The first image is of a hand painted panel one of my students in Kuwait gave me last year. Her name was Paramjeet ( thanks Felicity for the correction!) and she was from India and said that this little panel was hand painted by artists from her own region ( but I can't recall what that region was) What I do recall is Paramjeet's fabulous work. Jenny Bowker taught her to machine quilt and when Jenny next saw her she has machine quilted/embroidered an amazing study of a old city replete with sailing ship in black thread on white fabric- it was utterly amazing!
I have been preparing some more fabric for my next quilt. I am a bit low on white fabric for dyeing at the moment so have been squirreling around using what I have got. This fabric I bought in France and it has quite a coarse weave but it takes the dye beautifully. I have printed some bracken leaves onto it before machine embroidering some banksias onto it. I roll the gold ink onto the leaf itself and then place the leaf inked side down onto the fabric and press it down with a newspaper over the top. Because of the coarse weave of the fabric the print is not as clear as it might be but as i will be stitching around the edges it will show up more once I am finished with it- especially as lately I am double threading my machine whenever I quilt in order to get more of a line.
Did you double thread your machine for Gilgamesh"s rug. Is that why it looks so good? What kind of gold ink did you use?
ReplyDeleteI love the colors on the panel from your student. It's beautiful. I have never tried double threading my machine, but now there's one more thing to try! I assume you still use only one bobbin thread. I like the subtle effect of the leaf print on the coarser fabric. I too am mostly out of fabric to dye. Gotta remedy that asap.
ReplyDeleteDijanne,
ReplyDeleteA lovely job of dying and I like the indistinctness of the fern leaf, I think it enhances rather than detracts from the piece.
Judy
Dijanne, I think you must mean Paramjeet. If I remember correctly she is from New Delhi.
ReplyDeleteI love ferns, this is a super idea!
Thanks Felicity- made the corrections!
ReplyDelete