And while I wasn't sewing I had a nice little trip up to Scarborough to the Sealife Centre and saw a Weedy Seadragon, possibly an even cooler animal than the Bignose Unicorn Fish...
Monday, 10 September 2012
It's a boy!
I know you've all been as excited as I was that my dance teacher was having another baby and I found out the other day it's a boy! I had a mad weekend sewing and here's her baby present...
Wednesday, 29 August 2012
Red Door Rapper
Red Door Rapper are a fab new Rapper group (the dancing kind of Rapper, confusing I know, but they have a Facebook page and a few videos on Youtube that you can have a look at if you're unfamiliar with the dance kind of Rapper) started by my good friend Emma who will sadly be leaving to go to Uni at Cambridge! So I've made her a little leaving present to take with her and so she doesn't forget us :)
There's even a little red door as well!

Sunday, 5 August 2012
New Stuff :)
As well as doing the holiday work college have set me (hello Bignose Unicornfish, the coolest fish name ever!) I found out my Dance teacher is going to have a baby! It was kind of obvious as she was about 8 months pregnant when I saw her but still. So I decided to make a little baby gift for her, and here it is...
Actually, this isn't for her new baby, this is for the one she had a few years ago and I still hadn't got round to making something for but when she has the new one and I know the name I'll make it's cushion straight away!
Honest :)
Actually, this isn't for her new baby, this is for the one she had a few years ago and I still hadn't got round to making something for but when she has the new one and I know the name I'll make it's cushion straight away!
Honest :)
Tuesday, 3 July 2012
*Happy Dance*
Just had a very exciting evening where I just sold my first cushion!
She's now living with the lovely Sue who has promised to take good care of her :)
Thanks Sue!
She's now living with the lovely Sue who has promised to take good care of her :)
Thanks Sue!
Friday, 11 May 2012
Work Bay Shop
I've made so much it's like I'm running a little shop in my work bay! I've already had girls ask how much I'm selling stuff for and pick out which cushion and bag they want!!
Tuesday, 8 May 2012
Hi Lucy!
Got a request for a better explanation of how I made my cushions and printing in general for Lucy :)
First off you have to make a Koda Trace - this is a drawing on special Koda Trace paper and has to completely block the light out so usually takes ages checking that it's opaque and doesn't get smudged. If you want to print more than one colour you have to make a Koda Trace for each colour cos you can only print one colour per Koda Trace.
Then you take your screen and have to coat it with some special purple emulsion that's light sensitive and when it's dry you tape your Koda Trace to it - making sure it's the right way round for printing - and expose it to the light and where the light hits the paint it hardens and where your Koda Trace is the paint stays soft and washes off, leaving parts of the screen clear to print through!
To actually print, you pin your fabric to the backing cloth on the fancy print table we have so it doesn't move when you're printing on it, place your screen in the right place over the fabric with a line of paste at the top and pull your squeegee with the paste over the bit that you want to print. Depending on how thick/heavy the fabric is you need to pull the paste over it more - silk only needs one or 2 pulls but a heavy cotton would need 4/5.
There are different pastes too - this is getting a bit confusing - there are dye pastes that actually dye the fabric so the fabric still flows how it should, and pigment ones that just sit on top of the fabric so if it was on a light fabric like a silk it wouldn't flow the same. I like the dye pastes for that reason, cos I really like using silk :) The pigment ones are quite funky too cos there are loads of special ones that expand when you iron them and are all 3D!
On my cushions and tea towel I printed the black outlines in pigment (not the cool 3D stuff sadly) and when it had dried I painted the colour into it with the dye pastes.
Then it all needs fixing so the colour doesn't run when it's washed - pigment (my black stuff) just needs ironing on the back for a few mins which is really nice and quick but the dye paste (my colour) needs to go in this big scary steamer which everyone makes me open and close cos the think they're gonna fall in it! Anyway, the dye pastes need to be steamed for about half an hour then rinsed so the excess colour comes out - that scares me more than the steamer cos I always worry that ALL the colour will come out or it'll dye the rest of the fabric around it and turn it funny colours and other horrors but its usually fine.
When every thing's been fixed they just need to be sewn - the sewing's pretty easy but the measuring so every thing's in the right place is fiddly. The tea towel is easiest cos that's just had all the edges folded and sewn. The cushion has the edges sewn then is folded with the right sides together - this is the fiddly bit cos you need to measure everything so it's the right size - it's folded differently depending on where you want the back seam -and then sewn down the edges to finish it. To FINISH finish it it needs ironing so it's all uncreased and beautiful and looks like the ones I made :)
Hope that was helpful, I know there's looooads of info there - we had about 2 weeks to learn all that and I've just chucked it at you in one lol. Its probably way more info than you needed but I wanted to explain everything properly. If I haven't explained something enough or have actually missed something out let me know and I'll add in.
xx
First off you have to make a Koda Trace - this is a drawing on special Koda Trace paper and has to completely block the light out so usually takes ages checking that it's opaque and doesn't get smudged. If you want to print more than one colour you have to make a Koda Trace for each colour cos you can only print one colour per Koda Trace.
Then you take your screen and have to coat it with some special purple emulsion that's light sensitive and when it's dry you tape your Koda Trace to it - making sure it's the right way round for printing - and expose it to the light and where the light hits the paint it hardens and where your Koda Trace is the paint stays soft and washes off, leaving parts of the screen clear to print through!
To actually print, you pin your fabric to the backing cloth on the fancy print table we have so it doesn't move when you're printing on it, place your screen in the right place over the fabric with a line of paste at the top and pull your squeegee with the paste over the bit that you want to print. Depending on how thick/heavy the fabric is you need to pull the paste over it more - silk only needs one or 2 pulls but a heavy cotton would need 4/5.
There are different pastes too - this is getting a bit confusing - there are dye pastes that actually dye the fabric so the fabric still flows how it should, and pigment ones that just sit on top of the fabric so if it was on a light fabric like a silk it wouldn't flow the same. I like the dye pastes for that reason, cos I really like using silk :) The pigment ones are quite funky too cos there are loads of special ones that expand when you iron them and are all 3D!
On my cushions and tea towel I printed the black outlines in pigment (not the cool 3D stuff sadly) and when it had dried I painted the colour into it with the dye pastes.
Then it all needs fixing so the colour doesn't run when it's washed - pigment (my black stuff) just needs ironing on the back for a few mins which is really nice and quick but the dye paste (my colour) needs to go in this big scary steamer which everyone makes me open and close cos the think they're gonna fall in it! Anyway, the dye pastes need to be steamed for about half an hour then rinsed so the excess colour comes out - that scares me more than the steamer cos I always worry that ALL the colour will come out or it'll dye the rest of the fabric around it and turn it funny colours and other horrors but its usually fine.
When every thing's been fixed they just need to be sewn - the sewing's pretty easy but the measuring so every thing's in the right place is fiddly. The tea towel is easiest cos that's just had all the edges folded and sewn. The cushion has the edges sewn then is folded with the right sides together - this is the fiddly bit cos you need to measure everything so it's the right size - it's folded differently depending on where you want the back seam -and then sewn down the edges to finish it. To FINISH finish it it needs ironing so it's all uncreased and beautiful and looks like the ones I made :)
Hope that was helpful, I know there's looooads of info there - we had about 2 weeks to learn all that and I've just chucked it at you in one lol. Its probably way more info than you needed but I wanted to explain everything properly. If I haven't explained something enough or have actually missed something out let me know and I'll add in.
xx
Thursday, 3 May 2012
Those guilts, those guilts, they can't hurt meeeee
Been rather busy again and made another fab cushion! This one was a lot scarier than the others cos there was a lot more that could go wrong like stuff would end up in the wrong paces and not line up or my colour wasn't dark enough or the fabric was very slippy and I'd sew it wrong so I was bouncing around when it was done and had actually gone right! Phew!
I dont know why these end up looking so yellow... They're not really!
Anyways, these are on silk and done in the same way as the other one - printed black pigment and painted colour.
I cant take all the credit for their amazingness though - Mr. Lowe, a nice young singing man, helped by getting Those Guilts stuck in my head (cos Jez in nice like that) which was ok until I got home and needed to listen to it and it's not on Youtube! I can't believe Youtube has failed me :( But then I look at my cushion and it's all ok again.
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