Thursday, 21 June 2012

Shibori Dyeing

Here are the results at my first attempt at Shibori dyeing. These samples were all stitched to create a resist to the dye, by using different techniques the dye cannot penetrate the compressed fabric areas, thus creating the patterns. These were dyed using Turquoise MX cold water dye at 2%, the fabric used was fine lightweight white cotton.

These little circles were created using a simple BINDING technique to create rings of undyed fabric using small beads to create the circular repeating shapes. The bead positions were marked onto the fabric prior to binding. 
This is another method of binding called SPIDERWEB.  This is created by making a pinched umbrella like bunch of fabric and the thread resist is wound up and down the fabric bunch, here shown close up and as a group, I didn't like the inconsistency of the resist and dye dispersal.

Here are some stitched samples, for these the fabric is stitched and then gathered to create the resist.  This is the least successful sample created using a technique called MOKUME where the fabric sewn in running stitch and pulled tight like a concertina. Dye penetrated the compressed areas more than it should have done.
More successfully, this Shibori method is called ORI NUI where wavy lines are drawn, folded and stitched along the fold line to create two rows of dots.
 My final sample is my favourite so far (and I think the simplest) and is called KARAMATSU or Japanese Larch.  In this case the fabric is folded and concentric half circles are drawn on the fold  and then stitched with running stitch and drawn up tight to create the resist.
I found all of these methods in 'Shibori Designs and Techniques' by Mandy Southan.

Tuesday, 12 June 2012

Knitting with fabric strips

Now that I am on my very long summer hols, and I feel that I have had a bit of a rest; I've now started working my way through some of the ideas that I came across during term time, but didn't get around to trying them out.  This is a large square of old printed furnishing fabric cut on the bias to create a very long 3cm wide strip which I then knitted in garter stitch (every row knit) using 15mm (pretty fat) needles.  I've no idea what you would do with this, as the strip is far from perfect with extra rough ends where the fabric was cut on the turn, and creates random tufts in the knit, but its pretty self supporting and almost sculptural in its nature.

Monday, 11 June 2012

Crochet Spheres

Having hand knitted spheres for my uni projects this year, I thought I'd try to experiment with crochet.  I found this simple pattern at http://www.kundhi.com/blog/2010/10/11/tiny-crochet-ball-pattern/.  Although they worked out quite well, I found the number of rounds less easy to count than in knitting and I kept losing my place in the pattern.  Here are some of the better samples which look a bit like ice cream scoops.  I think that the crochet is less flexible than knitting as there are less stitch choices, so I think I may revert back to the knitting!