
My work (play) with disperse transfer dyes continues.I've been refining my process, trying to make larger pieces with them by tiling and overlapping images. And making more and more papers:

By the way, turns out this is the perfect use for an old vinyl shower curtain. And I've been using the old sheets I started using in a workshop as table protection; they keep looking better and better.
I'm doing this because I don't know of another way to get this kind of look on fabric:

Or this:

There's depth and interest in the images, the hand of the fabric remains the same, the colors are unmuddied. It's my current favorite technique--until the next one enchants me...
That is all.
No comments:
Post a Comment