I’ve struggled at releasing myself from the structure that I learned in my prior research career. For example, I have created my own dye color recipes -- 24 bottles of my own dye formulas, carefully documented into ratios of red, blue, yellow, or black that went into each recipe.
It was sort of a mystery to me. I now know my body was telling me this scientific approach was not serving me, that I needed to rely on my intuitive sense of color. I was attempting to document exactness into every project, exactly how I created every color for a particular project—so many drops of yellow mixed with so many drops of blue and then maybe some drops of red added in. Yeah, I’m gagging just writing this.
For the Blurred Boundaries Call I was going after the colors in the Sedona geology. This initial piece captured the colors I wanted. Here I applied thick lines of resist and dye in the spaces in between with a brush in a painterly approach, the dyes running up to the resist line. Sometimes I blended complimentary colors for an ombre effect. However, I wanted something with more texture, plus I needed a variation of values from dark to light.
I put the piece back on a frame to add dye (the frame is
shown below as illustration). I learned a dry dye application method from Karen
Sistek a Master Silk Painter. The dry method is possible by first applying a
starch resist (Magic Sizing) in a spray over the entire piece of silk. After the
starch dries, the dye does not penetrate the silk as quickly. Still, a brush of
dye needs to be almost dry and the dye is applied in small brush strokes.
I loved the effect, not using the dry brush method, but applying wet dye over the starched surface. Dyes did not flow, but resulted in a distressed surface, one that almost looked dirty. Dirty was perfect! I was simulating rocks after all!
I mixed colors on the
fly! No X number of drops of one color or the other! I used the same brush, not
this for olive, this one for purple. It was liberating. The results were
dramatic and interesting! I was mixing methods and mixing dyes with
recklessness and loving the results!
After steaming, this piece is now ready for the final step--more
later.
_________________________________________________________
Silk painting frames I use—PVC pipe, masking tape and pins
to stretch the silk to the frame.
No comments:
Post a Comment