Multiple Technique Practice Piece — the Back

Many people who work in surface design talk about how the first steps can look awful.  You just have to keep working until you get to a result you like – and if you don’t, well, you can always cut it up or use it as batting inside a dog bed!

That is definitely how I feel about the practice piece I started on old linen napkins — I am not even sure I will get it to the point that I like it.  But that’s what practice is all about.

With this piece, I planned to “quilt once, paint twice.”  I wanted to try different types of paints and pigments with the quilted lines and see if there were any effects I would want to repeat.    Some of the materials I used on the front side had bled all the way through to the back, but the medium I tried out here was Jacquard Dy-na-flo® liquid color.  (Which, as it turns out, is not the same as the Jacquard Lumiere® paint I have used before, and liked very much, and now have no idea where I put it.) (Okay, I just hunted until I found it!  I have about 15 jars of it — how I have I not used it up before now?  I am going to save it for another piece though, I am not going to waste it on this one.)

The Dy-na-flow is meant to be used with a resist on a tightly woven fabric, to get a painterly look.  Being that the back of this piece is a big scrap of a loosely woven cotton/linen blend, I didn’t get the results I was hoping for.

I started with this picture from a National Geographic book, Visions of Earth, as inspiration:

Sea worms, from the National Geographic book Visions.

Mantles of giant clams in the Kingman Reef, picture by Brian Skerry, from the National Geographic book Visions of Earth.

 

Cotton/linen blend painted with Jacquard textile paints.

Cotton/linen blend painted with Jacquard textile paints.

The results are definitely too undefined and too gaudy for me.  But the challenge will be to see if I can get it to a likeable stage.

But in the meantime, there’s always my old friend Photoshop®.

Photo of the fabric with the colors desaturated, and then the hues shifted.

Photo of the fabric with the colors desaturated, and then the hues shifted.

An interesting portion cropped from the photo above, and run through a few of the filters in Photoshop.

An interesting portion cropped from the photo above, and run through a few of the filters in Photoshop.

Now there’s something I can imagine using, either printing it onto fabric myself or getting it professionally printed.

My plan was to go back into this piece with specialty threads, but I think I may just go on to another piece.  As always, I am glad I took the time to just experiment!