A TECHNIQUE DRIVEN Blog dedicated to mastery of surface design techniques. First we dye, overdye, paint, stitch, resist, tie, fold, silk screen, stamp, thermofax, batik, bejewel, stretch, shrink, sprinkle, Smooch, fuse, slice, dice, AND then we set it on fire using a variety of heat tools.

Showing posts with label botanical art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label botanical art. Show all posts

Saturday, April 30, 2016

BOTANICAL SOURCE MATERIALS for Surface Design


My college botany textbook
This is my last post here for the month of April. I had big plans! So did Life (but she forgot to tell me)! In any case, it has been such a pleasure to gather this information and to do some studio experiments that I plan to continue on this botanical topic for a while on my own blog.

Frankly, botany is not the popular subject it used to be. (I actually got a great job during semester break in graduate school because I was the only student at the fairly large university who had a reputation for knowing any botany. Kinda sad. Worked for me though.) One hundred years ago things were different, and many wonderful botany books were published that are great fun to work with in art. For the most part, copyright issues are not a problem, due the ages of the publications. (You need to know a few things about copyright law to be sure you are not infringing.) And the illustrations are abundant and lovely, as is the text.

 


One of my favorites is a botany textbook published in 1901, Elements of Botany. I have used illustrations from this book in several pieces of art. Because I have only one copy of this book, I scan the images and then print on fabric or paper as needed. That means I can use multiples in one piece of art, always a great design element.


Detail from fabric collage "Some Elements of Botany"

Fabric and paper collage

One of four pieces in fabric collage "Some Elements of Botany"
Some other great resources for me have been a set of three encyclopedias published in 1877 and an ancient dictionary that must weigh five pounds! (All from my local library after the annual book sale.) Because I have so much material to work with, I can use the original pages. However, they are fragile so I back them with a lightweight fabric using an acrylic medium. More often, I scan those pages to print on fabric.

 
And of course, I occasionally use my revered botany textbook from undergraduate school. Pretty old now too (1961), but I would not use illustrations directly from that one. Significant alterations of images can work, though, and it is a great reference.
 From many years of moving and the consequent home decorating, I have a nice stash of small fabric samples and – guess what – many have wonderful botanical images printed on them. They make great collage elements.








 





Last but not least, I saved my lab notebook from my Plant Morphology class. What a treasure!!! My instructor, dear Leo Simone, was a stickler for his requirement of very carefully drawing everything we saw under the microscope as well as the live plant material. As a result, I have a wonderful collection of original images that I can use as I wish. Below is a print I made using my drawing of a microscopic Selaginella shoot.
Oil emulsion print - Selaginella shoot
Page from my botany lab notebook - placentation
 I'm in the process of enlarging this and other drawings to use on fabric as direct prints, transfers, and tracings.

Many thanks for the kind and instructional comments from all of you this month. I hope you have found some new techniques to get your botanical dreams onto your fabric!

Friday, April 15, 2016

Eco Printing Basics


Peony Leaf Hanging with Black Thread Embellishment
In the past months, I have been crazy about Eco Printing, otherwise know as "botanical contact printing." There is a lot happening in this broad and lively field of work on fabric and paper, and I have so much to learn. But it wasn't hard to figure out why it appealed to me so much.
1. I love plants! They are the primary component of this process.
2. I love experimenting! Experimentation is key to getting a handle on what works.
3. I love presents! Every time I open a newly processed packet, it feels like it's my birthday!
Fabric & plant bundles ready for processing
Fabric & plants wrapped on tin cans after processing
In general, Eco Printing is a process of laying plant material on fabric or paper ( a.k.a substrates) - frequently between 2 layers of the substrate, wrapping the materials together for maximum contact between the plants and the substrates, and then processing with heat (either with steam or by immersion), sometimes using a mordant to encourage the bonding of the plant pigments to the substrate. Loads of variety with all parts of this.
Dried oak leaves on linen, ready for wrapping
Oak leaves and linen securely wrapped with twine around a birch stick, with ferrous sulfate mordant ready to add to simmering water bath.


Bundles simmering
Saucepan containing some hot water, used to submerge the floating bundles
So, what about mordants? In my brief experience with mordants, it seems to be one of more interesting and variable of the elements in the eco printing process. My first batch of printing came out beautifully, with clear black outlines and whole leaf prints.
Oak leaf prints, embellished with gold thread
In looking back at my notes (which I try to record after every printing session), I see that I soaked the cotton and linen fabrics for this batch in a solution of 3 liters water, 1 teaspoon soda ash, and 1 teaspoon alum for about 12 hours. Then I squeezed out excess solution and soaked the fabrics in 3 liters water with 1 teaspoon ferrous sulfate for a couple of days. There were 3 mordants used here: soda ash, alum, and ferrous sulfate (the last responsible for the dark prints). Also note that I used October oak leaves that were completely dead and dry, and they gave beautiful results. I have also had good results with just alum on both fabric and paper and with seawater on a series with mangrove leaves and seaweed right off the Gulf of Mexico shoreline.

About the processing with heat: I have successfully processed both fabric and paper bundles in simmering water and above it with steam, usually for 2 or 3 hours. Sometimes I break up the required time, such as when I need to run an errand and don't want to leave the stove on. The break doesn't seem to matter. I am fortunate to have a vented fan that takes the moisture out of the house. REALLY helpful! I generally leave the bundles to cool overnight or for a few hours. After unwrapping the materials, I try to avoid rinsing the fabrics for at least a few days to allow for the continued bonding of the plant pigments to the fabric.

Is heat necessary? My understanding is that printing can take place at room temperature but that it requires longer periods of time. In her bible (or book, for some) Eco Colour: Botanical Dyes for Beautiful Textiles, India Flint has information on cold processing. I highly recommend her book, although I wouldn't call it the best resource for rank beginners. There are loads of books, blogs, websites, and workshops. I explore endlessly! You should too.

Here is a short list of plants that have worked very well for me:
  • oaks (all species that I tried)
  • peony leaves
  • onion and shallot skins (I collect them in a plastic bag as I cook and store in the freezer)
  • eucalyptus (moderately successful - from florist shops)
  • fruit tree leaves (cherry, pear, some unknown species)
  • mangrove leaves
  • fresh seaweed (Sargassum sp.)
  • sweet gum leaves (Liquidambar styraciflua)
  • sassafras leaves (Sassafras albidum)
In most cases, I have used both fresh and frozen materials with equally good results.

BOTANICAL NOTE: Don't be afraid of using Latin names! It's the most reliable way to know exactly which plant you have or want to find. Above, I used the Genus and the species names of sweet gum = Liquidambar styraciflua. When using the names, the protocol calls for either 1) italicizing both words or 2) underlining each word separately: Liquidambar styraciflua. Here's the thing: each species can have many common names but it has only ONE scientific name. The wonderful print below was made using a Florida garden plant that my friend called "Lipstick Plant" (because of the red flowers at the tips of the stems). But when I looked up the plant online, I found a completely different plant called "Lipstick Plant." Not what I was looking for!
"False" Lipstick Plant on paper

For now, here are a few images of finished works made with my fabric and paper eco prints, and I am working on more ways to use up those piles I am accumulating!
Purse made with Peony print on cotton

Cherry leaves processed between tin, in red cabbage bath

Silk scarf processed on tin can with onion skin and tropical leaves
Oak leaf table runner on linen

I expect I'll hear from many of you with more information. I'll attempt to organize any comments into a post later in the month, so send it on. Thanks!



Friday, April 8, 2016

Let Me Count the Ways......

Alstromeria leaves used as a screen stencil with thickened fabric dye
Pattern made with Alstromeria screen

Flora on Fabric

  • Screen printing with plant parts as stencils (see the photos above)
  • Deconstructed Screen Printing with plants (see below)
  • Flower photos turned into fabric collage
  • Direct/Monoprinting with plants
  • Gelli plate printing(also below)
  • Botany textbook illustrations scanned and printed on fabric
  • Natural dyes from plants
  • Botany lab illustrations
  • Eco printing
  • Sun printing
  • Flower pounding
  • Plant drawings scanned and printed







To the left is an example of some deconstructed screen printing done with paperwhite narcissus flowers and leaves, after they were first used as stencils. The thickened dye dried while I was distracted by something else.  


Next time, I'd start in with some step-by-step instructions.


Gelli plate printing with bamboo leaves on paper



Saturday, April 2, 2016

April is All Things Botanical Month

http://cf.ltkcdn.net/antiques/images/std/179617-425x326-Vintage-Botanical-Print.jpg
Antique botanical illustration
 Well, it's "All Things Botanical" Month on the "...And Then We Set It on Fire" blog. I am Cris Winters, artist in residence on this blog for the month of April 2016. How lucky am I to be part of this beautiful, delicious surface design blog???!!! Just to let you know who I am and how I got here, I was asked last year to participate by Beth Berman. We had exchanged messages on this blog and mine: crisniche.blogspot.com. I am also a fabric artist and love what happens here on the Fire Blog. But in addition, I am an ecologist with botany and ornithology expertise and experience. I have also been a serious gardener since my mom gave me my own little plot in our yard when I was eight years old. That was a Big Adventure to me, and it was the start of my passion for anything botanical, including drawing and painting plants in the style of scientific illustration.

"Grandpa Ott" morning glory - photo by Cris Winters
 
Yellow Foxglove - photo by Cris Winters






I know there are a lot of us fabric-and-surface-designy artists who include plants in many forms in our work. So much color, so much variety, so much great design straight from nature. I thought it would be fun this month to explore the many ways plants could be used in our artwork, not just as plant images but also as participants in the making of our art.
Butterflyweed - photo by Cris Winters



In addition, there are so many sources for those botanical images - old botany textbooks, dictionaries, and field guides, Arts and Crafts  and Art Nouveau designs, children's books, and much more. Use them as they appear (with copyright issues in mind) or send them to your photo editing program.


In my next post, I'll list some of the many topics I plan to cover this month. As we go forward together on this topic, I hope you'll send me your experiences of working with botanical materials and images.






William Morris design
Illustration from "Elements of Botany"