details here Rust and Clay Dyeing Book

Rust dyeing is a surface design method that adds dimension to your fabrics and fibers. I use the technique predominately on cotton or silk fabrics. Natural fibers take the rust colors better than synthetic fibers.

You can rust dye onto commercially dyed and/or printed fabrics. However, fabrics dyed using synthetic dyes, or those dyed with natural dyes take rust dyeing best as they usually do not have anti-stain coatings on them. When applying rusty objects to naturally dyed fabrics the colors will change. Iron, i.e. rust, is a modifier and is used as a mordant with natural dyes. Modifiers change the existing color via shifts in the pH levels. An example would be hibiscus or cochineal, each yield a red color, when you add iron they shift from red to purple. A minute amount causes this color change.

You can place rusty objects next to wet fabric and acquire rust patterning over time. However, vinegar will speed up the rusting process, it aids in breaking the rust particles free from the object that is rusting. Rusting occurs normally due to oxidation, i.e. contact with the air. Be patient. Rust dyeing with water takes about a week. Using vinegar produces color in less time usually twenty-four hours.

I use straight vinegar and all sorts of rusty objects to acquire my rust dyed patterns. Old nails and wire work well for this technique. Wire can be used for bound resist techniques, especially when wrapping the fabric around a rusty pipe. Or you can simply lay the wire in a loose pattern on the fabric and rust it in that manner.

Pole wrapping and bound resist techniques work well with rust dyeing. Simply wrap your vinegar-saturated fabric around a rusty pole, being careful not to tear the fabric, scrunch and otherwise manipulate the fabric to created patterning.

You can sprinkle iron mordant or iron shavings onto your fabric for other patterning. Iron mordant is preferable to shavings. Shavings are often sharp things that can cut you or the fabric. Metal shavings may be coated in machinery oil which would put unwanted stains onto the fabric.

If you like your rusty pieces and want to push the rust dyeing technique further, rinse the fabric and neutralize it in salt water, rinse it again and then rust the fabric once more. This will help prevent the fabric from rotting through.

Natural rust is an iron oxide. It comes in about ten or more natural colors depending on what it is in the neighboring the iron ore. Wear gloves and a mask when working with it. Iron in this form wants to bind with your hemoglobin blocking all available sites for oxygen, ask me how I know. You can become gravely ill from too much contact with raw iron products. In addition, tolerance to raw iron varies with each person.

You can mix a small amount natural rust with water, I generally use one teaspoon rust to one cup liquid, or with soy milk to paint fabric. Stir well. Let it sit for 24 hours to ensure that all of the color will dissolve. Then apply the rust solution to the fabric. Use a old brush you can dedicate to this kind of project. Natural bristle brushes work best with this technique allowing the liquid to wick up the bristles and not leave a mess on your fabric. Cure the fabric dry for 24 hours. Rinse and neutralize your fabric in a saltwater solution.

When using the rust technique if you want the process to stop you need to neutralize it with a salt-water solution. Dissolve about 1/4 cup salt into four gallons of hot water. I do this in a five-gallon bucket. Soak your fabric in the salt water about fifteen minutes. Wash the fabric using a non-phosphorous soap or a mild color free shampoo.

I teach workshops on rust dyeing, several workshops on natural dyeing and several for clay/pigment dyeing

Mark Making with Nature DVD

Mark Making with Nature is done and is shipping!!! The DVD is available on my webstore and is currently 40% off.

Natural Dye Topics covered:
Painting
Monoprinting
Bound Resist
Screenprinting
Stamping & Other Resists
Mixed Techniques & More

The DVD is not as detailed as the online classes - many of you have asked me this question - This is a wonderful introduction into the world of surface design with natural dyes, creating art cloth with unique marks utilizing nature.

Over one hour of techniques, and a supplemental PDF file with tips and helps.

And if I can ever figure it out I will put a blurb from the video onto my blog.

Mark Making with Nature DVD

Mark Making with Nature: Surface Design with Natural Dyes - DVD


It's Done! It's Done! It's Done!!!

This has been a steep learning curve for me, technology wise, but was well worth the effort! I'm hoping to have a video clip uploaded to my blog and to my websites later today, another steep learning curve. The reality is it will most likely happen tomorrow as I'm still sitting here burning DVD's.
Topics Covered in the DVD are:
Screenprinting with Natural Dyes
Monoprinting with Natural Dyes
Bound Resist with Natural Dyes
Alternative Resists
Stamping and much much more
Also included with the video is a PDF Booklet (100+ pages) on tips and instructions scouring and mordanting fabrics, making the binders, properly curing your fabrics and much more.

Updates

We have been very ill with that headcold crud that's been going around. I'm pretty thankful as I haven't had the fever like my hubby has. He's missed two days this week now, and my not go to work tomorrow if he doesn't shake this fever.

I have chosen not to do anything too technical, basically been sleeping a lot and doing some beading. More later from the homefront.