Complete Fabric Artist Work Shoop
Complete Fabric Artist Work Shoop
COMPLETE
fabric
artists
workshop
SUSAN STEIN
dedication
To my dad, C. Emmett Shogren, who was my greatest supporter and encouraged me to accomplish
whatever I set my mind to.
To my husband, John, for many years of love, support, and encouragement.
contents
Introduction
COLOR AND IMAGERY
Paintstiks Technique Quartet
Paintstik Decorated Apron
Brayer Painting
Brayer-Painted Lunch Bag
Quilted/Painted Folder Briefcase
Sponge Painting
Stamping with Found Objects
Nature Printing
Monoprinting
Monoprinted Placemats
Splash and Puddle Painting
Sunprinting with Paint
Resisting Paint
Painted Tabletop Screen
Lasagna Dyeing
Lasagna Painted Silk Throw
Rust Dyeing
Rust-Dyed Silk Scarf
Screen Printing
Screen-Printed Pillowcase
Shaving Cream Marbling
Color Discharge with Bleach
Discharged Dye Pillow
Image to Fabric Sheet Transfer
Photo-Transfer Mail Sorter
Printout to Fabric Transfer
Inkjet Transparency to Book Cover
TEXTURE AND DEPTH
Resources
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Index
when possible or work in a vented room. Most of all, cultivate a playful attitude and be ready for the
question How did you DO that?
Artists have used paintstikslinseed oil and pigment solidified into a stick
formfor many years.
Versatile, easy to use, and permanent when set properly, they come in many colors and a wonderful
array of iridescent hues. A blender sticka colorless stick used for making value gradationsallows
you to create lighter colors. You can purchase paintstiks individually or in sets.
Now that the fiber people have discovered them, paintstiks have become a very popular tool for
decorating clothing, wall hangings, cloth books, and art dolls.
Apply the color directly to the fabricits just like coloring with a crayon. You can use paintstiks to
make rubbings of fairly flat objects that have recesses deep enough to feel through fabric, or try one of
the many commercial rubbing plates. Stencil using a stencil brush and any purchased stencil design (or
make your own stencil from freezer paper or template plastic). Use masking-tape guides to paint
straight lines for plaids. Pull the color off of a paper with torn edges to create lovely, soft stripes.
Clean hands and brushes with citrus cleaner, workshop solvent, or soap and water. Protect your carpet
and your clothing, as any flakes of paint that fall from your work surface will dry and become a
permanent stain.
Write or Draw
Place the nonslip surface on your table. Using masking tape, adhere three edges of the fabric to the
surface, right side up. Peel off the protective skin that forms on the outside of the paintstik, either by
pinching it off with a paper towel or trimming it off with a small knife. When the stick glides easily over
a piece of paper, it is ready to use. Write words or draw abstract lines on the fabric with the paintstik.
Note: If the paintstik wears down to the cardboard cover, loosen the cover around the stick and push the
stick up from the opposite end, leaving the cardboard intact.
Make a Rubbing
Slide a rubbing plate under the fabric through the open edge. Stroke over the fabric with the flat end of
the paintstik to capture the pattern from the rubbing plate. Move the plate as needed and continue to
stroke the paint onto the fabric. You can use more than one color if you like, but be careful not to
smudge already painted areas. You will, with a little practice, be able to avoid stroking off the edges of
the rubbing plate.
Stencil
Tape a stencil to the fabric or hold it firmly in place. Choose a brush size appropriate to the stencil
openings. To smoothly load your stencil brush with paint, first stick a large piece of masking tape to
your work surface, then rub the paintstik onto the back of the tape. Load the brush by picking up as
much paint as possible from the tape. Brush the color from the stencil edge into the opening to create a
soft outline that lightens toward the motif center.
Note: You can create a stencil from freezer paper! Cut out a shape, leaving approximately 2" (5.1 cm)
of paper as a surround. Iron the paper, shiny side down, directly onto the right side of the fabric.
Finishing
Let the fabric dry for at least two to three days. If you try to work with it earlier, the paint will smear.
Set an iron to the correct temperature for the type of fabric you are using. Protect your ironing surface
with a piece of parchment or kraft paper. Iron the back of each area for 10 to 15 seconds.
Susan Suggests
To give an appliqu a three-dimensional effect, draw around it with a paintstik to create a shadow.
Use oil paint sticks and a rubbing plate to decorate a butcher apron with a
colorful design.
Shiva Artists Paintstiks come in many colors and are easy to use. Once they dry and are properly heat
set, the color is permanent. Choose matte or
Rinse the apron fabric to preshrink it and remove sizing and wrinkles. Press. Enlarge the pattern on page 49 and use it to
cut out the apron.
Place the nonslip sheet on the table. Choose one or more rubbing plates and arrange them on the sheet. Cover the plates
with the apron faceup. Use your hands to press the apron onto the rubbing plate so you can tell where the edges of the
design are located.
Peel off the protective skin that forms on the flat end of the paintstik, either by pinching it off with a paper towel or
trimming it off with a small knife. Carefully dispose of the peelings so they dont get on your clothes or floor. Place your
left hand firmly down on the left side of the area of the apron to be decorated to hold it in place. Rub over the area
covering the rubbing plates with the paintstik, trying not to go beyond the edges of the raised designs and stroking in one
direction, away from your left hand. (Or switch hands and directions if you are left-handed.) Let the apron dry undisturbed
for two to three days, depending on how heavily the paintstik was applied.
Protect your ironing surface with cooking parchment. Place the apron facedown and iron with a dry iron for 10 to 15
seconds in each spot that was decorated. Make sure the room is well ventilated. This will make the paint permanent to
washing, but the apron (or any project colored with paintstiks) should not be dry-cleaned.
Turn under the top edge, long sides, and bottom edge of the apron 1/4" (6 mm); press. Turn under 1/2" (1.3 cm) again;
press and stitch. Fold the bias tape in half to determine the center. Place the tape around your neck so the center mark is in
back and mark the tape where you want the top edge of your apron. Pin the bias tape around the remaining raw edges of
the apron, with the wider fold on the back of the apron. Align the marks with the top edge, creating a neck strap, and
extend the ends beyond the sides to make ties. Sewing from the right side, stitch the tape along the full length.
Susan Suggests
Paintstiks are the perfect medium to grab for embellishing a project that needs a little spark, such as a
wall hanging with a plain border or an ordinary sweatshirt cut up the front to make it a unique jacket.
brayer painting
Brayers are like small versions of the rollers used to paint walls.
They are very useful for applying paint to fabric in a variety of wayseach one interesting and fun!
You can create patterns by placing items around the roller before loading it with the paint. Brayers with
a removable roller make it easy to wind threads and fibers around the roller. Create a different effect by
putting objects under your fabric and rolling a paint-filled brayer over the top.
Creating garment fabric with abstract designs is easy, as the brayer covers a large area quickly. It is
simple to create fascinating texture with common household items. Mix the techniques for a variety of
looks. Lets get started!
Susan Suggests
Scatter rubber bands under a piece of fabric for an interesting abstract effect.
If your idea of packing a lunch is to throw a beverage and a frozen entre into
your briefcase, heres a great idea for you!
This attractive, insulated lunch bag is also a conversation-starter at work or on the bus! Brayer painting
over textured items makes a unique fabric for the outside layer. A dense quilt batting provides the
insulation, and a tightly woven cotton lining resists snags from silverware. Make lunch bags for the kids
too, using their plastic letters and other toys for rubbing patterns. Better yet, have them make their own
bags!
With a rotary cutter, ruler, and mat, measure and cut 12" 32" (30.5 81 cm) pieces of outer fabric, batting, and lining
fabric.
Lay out textured items on the plastic-covered table so they cover a 12" 32" (30.5 81 cm) area. Use double-stick tape to
hold them in place.
Place the outer fabric over the textured items and tape the edges to the plastic-covered table, using masking tape. Rub your
fingers over the fabric so you can make a slight imprint where the rubbing materials are located.
Pour paint onto the glass or plastic palette, and roll the brayer through it until there is paint evenly
distributed around the roller in a thin layer.
Working quickly so the paint doesnt dry, roll over the fabric in the shorter direction, reloading the brayer for every pass.
Let the paint dry. Iron the fabric on the back with a dry iron to set the paint.
Layer the outer fabric, batting, and lining. Fuse the layers together by steaming, first from one side and then from the other
side. Follow the batting manufacturers directions. Set your machine for a fairly wide satin stitch and sew all around the
edges of the quilt sandwich.
Fold the quilt sandwich in half, right sides together, aligning the short ends. The short ends will become the top of the bag.
Stitch the sides with a 1/4" (6 mm) seam. To make gussets at the bottom, flatten the bottom, forming triangles on each
side, with the side seams centered in the triangles. Sew across each triangle, perpendicular to the seam, 2" (5 cm) from the
point.
Turn the bag right side out. Center a piece of Velcro loop tape along the top edge of one side; stitch it in place. From the
opposite side, fold down both sides of the upper edge twice, 1-1/2" (3.8 cm). Mark where the hook tape should be. Unfold
the bag and stitch the hook tape to the outside of the bag.
Susan Suggests
Practice loading and using the brayer before starting your project. It is difficult to get an entirely even
application of the paint because the brayer puts down more paint on the first revolution of the roller,
but putting too much paint on will blur the rubbing completely.
Set yourself apart as a creative, interesting, yet professional, person at your next
committee meeting.
Sized to hold several file folders, this tote will have them wondering how you made such a unique
fabric. Simple quilting, and then painting afterward, creates a wonderful texture and pattern.
Try small samples of different combinations. If you like them all, make a tote for every organization
you belong to!
Susan Suggests
Make your tote from a dark-colored quilt sandwich, and color it with this interesting technique.
Working in a well-ventilated area, mix equal parts textile paint and discharge paste (both by
Jacquard). Apply the mixture to the fabric (by brushing, rolling, or stamping), and allow it to dry. The
discharge paste will remove the black color from the fabric and add the new color at the same time.
Iron the quilt to reveal the new color.
With a rotary cutter, ruler, and mat, measure and cut a piece of the outer fabric and a piece of backing 15" 22" (38 56
cm) . Cut a lining piece 14" 21" (35.5 53.5 cm).
Fuse the quilt sandwich together by using an iron to steam the backing to the batting and then steaming the outer fabric to
the other side of the batting. Quilt all over the sandwich with a simple grid or other design, using a walking foot for
machine-guided straight lines or a darning foot for free-motion curved lines. The pattern should be dense and consistent.
Rinse the quilt sandwich in warm water to shrink the batting a little, blot in a towel, and dry in the dryer.
With the brayer, apply paint lightly over the surface of the quilt sandwich, covering the raised areas. You may want to
practice with the brayer first to determine how much paint you want on it when you start printing. Allow the paint to dry.
Heat set the paint with a dry iron. Trim the quilt sandwich to 14" 21" (35.5 53.5 cm). Press the sandwich in half,
wrong sides together, to create a guideline for handle and pocket placement.
The pocket can be a piece of artwork, a photo of your dog, another piece of quilting, or just a great chunk of fabric. To line
the pocket, place it right sides together with a square of lining fabric and sew across the top and bottom edges with a 1/4"
(6 mm) seam. Turn the pocket right side out and press. Place it in the center of one side of the quilt sandwich and pin. Sew
along the bottom edge.
Rubber stamp by Fred B. Mullett
Sew the narrow ribbon to the center of the wide ribbon. Starting at the fold, pin the sewn ribbon to the tote: cover 1/4" (6
mm) of the sides of the pocket, extend to the top of the tote, allow 7" (18 cm) for a handle, start down the other side of the
pocket, repeat the placement on the other side of the fold, and finish at the fold again. Turn under the raw edge of the
ribbons and pin over the starting end. Sew down both sides of the ribbon, starting and ending 1" (2.5 cm) from the top
edges. Embellish the handle with yarn, trim, charms, or beads, if desired.
Sew the sides of the tote, right sides together, with a 1/4" (6 mm) seam. Turn right side out.
Sew the lining in the same way, but leave a 3" or 4" (7.5 or 10 cm) opening in one side. Slip the outer tote into the lining,
right sides together, and pin the raw edges, keeping the handles out of the way. Sew all around the top edge.
Pull the tote right side out through the opening in the lining seam. Sew the opening closed and press the tote and lining.
Push the lining into the tote and topstitch around the upper edge, catching the handles for reinforcement. Buy some
colored file folders to match your new tote!
sponge painting
Sponge painting is a quick and easy technique for creating textured patterns and
backgrounds.
Small pieces of nonhardening sponge work well with medium-bodied fabric paints, and you can paint
on wet or dry fabric to achieve different effects. Look for sponges that have holes of various sizes, and
buy several so you always have a dry sponge ready for the next application. Use a transparent paint to
fill in the background areas after the first sponge painting is dry.
Susan Suggests
If you like a watercolor look, spray the fabric with water either before or after painting with the fabric
paint.
Cut a stencil out of freezer paper and iron the freezer paper to the stencil fabric. You can also use a precut acrylic stencil.
Cut the hydrophilic sponges into small, easy-to-hold pieces. Pour metallic paint onto a freezer-paper palette. Dip a sponge
into the paint and then dab the sponge onto the freezer paper to remove the excess (dont go directly to the fabric or the
sponge texture will not show on the first application).
Dab the paint on the fabric through the stencil openings. The less paint you have on the sponge, the more textured the
design will look. Rinse the sponge and let the paint dry.
Create color movement and texture on the background fabric with another piece of sponge and the medium-bodied,
transparent paint. Refill the sponge with paint as necessary. Devise your own pattern or follow the print on the fabric, if
any. Use a variety of paint colors, if you wish. Try layering colors by dabbing a second color alongside of, and slightly
overlapping, the first color. Allow the paint to dry.
Rubber-stamping has been popular for years, but imagine other ways to stamp
designs onto fabric.
Look around the house for common objects that could make unique prints. Check out your button box,
desk, kitchen drawers, and workbench for items with interesting texture or items that can be carved or
manipulated into patterns. A medium-bodied or a metallic paint works well for stamping because both
retain the sharp edges you want. The key to making clear impressions with any stamping device is to
load the stamp with enough paint to make a clear image, but not so much that the paint flows into the
stamps negative spaces. Work quickly when using fabric paint so it does not dry on the stamp.
Susan Suggests
Use an old toothbrush to clean out crevices if they clog while youre working.
Button Stamping
Glue a button to the lid of an old pill bottle or film canister. Spoon paint onto your palette and smooth it
out with the rubber brayer. Dip the button into the paint, then stamp the fabric. To keep the image
distinct, load the stamp with paint each time you use it. For varied brightness, stamp two or three times
before reloading with paint. Heat set the paint by ironing the fabric for three minutes or placing it in a
hot dryer for 30 minutes.
Carved-Eraser Stamping
Carve the erasers into your own one-of-a-kind designs and cut the weather stripping into shapes. Glue
them separately or in a pattern to the Plexiglas scraps. Spoon paint onto your palette and smooth it out
with the rubber brayer. Dip the stamps into the paint, then stamp the fabric. Heat set the paint when dry.
Note: Carved-eraser and weather-stripping stamps created by Diane Bartels.
nature printing
Flowers and leaves delight us during the growing season and are always nice to
have around the rest of year.
Print and paint fabrics using natural materials, and you will enjoy the beauty of nature on wall hangings,
quilts, household items, and clothing. Collect leaves and flowers any time of the year, press them
between the pages of a thick phone book until theyre dry, and then store them in plastic page protectors
for future use. Simple flowers and leaves work best for printing and some will last through multiple
uses.
Susan Suggests
After your images are printed, dried, and heat set, they can be outlined with a permanent black
marker or highlighted with stitching.
Spray
Pour the transparent paint into a small spray bottle. To produce a bold effect, use full-strength paint or
for a softer look, dilute it with water. Place a large leaf on the fabric and spray the paint around the
edges. Let the paint dry. Press with an iron to heat set when you complete your final Nature Printing
technique.
Brayer: Preparation
Draw an outline the size of your journal page on the newspaper. Arrange the leaves inside the outline,
vein-side (backside) up. Veining is more prominent on the back of leaves and offers a sharper image
than you would get from the front. Remove the leaves one at a time from the newspaper, paint the backs
with sponge brushes and two or more colors of opaque paint, and replace them in the design. Using
variations of paint colors imitates the dappled hue of real leaves.
Brayer: Technique
Place a piece of fabric right side down over the leaves. Roll the brayer over it to transfer the paint to the
fabric. Work quickly before the paint dries. This technique takes practice, so do several pieces and
choose the best for your project. Peel the leaves off of the fabric and wipe them off if you want to use
them again. Let the paint on the fabric dry for a few minutes.
Accent
To add an accent, spread metallic paint on another leaf, place it paint side down in the design, and
brayer over it to transfer the paint to the fabric. Heat set the fabric with an iron when completely dry.
monoprinting
Susan Suggests
You can use an 18" 12" (45.7 30.5 cm) folded piece of fabric for a butterfly effect. Be very
careful when placing the fabric within the sheet protector.
Cut two edges off the sheet protector, leaving one connected edge. Open the sheet protector on the plastic-covered table.
Shake or stir the paint thoroughly and spoon the paint onto one side of the plastic. Use two or three colors that coordinate
with or complement each other.
Close the sheet protector. Manipulate the paint by pushing with your fingers so paint covers most of the
area inside the plastic. Work quickly so the paint does not bead up or start to dry. Open the sheet
protector.
Place one piece of fabric on each side of the sheet protector, then close it. Quickly and gently rub both sides of the plastic
to transfer the paint to the fabric. Do not push the paint into the grain of the fabric or the colors will appear dull.
Remove the fabric pieces from the sheet protector and separate them. Let them dry flat on the plastic-covered table for 24
hours. Heat set the paint with an iron set to the proper temperature for the fabric for 30 seconds on both sides of the fabric,
or place the fabric in a hot dryer for 30 minutes.
monoprinted placemats
Monoprinting is a very old method for printing on paper, using ink and a marble
slab.
Today we can print our own fabric using textile paint and a piece of plastic or glass. First you apply
paint to the surface and manipulate it. You can use many methods for drawing in the paintall fun and
rather playful. Then you lay the fabric over the paint and roll over it to transfer the design. Often you
can get a second print from the paint that is left over, and sometimes its better than the first! When the
paint is dry, heat set it with an iron, and make some great new placemats for your table.
Susan Suggests
Use the monoprinting technique to make a table runner. Follow the same steps, adjusting the
measurements to suit your project. Make napkins with satin-stitched or serged edges to match.
Preshrink the fabrics and batting. Iron the fabric smooth. With a rotary cutter, ruler, and mat, measure and cut four 9"
13" (23 33 cm) pieces of the center fabric. Cut four 17" 21" (43 53 cm) pieces of the border/backing fabric. Cut four
12" 16" (30.5 40.5 cm) pieces of batting.
Tape the plastic or glass to the table to make it easier to pull the fabric off the paint. Draw a 9" 13" (23 33 cm)
rectangle on the plastic with a marker. Apply the Lumiere paint to the plastic within the drawn rectangle with a sponge
brush. Try to apply enough paint to minimize brush marks but not so much that the paint will spread out everywhere when
you print the fabric. But, as always, imperfections show the mark of the artist and are what make your work unique! Work
quickly so the paint does not dry on the plastic.
With the stamp, pick up paint from the plastic by pressing down hard and lifting straight up. Wipe the stamp on paper
towel between each use. Randomly stamp until there is pattern all over the painted area. Work quickly so the paint does
not dry.
Lay the center fabric facedown on top of the paint, being careful not to smear the design. Roll the brayer over the top of
the fabric so the paint transfers to the fabric. Pull the fabric straight up off the plastic and set aside to dry. Repeat the
process for three more pieces of fabric. Heat set the paint by ironing the fabric on the back with a dry iron for 30 seconds
on each area.
Print Variation
To make two prints from one paint setup, spray water onto the paint that remains on the plastic after
printing the first piece of fabric. Lay a second piece of fabric over it. Roll the brayer over the fabric to
transfer the paint. The second print will be much lighter and show the pattern of the spray.
Press under the edges of the border/backing fabric 1/2" (1.3 cm) all the way around. Center the mat board on the wrong
side of the border/backing, and press the edges up and over the board. To miter the corners, first fold in the corner
diagonally and press. Then fold in the sides to meet in the center of the corner. After pressing, remove the mat board.
Place the batting piece in the center of the border/backing aligning it to the outer the folds. Center the printed piece over
the batting, tucking the edges under the folded edges of the border. Pin.
Topstitch the edges of the border through all the layers. Quilt the center around the printed motifs if you wish.
Dye-na-Flow paint, a very thin paint that acts like a dye, flows over the surface
of and mixes readily on fabric.
One of the advantages of using paint instead of dye is immediately seeing your colors blend and
patterns develop. Youll have no control over what the paints do after you apply them to the fabric,
which generates extra fun!
Youll quickly grasp color theory as you watch primary colors (red, yellow, blue) mix together to form
secondary colors (purple, green, orange) and see complementary colors (see page 47) blend to make
earth tones.
In this sample, the complementary colors purple and yellow formed brown when they bled into each
other.
Try a piece of silk or pima cotton for this project, as these fabrics are easy to manipulate.
Susan Suggests
The color wheel can help guide you through color choices. Complementary colors are yellow/purple,
blue/orange, and red/green. Here is an easy way to remember this: the complement of any primary
color is the combination of the other two primary colors.
Create a Background
Lay a piece of fabric on your work surface. You will create this pattern using one or more colors, as
desired. Dribble paint with a pipette or eyedropper across the fabric in parallel lines. Now dribble paint
onto the fabric in lines that are perpendicular to the first lines. Leave some white space for the paint to
flow into. After a couple of minutes, add more paint if you think there is too much white space, or spray
the fabric with water to make the paint run.
Salt Patterning
Spray the fabric with water. Paint a random pattern over the entire surface with two or three colors,
using a separate sponge brush for each color. Spray the fabric with more water to make the colors blend.
Immediately sprinkle coarse salt over the surface. Let the fabric dry slowly to allow the salt to push the
paint into fascinating configurations. Wrinkles in the plastic or ripples in the fabric will also form
designs. After the fabric dries, brush off the salt, heat set the fabric with the iron or in a dryer for 30
minutes, then wash out any salt residue.
Bubble-Wrap Patterning
Lay a piece of bubble wrap on the table, bubble side up. Lay a piece of fabric over it and spray the
fabric with water. Paint a random pattern over the entire surface of the fabric with one or more colors,
using a separate sponge brush for each color. As you work, push the brush down into the valleys created
by the bubble wrap. Spray the fabric with more water until you see distinct circle patterns. Allow the
fabric to dry completely, then press to heat set the paint.
Color Pleating
Cut a piece of heavy-duty aluminum foil to the size of your fabric (a fat quarter, 18" 22" [45.7 55.9
cm], or a smaller piece works well). Use masking tape to attach the ends of the fabric to the foil. Crease
the foil and fabric together into 1" (2.5 cm) pleats. Unfold the pleats slightly. Place the pleated fabric
and foil on your table. Spray the fabric with water. Using enough paint so the colors will be able to
blend together on the sides of the mountains and in the valleys, apply a color with a sponge brush on the
mountains. Using a separate sponge brush, apply another color in the valleys. After the paint dries, press
the fabric flat, using a heat setting appropriate to the fabric, to reveal a wonderful soft stripe and to set
the paint.
Sunprinting is an exciting and delightfully simple technique that uses the sun to
imprint images on cloth.
The entire surface of a fabric is painted, objects are arranged on it, and the fabric is dried in direct
sunlight. The color under the objects lightens, but the brilliant color of the painted fabric exposed to the
sun remains.
The intensity of the sun affects the quality of the prints, so plan ahead and have your materials ready for
when the weather cooperates. Make sun blocks from items found around the house and yard. Each will
make a distinct pattern. If the day is breezy, weigh down your objects with small stones or tape netting
over them. Do not use glass or another solid cover because it will prevent the paint from drying and
printing your image.
Susan Suggests
Try layering your sunprints. After printing and drying your fabric, repaint with another color and use
the same or different objects to print the fabric for a luscious layered effect.
Place the fabric on a plastic-covered board. Any threads lying on the surface of the fabric or the board will create a print
and so will folds or wrinkles in the plastic. Spray the fabric with water until damp.
Paint the entire surface of the damp fabric with paint using a sponge brush. Take the paint straight out of the bottle. Work
quickly so the paint stays wet, as dry paint will not print.
Place your sun blocks on top of the fabric. Spray the fabric with water again and press the edges of the objects firmly into
the wet paint. They must lie flat; edges that are not flat against the fabric allow sun underneath and you will not get a clear,
sharp print. Weigh down the objects, if necessary, with small stones or glass marbles, or tape a piece of netting over the
project if the weather is breezy. The netting will print, but that adds an interesting secondary design. Place the project in
direct sunlight.
When the fabric has dried completely, remove the objects. Heat set the paint by ironing the fabric for three minutes or
placing it in a hot dryer for 30 minutes. Be sure to look at the back of the fabricsometimes it is as pretty as the front!
resisting paint
You can control where paint flows over fabric or where it remains after its
applied.
Numerous intriguing methods, some mechanical and some chemical block paint from certain areas of
the fabric. Each is called a resist. Mechanical resists range from the fine hand-stitching of Japanese
shibori to clothespins clamped on folds in the fabric. Chemical resists like gutta allow you to paint
lovely florals or other images with precision. Potato dextrin dries on a fabric and forms a network of
fine cracks that allows paint or dye to seep into them. For this project, simple school glue was used as a
chemical resist and then washed out.
Try the methods shown here for quick, dramatic results. Different paint viscosities (consistencies)
provide different results, so play with several to see what works best. As always, heat set the paint after
it dries to make it permanent.
Block the paint from the fabric or change the way it flows
across it. These four techniques open a world of possibilities.
Preparation
Protect your work surface with the plastic cover. Before you begin, read through all of the techniques
described in this section. One technique may contain a detailed instruction that is necessary for related
techniques.
Susan Suggests
Combine one or more of the techniques used in Resisting Paint with one or more techniques from
Color Discharge with Bleach for myriad design options.
Glue Resist
Create a pattern on the fabric with the glue. Let the glue dry completely. Paint the fabric with the
medium-bodied paint, using a sponge brush. Spray the painted fabric lightly with water if you would
like the colors to blend. After the paint dries for 24 hours, heat set it on the wrong side of the fabric with
a dry iron. Soak the fabric to soften the glue and then hand wash using a toothbrush to help remove the
glue. Where the glue drawings covered the fabric, the original color will appear.
Tape Resist
Tear pieces of masking tape into strips and press them firmly onto the surface of the fabric, either
randomly or in patterns. You can also use stickers or shelf paper cut into shapes. Paint over the resists
with a sponge brush and the medium-bodied paint. Allow the paint to dry and then remove the resists.
Take your design one step further by washing diluted paint over the painted piece to color the white
areas and alter the color of the painted areas. Heat set the paint by ironing the fabric for three minutes or
placing it in a hot dryer for 30 minutes.
String-Tied Patterning
Place a piece of string diagonally on a piece of dampened fabric. Drape the fabric over the string
diagonally, forming two triangles. Hold the ends of the string and twirl the fabric until it is wound
around the string. Scrunch the fabric together in the middle of the string and tie the string ends together.
Dab thinned transparent paint into the wrinkles of the fabric with a sponge brush. The more paint you
dab, the fewer white areas will remain. Let the fabric sit for 15 minutes or longer. Cut the string and
unfold the fabric. Heat set the paint when dry.
Rubber Banding
Pick up a piece of dampened fabric from the center. Secure rubber bands around two or more sections
about 1-1/2" (3.8 cm) apart. Dab one or both types of paint into the folds with a sponge brush, using
plenty of paint. The transparent paint will bleed between sections and the medium-bodied paint will be
more contained by the rubber band resist. Let the fabric sit for 15 minutes or longer. Cut the rubber
bands and unfold the fabric. Heat set the paint when dry.
Susan Suggests
When you design small pieces such as the ones in this project, make extras and put them in a plastic
bin marked Miscellaneous. Then when you start a new project or collage, you will have assorted
items already prepared. Even things you dont like can be used as backgrounds for stamping, needle
felting, or layering.
Resist-Painted Stripes
Choose a colored piece of fabric for this technique. You may want to do two pieces and choose the one
you like best for the finished project. Cut pieces of masking tape the length of the fabric and tear the
pieces into two long strips with irregular widths. Press the tape onto the fabric. Using Lumiere paint,
brush paint between the tape strips until the exposed fabric is covered. Remove the tape and let the
fabric dry.
Painted Plaid
On dampened white fabric, paint two colors of Dye-na-Flow in parallel lines. While the first colors are
still wet, paint a third color across the first lines to blend the colors, leaving some white space for the
paint to bleed into. Let dry.
Sun Print
Cover a dampened, colored fabric piece (7" [18 cm] square) with dark colored Dye-na-Flow paint. Place
a leaf, paper cutout, rice or pasta, coarse lace, or other mask on top of the painted fabric and press down
so the edges are tight to the surface. Put out in direct sun and let dry. When the fabric is dry, the mask
shapes should be the color of the original fabric and the background should be dark. Trim the square to
5" or 6" (12.5 or 15 cm).
Salt Patterning
Paint the entire surface of dampened white fabric with Dye-na-Flow. It should be quite wet. Throw
coarse salt onto the wet paint and allow it to dry without disturbing it. The salt will pull the paint into
interesting patterns.
Heat set all of the fabric pieces by ironing them from the back for 30 seconds on all areas. Fuse the painted pieces to the
interfacing with Wonder-Under, following the manufacturers directions. With a rotary cutter, ruler, and mat, measure and
cut five pieces of backing fabric the same size and fuse to the back of the interfacing pieces. Trim the pages down to 8"
10" (20.5 25.5 cm). Fuse the sun print to one of the painted pieces. Stitch around the edges of the sun print and all of
the pages using a close zigzag stitch.
Cut a 19" 42" (48.5 106.5 cm) piece of hinge fabric. Fold the hinge right sides together lengthwise and sew around the
raw edges with a 1/4" (6 mm) seam, leaving a 3" (7.5 cm) opening. Trim the corners and turn right side out through the
opening; press. Lay the pages on the hinge so the ends match and there is a tiny space between the pages. Sew down
each side of the pages through all the layers.
lasagna dyeing
This method, also called painting silk layers, makes it fun and exciting to
paint several pieces of silk at the same time.
Youll stack four or five layers of silk pieces and then paint the surface with a free-flowing textile paint.
This very thin paint gives the effect of dyeing without the mess and chemicals. The paint sinks through
the fabric layers and creates a variety of patterns, depending on the absorbency and the position of the
fabric in the stack. The colors blend together and always produce a surprise.
I painted my project pieces with magenta and turquoise and then applied golden yellow. Suddenly,
orange, bright green, and yellow sprang to life.
Wait for all the layers to dry (the hardest part of all!), then peel them apart to reveal the wonderful
results.
Susan Suggests
For the various silk weaves, choose netting, crinkle chiffon, patterned organza, and habotai. Look for
silk fabrics with woven-in designs for extra impact.
Cut four or five pieces of silk to the same size6" to 9" (15.2 to 22.9 cm) squares work well. Set the iron to the
temperature for silk and press to remove all wrinkles. Stack the pieces together. Do not pin them because the pin would
attract the paint, and a little shifting is fine.
Fill two or three nozzle-tipped squeeze bottles, pipettes, or eyedroppers with separate colors of transparent paint, and
create lines or patterns on the top layer of silk. Leave some white space as you work. The paint will flow freely as it dries,
generating its own design.
Note: Avoid using colors opposite each other on the color wheel (red/green, blue/orange, purple/yellow)
because they make muddy colors when mixed.
Peel the silk layers apart when they are dry. Notice how the pattern differs greatly depending on the weave of the silk and
the position of the fabric in the stack. Press the pieces to set the paint.
Cut a piece of cotton fabric the size you want for your finished project. Cover it with a layer of fusible web. Arrange the
silk pieces into a pleasing composition, cover it with a piece of cooking parchment, and fuse. Sew or fuse the ribbon over
the edges.
There is nothing that feels as lovely as silk, but did you know it can be less
expensive than cotton?!
Look for China silk, silk twill, crinkle chiffon, silk with motifs woven into it, organza, and other silks
that have similar weights. Pile up squares of the different pieces and pour on Dye-na-Flow paint. Walk
away for a few hours, and then peel apart the layers to reveal gorgeous colors and patterns. Back the
squares with batting and a print fabric, quilt along the printed motifs, and you have the makings of the
most luxurious throw youve ever seen!
Susan Suggests
If you cant find ribbon to match your painted silks, buy white ribbon and paint it with the same
colors as your fabrics. Remember that paint, unlike dye, can be used on any fiber content, so you can
use polyester or rayon ribbon if you like. Remember to heat set it just like the fabric, using a
temperature appropriate for the fiber.
Collect silks of several different weaves and patterns, keeping in mind that you want it to have a little body (about the
weight of a typical silk scarf) so it will be easy to handle. Cut or tear twelve 22" (56 cm) squares of fabric. You will be
cutting down the size slightly after the quilting is completed. Press all creases out of the silk because the paint will follow
them. Divide the silk pieces into three stacks of four pieces each. Do not pin them.
Using a separate pipette or eyedropper for each color, dribble paint onto the top piece of each stack. Create a grid or other
pattern that covers much of the fabric but leaves some white space, since the paint will flow for some time after you apply
it. The bottom layers will collect a lot of paint, so too much paint will make the colors muddy, but not enough paint will
leave too much white on the top layer. Work quickly so the colors blend. For variety, use a different order or pattern on
each stack. Note that different silks have different absorbency rates, regardless of their thickness.
After the paint is completely dry, carefully pull the layers apart. Heat set the paint by ironing each piece for 3 minutes, or
throw the pieces in the clothes dryer on high for 30 minutes.
Place the fusible batting in the dryer for 5 minutes on delicate to remove the wrinkles and preshrink it. Preshrink the
backing fabrics by ironing them with steam. Use a rotary cutter, ruler, and mat to cut the backing fabrics into twelve 22"
(56 cm) squares and fuse them to the batting using lots of steam. The other side of the batting will stick to your ironing
surface, but it peels off readily. Trim the batting to fit.
Steam-iron the silk pieces to the other side of the batting sandwiches. Sizes may not match exactly, but the squares will be
trimmed after the quilting is completed.
Drop the feed dogs on your machine and put on the darning foot. Quilt around the motifs on the backing fabrics (you dont
have to follow the lines on the print exactly). Remember that the bobbin thread will be what shows on the silk side of your
quilt sandwiches. Make sure the density of the quilting remains fairly consistent from one sandwich to the other. Wearing
quilting gloves helps you move the sandwiches more easily.
After quilting, cut the sandwiches down to 20-1/2" (52 cm) square. Arrange the pieces in four rows of three sandwiches,
balancing the colors and patterns. Sew the pieces of each row together with 1/4" (6 mm) seams, stitching through all the
layers. Sew the seams with the backing sides together so the seam allowances show on the silk side. Press the seam
allowances open, as flat as possible. Sew the rows together, matching seam intersections.
Center the ribbon over the seams on the silk side, covering the seam allowances. Sew close to both edges. The back of the
quilt will have sewn lines parallel to the seams. After all the seam allowances are covered, bind the quilt.
A quick and easy variation: Buy a pre-hemmed silk scarf blank, 12" 60" (30.5 152 cm), and fold it into five 12" (30.5
cm) sections. Paint the top layer, let it stand until dry, unfold, and heat set. A designer scarf for under $5!
rust dyeing
You will never look at junk metal the same way after
trying this process.
Preparation
Protect your work surface with the plastic cover.
Susan Suggests
Be sure to use one of the fabric types listed in the materials list. They have no finishes on them that
would prevent the rust from coloring the fabric.
Lay the fabric on the tray. Spray it with a solution of approximately half vinegar and half water.
Put on rubber gloves and lay metal objects and shredded steel wool on the wet fabric. Use special care when handling
metal that is already rusty. Spray again with vinegar-water.
Place the tray inside the garbage bag and tie up the opening. The fabric needs to stay wet for twenty-four hours in order for
the metal to rust and color the fabric. I weighted down the top of the bag with books to press the steel wool to the fabric.
Put on rubber gloves. Remove the bag and then remove the metal pieces and steel wool from the fabric and store them for
further use. Neutralize the rust by soaking the fabric in the salt-water solution. Wash the fabric in soapy water.
Beauty can come from humble beginnings. Although rust stains are something
we usually avoid, this project promotes them!
The wonderfully rich-colored surface of this silk scarf was created by staining it with rust. After being
trapped inside a plastic bag with wet metal findings and steel wool fibers, a once plain scarf emerged as
a truly unique work of art. Soon you will be searching nooks and crannies and even the street for castoff
metal pieces with interesting shapes.
Susan Suggests
If you use rust-dyed fabric for piecing or appliqu, be aware that the fabric will be harder to stitch
through. Use a microtex/sharp needle.
Place some of the metal objects in the tray. Put on the rubber gloves to protect your hands and shred some steel wool over
the bottom. Fold the scarf to fit into the tray over the metal objects. Spray the scarf with a solution of half vinegar, half
water. It should be quite wet.
Lay more metal objects on the top layer of the scarf. Shred more of the steel wool, sprinkling it over the entire surface.
Spray the metal with the vinegar-water solution.
Place the tray in a garbage bag and close the end. Weight the metal objects down with heavy books so they maintain good
contact with the scarf. Place the tray in a warm place for 24 hours or until you like the amount of rusting (sometimes as
little as 2 hours makes a nice design).
Wearing the gloves, remove the tray from the plastic bag and take off all of the metal objects and steel wool. In a basin,
mix 1/4 cup (60 ml) of salt in 4 gallons (16 l) of hot water. Soak the scarf to neutralize the rust. Wash the scarf in soapy
water, rinse, and dry.
Cut a piece of stovepipe wire several inches longer than the length of the scarf. Fold a piece of sandpaper in half and run
the wire through it to remove the protective coating. Lay the wire down the length of the scarf.
Roll the scarf onto a PVC pipe, curving the wire as you go. Wrap any remaining wire around the scarf to hold it on the
pipe. Scrunch the scarf together sideways to create wrinkles. Spray with vinegar-water again. Place in a garbage bag for 24
hours or until the rusting is complete. Unwrap the scarf from the pipe, neutralize, wash, and dry.
screen printing
With a small assembly of wood and mesh, a few cuts in stickyback plastic, and a handy squeegee, create your personal
style statement in cloth.
Preparation
Protect your work surface with the plastic cover.
Susan Suggests
Use a thick viscosity paint to keep the color from seeping under the edges of your design. If you do
not have a squeegee, try using an old credit card.
Pound the stretcher bars together until the frame is tight. Cut a piece of polyester mesh to approximately the outside
measurements of the frame and staple it to the wood, stretching the mesh as taut as you can. Cover all the wood frame
around the mesh with duct tape, extending the tape onto the exposed mesh about 1/2" (1.3 cm); repeat the taping on the
back of the frame. Scrub the mesh with the toothbrush and scouring powder to open all the holes in the weave completely.
Cut a piece of sticky-back plastic slightly smaller than the outside measurements of the frame. Cut a design in the center
using the craft knife. Keep the area of the design about 1/2" (1.3 cm) smaller than the exposed mesh on all edges. Remove
the protective paper from the plastic, adhere it to the front of the mesh (the side that will be flush against the fabric), and
rub it onto the mesh firmly.
Put a thick pad of newspaper on the table and lay a piece of fabric on it, right side up. Place the frame on top of the fabric,
with the design touching the fabric. Pour about 2 tablespoons (30 ml) of the paint onto the tape along one edge of the
frame. The exact amount of paint you need will depend on the openness of your design. You can use two or three colors if
you like. Apply firm pressure and pull the paint across the mesh with the squeegee. You may need to do two or three
passes. It takes practice to know how much pressure to use, since too much will force paint underneath the edges of the
design opening.
To avoid smearing the paint as you lift the frame, hold the fabric down with one hand and carefully pull the frame straight
up. Touch up any leaks or missed spots with the brush. Continue to print images so you have a selection to choose from
(you will likely have some rejects at the beginning). Let the paint dry. Scrub the screen immediately so the paint does not
clog the mesh. Heat set the paint with an iron after it is completely dry.
screen-printed pillowcase
What child wouldnt love to have a personal pillowcase? Make one from fun
fabric and screen print the childs name on the hem band.
Or make some artful pillowcases for your own bed, possibly matched to the quilt or a painting in the
room. Although some techniques for making the screens are more high-tech, this method of screen
printing is easy to do and the materials are readily available.
Susan Suggests
Tuck a piece of lace or folded strip of fabric into the seam when you topstitch the band of the
pillowcase for a special accent.
Preshrink the fabrics and iron them smooth. Using a rotary cutter, ruler, and mat, measure and cut the main fabric to 27"
40" (68.5 101.5 cm). Cut the hem band 9" 40" (23 101.5 cm). Press the hem band in half in both directions, wrong
sides together, to mark the position for printing.
Cover all the wood of the printing screen frame with duct tape, extending the tape onto the exposed mesh about 1/2" (1.3
cm); repeat the taping on the other side of the frame. Scrub the mesh with cleanser and a toothbrush to open all the holes
in the weave completely. Rinse and dry thoroughly.
Draw your design or stencil your lettering on the protective paper side of the shelf liner. Make sure your design will fit
into a 3-1/2" 8" (9 20.5 cm) space. Use the craft knife to cut out the design. If you want to include a name plus another
motif in a different color, cut two stencils and use two screens.
Pull off the protective paper from the shelf liner and press the sticky side to the back of the screen (the side that will lie flat
on the fabric). Your lettering should read correctly when the screen is laid on the fabric.
Place a pad of newspaper on your plastic-covered table. Turn the screen so the stencil is flat against the paper. Pour one or
two colors of paint onto one end of the screen and squeegee it across the screen so the design in the stencil is printed
clearly onto the paper. It might take a little practice to determine how much pressure is needed: too little will not put
enough paint on the paper and too much will push paint under the openings in the stencil.
Place the hem band on an old towel, making sure the design is centered on the correct quarter section of the hem band, and
screen print the design onto the fabric.
Carefully pull the screen straight up and off of the fabric. Touch up any missed spots with a small paintbrush. If you are
only making the one print, remove the shelf liner from the screen immediately and wash the screen with a brush to remove
all traces of paint. Let the painted fabric dry thoroughly. If you are using two screens, add the additional motifs, let dry
again, and then iron the fabric for 30 seconds with a hot iron to set the paint.
Sew the hem band to the main fabric, with the right side of the hem band against the wrong side of the main fabric. Sew
with a 1/2" (1.3 cm) seam allowance. Press the seam toward the hem band. Press under 1/2" (1.3 cm) on the other edge of
the hem band, fold it over to the front to make a band, and topstitch it over the previous seam.
The craft of marbling paper originated in China more than 2,000 years ago.
Marbled paper became popular in seventeenth-century Europe as a decorative finish on book covers.
Paper marbling required working with a vat of a thick seaweed medium on which paint was suspended.
The paint was combed to make patterns and then carefully picked up by placing a piece of paper over it.
As you can imagine, there are lots of ways the process can go wrong. Here you will use foamy shaving
cream for a suspension medium and drop thin paint onto the surface. Instead of paper, you will use
fabric to create a unique cloth for your next project.
Susan Suggests
You can also comb your marbling design in a curve or a series of curves for variety.
Spread enough shaving cream on the plastic surface, 1" (2.5 cm) deep, to match the size of your fabric. Smooth the top
with the rulerthe top does not need to be level, just smooth.
Dribble straight lines of transparent paint onto the surface of the foam with a pipette or eyedropper. Use as many colors as
you like.
Starting at one side, comb across the lines of paint, moving from the top edge to the bottom. Wipe any shaving cream off
the comb. Place the comb next to the already combed area and comb from the bottom to top. Keep reversing direction as
you create your design.
Drape a piece of fabric face down onto the surface of the foam. Press it very gently into the foam so the paint adheres to
the fabric. Carefully lift the fabric off the foam and scrape the excess foam from the fabric using the ruler. Comb through
the paint left on the foam and make more prints until the foam is used up, adding more paint as needed. Let the paint dry
and then iron to set. Rinse and dry the fabric pieces to remove the shaving cream.
It is just as much fun to take the color out of fabric as to put it in!
Simple techniques for applying bleach to black or dark-colored fabric give you dramatic results. Be sure
your fabrics are cotton or rayon, as bleach will dissolve silk. Doing a few swatches on various black
fabrics before you start will determine what colors you will get. Different fabrics give surprisingly
different shades of brown, tan, red, and green. You will need to work in a well-ventilated area, label
your bottles and buckets, neutralize the bleach in the discharged fabrics, and wear rubber gloves when
using liquid bleach. Do not use bleach if you have breathing problems or are pregnant.
Susan Suggests
When deciding when to neutralize your bleached pieces, remember that colors look darker on wet
fabrics.
Doodle Bleaching
Iron freezer paper, shiny side down, to the back of the fabric. This will stabilize it while you draw
designs with a bleach pen. You can use a stencil, write words, or make abstract lines. Make sure you
keep consistent pressure on the pen to avoid getting exploding bubbles in the stream of gel. Let the
gel work until you like the color. Remove the freezer paper, don the rubber gloves, and submerge the
fabric in the bucket of neutralizing solution to stop the bleaching action.
Gel Stamping
Pour dishwasher gel onto your palette and smooth it out with the brayer or wooden stick. Dab a foam or
rubber stamp into the gel, then stamp the fabric. Let the gel work until you like the color, then don the
rubber gloves and submerge the fabric in the bucket of neutralizing solution to stop the bleaching
action.
Finishing
After the bleach is neutralized, wash the fabric in warm, soapy water and rinse.
A fun technique to try is discharging dye, which removes color rather than
adding it.
It can be done with a variety of products using many different applications of the chemicals. Be sure to
work in a well-ventilated area or outside. It is common to work with black fabric, but other colors also
work well. Batiks, with their multiple layers of dye, produce wonderful results. For this project, you will
apply a paste that can be used on all fibers, unlike bleach, and can be used with fewer precautions than
chlorine. The color is removed with an iron through an almost magical process.
Susan Suggests
If you want more precise edges in your stenciling, spray stencil adhesive on the back of the stencil
and let it dry. The tackiness of the adhesive will help hold the stencil in place on the fabric.
Alternatively, make your stencil from freezer paper and iron it onto the fabric temporarily.
Test several different fabrics to determine which discharges the best, what colors emerge, and what matches your dcor.
Lay out swatches of each fabric, brush on discharge paste, and let dry. You wont see any change in color as it dries. Iron
the fabric and watch as the color mysteriously disappears. You may rinse the fabric if you wish, but it is not necessary.
With a rotary cutter, ruler, and mat, measure and cut a 12-1/2" (32 cm) square piece of the batik fabric to be discharged.
You may want to discharge two squares so you can choose the best one. Make sure the fabric is pressed smooth. Cut the
main pillow fabric into two 2-1/2" 12-1/2" (6.5 32 cm) strips, two 2-1/2" 16-1/2" (6.5 42 cm) strips, and two 12"
16-1/2" (30.5 42 cm) back panels.
Make sure the room is well ventilated. Place the stencil in the center of the batik piece and brush discharge paste through
the openings. Wash the paste out of the brush and off the stencil and let the fabric dry.
After the paste is completely dry, place the batik piece on an ironing board and iron it until all the areas have changed
color, moving the iron around so you dont get impressions of the steam holes.
Place the batting and backing piece behind the batik fabric and, with a sewing machine, quilt around the stenciled motif to
add dimension and strengthen the batik. This will also make the weight of the panel more comparable to the weight of the
main pillow fabric.
Sew the two 2-1/2" 12-1/2" (6.5 32 cm) strips of the main pillow fabric to the top and bottom edges of the batik panel
with a 1/4" (6 mm) seam allowance. Press the seams away from the center. Sew the two 2-1/2" 16-1/2" (6.5 42 cm)
strips of pillow fabric to the sides of the batik panel. Press the seams away from the center.
Turn under one long edge of a back panel piece 1/4" (6 mm) and press. Turn under again 1" (2.5 cm), press, and stitch.
Hem one long edge of the other panel in the same way. Place the pillow top right side up on the table and place the two
backing pieces, right sides down and overlapped, onto the pillow top, so the raw edges match. Mark the corners of the
backing pieces so they are rounded. Pin the edges and sew a 1/2" (1.3 cm) seam all the way around. Trim the corners. Turn
the pillow right side out and insert the pillow form.
More Ideas
Apply the discharge paste to a foam stamp and stamp it onto the fabric. Or simply brush the discharge
paste onto the fabric using a foam brush. Use masking tape to make a resist of straight lines. Use the
discharged fabric for simple potholders or a pocket for a tote.
Susan Suggests
Try printing black-and-white clip art on a fabric sheet and tinting the art with fabric paints before
fusing organza over it.
Finishing
Cut a piece of fusible web to the size of your fabric sheets. Place the web over the cotton sheet and then
place the organza sheet on top. Cover with parchment or a press sheet and fuse the three layers together
using an iron.
Make a fun mail sorter for the front hall or kitchen, so each member of the
family has a personal pocket.
Photo-transfer sheetspaper-backed fabric coated to make inkjet printing permanentgo right into the
computer printer or copy machine. Use any printed or digital photo you have to make the centerpiece
for each crazy-pieced block. Then assemble them into a wall hanging. Make one for your own family
and everyone on your gift list.
With a rotary cutter, ruler, and mat, measure and cut a foundation for the pocket section from the main fabric 9-1/2" 631/2" (24 161 cm).
Note: Cut the main fabric on the lengthwise grain. Cut two border pieces 2-1/2" 63-1/2" (6.4 161
cm). For the back, cut one piece of the main fabric 13-1/2" 63-1/2" (34.3 161 cm). Cut one 9-1/2"
(24 cm) square of lining fabric for each member of the family. Cut the piecing fabrics into 2" (5 cm)wide strips as you need them. Cut the binding fabric into four 2" (5 cm)-wide strips.
Double-stick tape your photos to sheets of copy paper with space between the pictures. Place the sheets on the copier.
Place the photo-transfer fabric, one sheet at a time, in the paper feed of the copier so the photos will print onto the fabric
side. Print a sheet of fabric for each page of photos. Let dry. Follow the package directions if washing is needed.
Remove the paper backing from the fabric sheets and cut them apart so you have white space around each photo. Sew one
strip of fabric to the side of one photo, right sides together, using a 1/4" (6 mm) seam and angling the strip. Press the strip
away from the photo. Trim off the excess strip with scissors.
Continue to add strips at an angle to the photo, pressing the strips away from the photo, and trimming off the end of each
strip as you go around the photo. Add strips until the block is more than 9-1/2" (24 cm) square. Trim it to an exact 9-1/2"
(24 cm). Repeat for all the photos.
Place a lining square, right sides together, with each pieced square and sew across the top and bottom edges with a 1/4" (6
mm) seam allowance. Turn right side out and press the seams to one side, and then turn the lining to the back and press
flat.
Steam-fuse the backing to one side of the batting and steam-fuse the center panel of main fabric to the middle of the
batting on the other side.
Lay the top pocket on the fabric 2-1/4" (5.5 cm) from the top edge of the center panel. Pin through all the layers. Continue
to pin the pockets to the hanging 1" (2.5 cm) apart until you reach the bottom. There should be 2-1/4" (5.5 cm) left at the
bottom. Topstitch across the bottoms of the pockets through all the layers.
Pin the border strips right sides together over the raw edges of the center piece and pockets. Sew through all the layers
with a 1/4" (6 mm) seam. Press the borders away from the pockets onto the batting. Bind the edges, add a casing on the
back, insert the hanging stick, and hang.
Susan Suggests
If you want to add names to each pocket, use semitransparent ExtravOrganza photo transfer fabric to
make labels on your computer. Back the organza with Mistyfuse fusible web, and iron onto the
pockets.
Susan Suggests
If you want a darker laser-printed image, go to a copy shop and ask them to make a copy or printout
using extra toner.
Susan Suggests
Embellishments you might consider: fabric foil, piping around the transfer piece, beading, collage,
rubber-stamping, or Paintstiks. Fusible batting makes it easy to quilt the outside cover without adding
another piece of fabric on the back.
Look for an image that will fit nicely on the size book you wish to cover. Dover books are excellent sources for copyrightfree images and can be found at any bookstore. To start, choose a small to medium-size design so you can practice
transferring all the lines to the fabric before the gel medium dries out. You can place several small images on one
transparency and cut them apart if you like. Make the inkjet copy or printout on the rough side of the inkjet transparency
sheet.
Tape the background fabric to the plastic-covered work surface. With a brush, spread gel medium onto your background
fabric quickly and evenly, brushing in both directions. Make sure the area covered is larger than your image. The fabric
should be wet but not overly so, or the transparency will slip and the image will smear. Run your finger over the fabric to
check for places that are not covered.
Place the transparency facedown on top of the wet gel medium and burnish the image onto the fabric with a bone folder or
your fingernail. Use circular motions and be sure to cover every area, working quickly while the medium is still wet.
Check to see the results by carefully lifting a corner. You wont get a perfect transfer, but that is the beauty of this method.
Remove the transparency sheet, which should have very little ink left on it, and let the medium dry completely. Turn the
dry transfer right side down on a press cloth and iron from the back to flatten it.
Measure the binder or other book when it is opened up and laid flat. Add 1" (2.5 cm) to the width and length for ease and
seams. Decide how big to make your transfer piece and trim it to that size, adding 1/4" (6 mm) seam allowances on all
sides. Cut pieces of the outside cover fabric to border the transfer so it will be centered on the front of the cover and go
around the back cover, adding extra to the size of the border pieces for seams and optional quilting.
Tip: Make a rough sketch of the pieces to cut so you can check your measurements.
Sew the outside cover pieces to the four sides of the transfer piece with 1/4" (6 mm) seams, pressing the seam allowances
away from the transfer. Add any embellishments at this point. You may wish to add batting and quilt the outer cover. Trim
it to the size determined in step 4.
Cut a lining piece the same size as the outside cover and two lining pieces the height of the cover by 4" (10 cm) wide. Sew
under 1/4" (6 mm) on one long side of the two lining pieces. Lay the two strips right side up on the right side of the lining,
with the hemmed edges toward the center.
Lay the outer cover right side down over the lining and strips. Pin. Sew a 1/4" (6 mm) seam around the edges, leaving a 3"
(7.5 cm) opening in the stitching on the bottom edge of the back section. Press under the seam allowances of the opening
and clip the corners.
Turn the cover right side out through the opening and stitch or fuse the opening closed. Press the book cover, lay it flat,
and insert the binder or sketchbook into the flaps.
Susan Suggests
Hand-wash foiled fabrics; do not dry-clean.
Shaped Foil
Cut a shape out of the fusible web. Iron the shape onto the fabric and remove the release paper. Place a
foil sheet over the web, color side up, and burnish with the edge of the iron three or four times.
Note: Protect any previously applied foil from direct contact with the iron with parchment paper.
Dimensional Foiling
Place a foil sheet, dull side up, on a heat-resistant ironing board. Heat a glue gun and then draw a shape
with the glue on the foil sheet. Allow the glue to cool completely and then peel it off the foil. To attach
the shape to fabric, place it glue side up on the ironing board. Place the fabric, wrong side up, over the
shape and lightly press until the shape adheres to the fabric.
fabric beads
Fabric beads make a fabulous closure on a garment, but think of using them in a
necklace or on a wall hanging!
Place them in a pictorial piece as sculptural elements, as flower stems, as the parts of a chair, or as fence
rails.
Discover how to create your own beads out of fabric that coordinates with your projectswithout an
expensive trip to the bead store.
Craft your beads in different shapes, decorate them with threads and trim or even other beads, foil them
to add shine, and make them from fabrics that ravel in an interesting way. They are so quick and easy to
create, youll want to make lots.
Using the following method, youll make sturdy beads that wont flatten out. If they will receive extra
hard wear, coat them with polyurethane to seal them.
Sew finished beads to your background fabric or glue them down with permanent fabric adhesive.
Susan Suggests
Add further interest by wrapping a colored wire around your beads, or go for extra glitz by threading
seed beads onto a wire and then wrapping the bead.
Cylinder Beads
Iron fusible web onto the back of fabric. Cut the fabric into strips that are the width of the bead you
want, usually 1" to 1-1/2" (2.5 to 3.8 cm) wide by 8" to 10" (20.3 to 25.4 cm) long. Remove the release
paper from the fusible web and roll the fabric strip onto a bamboo skewer. Roll the skewered bead on an
iron set to the proper temperature for the fabric, to fuse the fabric layers together. Dont roll too long, or
you may fuse the bead onto the skewer permanently.
Tapered Beads
This technique works especially well with batik fabric or other hand-dyed fabrics that have scattered
colors. Iron fusible web onto the back of fabric. Cut the fabric into strips as in Cylinder Beads. Cut
one end of each strip into a long, centered point. Remove the release paper from the fusible web and roll
a strip onto the skewer, starting at the wide end. Melt the fabric layers together on the hot iron.
Decorative Touches
Decorate your beads with eyelet trim, thin yarn, narrow silk ribbon, or metallic thread. Lay the trim
across one side of the bead. Wind it up the bead and back to the start of the trim. Tie the two ends
together in a knot and let the tails dangle. Brush foil adhesive onto a bead and apply foil after it dries.
(See Direct to Fabric Foil Stamping on page 18 for a description of this technique.)
Frayed Beads
To create a dupioni silk tapered bead, apply permanent fabric adhesive only to the pointed tip of the
fabric, on the back side. This will secure the rolled layers, and the unglued edges will create an
attractively raveled, soft bead. Think of all the possible variations!
Cant afford diamonds? Make a necklace every bit as exciting out of fabric you
probably have in your stash.
Now you can have matching accessories for every outfit in your closet. There are all sorts of ways to
embellish your beads and no end to the colors and styles you can make. Remember that you can also
use fabric beads for garment closures, purse latches, tassels on scarves, three-dimensional elements on
collages, and any number of other uses.
Using a rotary cutter, ruler, and mat, measure and cut the fabrics into four 10" 17" (25 43 cm) pieces. Fuse WonderUnder fusible web to the back of each piece, using a dry iron.
Cut 33 strips 1-1/2" (3.8 cm) wide and 10" (25 cm) long. Cut the strips into long triangles, centering the point at one end
and angling to the corners of the opposite end. Remove the fusible web release paper from the back of the strips.
Lay a strip, fusible side up, on the work surface. Starting at the wide end, roll the strip on a bamboo skewer, ending with
the narrow point. Hold the bead against a hot iron and roll it to melt the fusible web, making sure you catch the point
securely. Heat the bead until it is firm, but do not melt the bead to the skewer. When cool, slide the bead off the skewer.
Repeat step 3 for all the fabric strips. Cut three lengths of cord to 24" (61 cm), 28" (71 cm), and 32" (81 cm). String nine
beads on the short cord, eleven beads on the middle cord, and thirteen beads on the long cord. Tie all of the ends together
in a square knot; the strands will fall in a cascade.
Foil
If you want to add a little glitz, leave the bead on the skewer and apply dabs of foil adhesive to the
surface of the bead with a cotton swab. Stick the point of the skewer into something and allow the
adhesive to dry. Then, place a piece of fabric foil over the dry adhesive, color side up, and use the iron
to burnish the foil onto the bead. Turn the bead and reposition the foil until all of the adhesive is
covered. Glitter and glitter glue also work well.
Embellish
Add interest and texture to your beads by winding them with yarns and trims. You may want to add a
tiny bead of glue to the knot if the trim is slippery. Or wrap a piece of wire around the bead and add
small glass beads to the wire ends.
Silk
Use dupioni silk to make lustrous, fringy beads for a dressy outfit. Do not back the fabric with fusible
web because you want the edges to ravel. Simply cut the silk into long triangles, roll onto the skewer,
and secure the points with fabric glue.
Mixed Media
Combine your fabric beads with felt or wooden beads, charms, or ribbons. Make the strips longer or
wider for larger beads.
Susan Suggests
You could also string your beads onto yarn, fishing line, fine silver chain, or ball chain. If you choose
to use 1/8" (3 mm) satin cord for stringing, make your beads using a chopstick or dowel rather than a
skewer so the hole in the bead will accommodate the larger diameter cord.
silk fusion
Silk fusion, also called silk paper, consists of silk fiber that has not been spun
into yarn or thread.
A textile medium, used as a soft adhesive, holds the fibers together. You may want to experiment with
different mediums depending on the degree of stiffness you want for your final fabric.
Bombyx silk, from silkworms that eat mulberry leaves, is light, almost white in color, and quite smooth.
The silkworms that produce tussah silk eat oak leaves and their silk is gold-colored (although its often
bleached) and coarser than bombyx. Either works well for silk fusion.
Add a variety of decorative elements to your fusion, or cut up the sheet and include the pieces in wool
felting for a beautiful, tactile play of texture on texture. Of course, beading or other embellishments on
the finished silk fusion add a fun touch and are easy to attach to the firm surface.
Use your silk fusion for wall hangings, containers such as boxes and bowls, book covers, and clothing.
Susan Suggests
Create thickness through additional layers. After completing a few projects, you will be able to judge
how thick you want your silk fusion for its final use.
Lay out a piece of tulle or netting on your work surface. Pull small amounts of silk fiber from the hank of roving and lay
them parallel to each other on half of the tulle in a thin and even layer.
Note: For the nicest look, never cut the silk roving. Hold your hands about 8" (20.3 cm) apart on the
hank of roving and pull it apart.
Lay additional fibers crosswise on top of the first layer. Lay a third layer of fibers in the direction of the first layer. Check
for thin spots in the layers and fill in, if necessary.
Lay silk or skeleton leaves, ribbons, or other decorative elements on top of the third layer of fibers. Cover them with wisps
of fibers to hold them in place. Fold the other half of the tulle over the top of the layered silk fibers and embellishments.
Dissolve about 1/2 teaspoon (2.5 ml) of shampoo into 2 cups (0.5 l) of water. Brush the solution on the tulle until all layers
are thoroughly saturated. Blot out as much water as possible with paper towels. Coat both sides of the tulle with fullstrength textile medium. Let the fusion dry on a screen or piece of plastic mesh and then peel it off the tulle.
Silk comes in wondrous forms, and now many of them are readily available to
quilters and fabric artists.
No other fabric feels like silk or slurps color like silk.
Cocoons are the source of silk filament, and a dried worm is inside each one. Silk carrier rods are a byproduct of the silk-making process and can be peeled into thin layers. Hankies are gossamer-thin layers
of silk fiber that can be further peeled apart.
Use the cocoons, carrier rods, and hankies to make necklaces, tassels, and embellishments on wall
hangings or for other creative projects.
Susan Suggests
Make a silk cocoon tassel! Cut off the end of two silk cocoons and remove the worms. Paint the
cocoons two different colors. Let dry.
Snip the end of one cocoon into sharp points and slip it over the second cocoon. With thread and a
sharp chenille or darning needle, poke into the cocoon on one side of the closed end and come out on
the opposite side. Pull the thread through. Cut the thread and tie the ends together.
Decorate the cocoons with glitter, seed beads, or fancy threads. Slip a fancy yarn or part of a painted
silk hankie into the open end of the tassel, if desired, and glue in place.
Go Creative
Set your iron on silk and use steam to press the silk rods flat. The rods can be woven, used as stems for
cocoon flowers, rolled and stuffed into cocoon openings, or used as they are.
The cocoons can be cut to form flower petals, made into beads, decorated and made into tassels, or cut
in half and attached to a silk hankie with permanent fabric adhesive.
Use the hankies as backgrounds or stuff small bits of hankie into the ends of the cocoons for tassel
embellishments.
gossamer silk
Gossamer silk, unlike the stiffer silk fusion, remains soft and more like a fabric.
It can be used for scarves, vests, wall hangings, or fluttery window coverings. Gossamer silk is fairly
sturdy because the sewing holds it together. It can be embellished either during the layering and sewing
process or after the stabilizer is removed. Yarn, trim, or shapes cut from China silk, Angelina, or Mylar
are just a few of the embellishments you can include as you lay out the fibersjust make sure your
additions can withstand a bath in warm water. A bit of patience is needed when spreading out the silk
and for stitching, but the results will get rave reviews.
Susan Suggests
Try free-motion sewing for an organic look, making sure your stitching lines cross over each other to
create a net of stitches. Be sure to start stitching in the center of your composition.
Lay out a piece of water-soluble stabilizer slightly larger than the size of the project you have planned. Pull apart (do not
cut) the silk top, holding your hands about 8" (20.3 cm) apart on the hank and pulling.
Carefully lay out thin strands of the silk fiber on the stabilizer, making sure there are no thick clumps and that the
stabilizer is covered completely. Place embellishments on top of the fibers. Add more silk, if you like, or leave the
additions to be caught by the stitching.
Cover the silk fiber with another piece of stabilizer and pin through all of the layers to hold the fibers and embellishments
in place. Using a walking foot if you have one and cotton thread that matches the silk fiber, stitch through the layers in a
1/2" (1.3 cm) grid, starting with the horizontal and vertical lines in the middle (which will help hold everything in place
while you do the rest of the stitching). Stitch the entire piece. It is not necessary to sew the stitching lines perfectly
straight.
Soak the stitched piece in warm water for 5 to 10 minutes to dissolve the stabilizer. If you still feel stabilizer on the wet
fabric or if the fabric is stiff after it dries, rinse it again. Spread the fabric out on paper towels or a terry towel, reshaping it
to its original size. Let dry.
Use a variation of the gossamer silk technique to decorate your home with a
colorful and unique accessory.
Sewing the fibers to a piece of heat-resistant template plastic and adding other embellishments gives
you a translucent cover for a candle. The light can be seen through the needle holes and the thin spots in
the fiber. Make one version with lace and ribbon, another with a painted motif under the fibers, and a
third with beaded trim along the top edge.
Susan Suggests
Place the votive candle in its holder on a heatproof coaster to protect your table and light your candle
cover all the way to the top.
Pull lengths of fiber from the silk skein about 11" (28 cm) long by holding your hands that far apart and pulling gently.
Separate the fibers into thin wisps and lay them parallel over the surface of a piece of template plastic, keeping the layer
thin so light will show through.
Lay lace, ribbons, silk leaves or flowers, or other trims onto the surface of the fibers. You can add a few more wisps of
fiber if you like. Make sure all embellishments are colorfast in water, because you will be rinsing the candle cover to
remove the stabilizer.
With scissors, cut a piece of Super Solvy slightly larger than the template plastic and lay it over the fibers, pressing out the
air between the layers. Using the large sewing machine needle and decorative thread, sew along the shorter edges of the
plastic to secure the Solvy and fiber ends.
Note: The fibers and embellishments will shift slightly as you work. Use a longer stitch length to
prevent the plastic from tearing between stitches. Use sturdy cotton thread to add interest and withstand
the heat of the candle.
Use a straight stitch to make a 1/2" (1.3 cm) grid of stitching or meander-stitch with a darning foot all over the surface of
the fiber sandwich, catching all trims and fibers in the stitching. Trim the excess fiber and stabilizer from the edges.
Soak the fiber sandwich in warm water for 10 minutes, then drain the water and run water over the piece to remove all
traces of the stabilizer, which will feel slippery if present. Blot with towels and allow to dry.
If you are using a beaded trim on the top edge, sew it on after the fibers are dry. Use a zipper foot so you can sew close to
the beaded edge. Allow for a 1/2" (1.3 cm) overlap on one edge.
Overlap the edges of the template plastic 1/2" (1.3 cm) and glue in place. Place rubber bands around the middle and
clamps at the ends of the candle cover while it dries to keep the overlap even and in contact with the underside edge.
Remove the clamps and bands and place the finished cover over a votive candle.
For another look, rubber stamp a motif onto the template plastic using Jacquard Neopaque paint. With a sponge brush, dab
paint onto the rubber stamp and stamp onto the plastic sheet. Let the paint dry thoroughly, iron the plastic from the back
with a medium-hot iron to set the paint, and then layer the fibers over the painted motif as described in steps 1 to 5. Finish
as in step 7.
burned-edge appliqu
Painting the silk, cutting rough shapes, and then burning the edges is a fun way
to create artistic appliqus.
The singed, gray edges add a sophisticated verve to the fabrics colors. Appliqu by hand or with a
sewing machine. If you stitch through the batting and backing fabric at the same time, you will
complete the quilting process too! Be sure to use tweezers to hold the silk in the flame if you are doing
small pieces. Have a container of water nearby in case the silk starts to burn too quickly.
Yvonne Porcella, in her book Colors Changing Hue, first introduced me to this method for sealing the
edges of silk shapes so they could be appliqud without turning under seam allowances.
Susan Suggests
You can use any natural-colored silk that has body. Perfect choices are China silk or silk twill of 8 to
12 mummie. (Mummie is the measure of weight for silk.)
Cut several pieces of silk about 11" (27.9 cm) square and place them flat on the plastic-covered table. Spray the silk with
water. Paint each piece a different color using a separate brush for each color. Spray with water again to make the paint run
and puddle. Sprinkle coarse salt on the surface of the wet silk, and then let the fabric dry slowly. Remove the salt crystals
and iron the silk to heat set the paint.
Prepare the appliqus and background pieces by cutting the painted silk into rough shapes slightly larger than you want the
finished pieces to be. Dont worry about exact outlines because you will be burning the edges to get the final shape.
Light the candle. Using the tweezers, hold the edge of a cut silk piece horizontally in the side of the candle flame. Avoid
holding the silk at the top of the flame, which will produce soot and ruin the colors. Let the silk burn just long enough to
shape the piece. Rotate the piece until all the edges have been burned. The silk should stop burning as soon as you remove
it from the flame, but if it continues, blow gently on it or dunk it in a container of water and try again after it dries. Keep
the silk from touching the wax. Pull any crunchy bits off the edges, but avoid smearing soot onto the silk.
Place the backing fabric wrong side up and cover it with the batting. Position and then pin the background pieces of silk
on the batting. Sew 1/8" (3 mm) from the edges of each silk piece through all the layers. Adhere the appliqu pieces to the
background with the glue stick and topstitch around the edges. Cut the page to 8-1/2" 11" (21.6 27.9 cm) after
stitching and finish the edges as you like.
Make a pretty accessory for your table or sideboard with painted silk and
burned-edge appliqu.
Dye-na-Flow paint makes it easy to add vibrant color without the complexity of dyeing, and it keeps the
soft hand of the fabric. Since you are painting blobs on a large piece of fabric and then tearing it into
strips, all of the colors blend. The blackened edges lend a nice contrast to the brightness of the silk. This
technique could also be used for a lovely vest.
Susan Suggests
Remember that any folds or wrinkles in the plastic under the silk will also make patterns in the paint.
When you tear the silk into strips, you can eliminate any portions that you wish.
Tear the silk into one 1/2-yd. (0.5 m) and one 1/4-yd. (0.25 m) piece. Lay the larger piece on the plastic-covered work
surface and spray it with water. Brush on Dye-na-Flow paint with a sponge brush straight from the jar, or dilute the paint
for a lighter look. Paint irregular areas of color rather than a pattern. To make the colors blend, make sure the silk is quite
wetspray it again after painting if you wish. Use colors that mix well, such as blue and yellow, red and blue, or red and
yellow, or the three printers primaries (magenta, turquoise, and yellow), as in the sample.
Sprinkle silk salt over the surface of the painted silk and allow it to dry undisturbed. Walk away and do something else
because the process takes about 45 minutes to work. When you return, you will be amazed at how the salt has attracted the
paint, making streaks and circles. Allow it to dry completely. Brush off the salt.
Tear the smaller silk piece into four 9" 11" (23 28 cm) pieces. Lay out the pieces on the plastic and spray them with
water. Paint two of them in shades of green for leaves; paint the other two in flower colors that contrast with your
background piece. Allow them to dry. Iron all of the silk pieces for 30 seconds on each area to set the paint. Wash and dry
the large piece to remove the salt residue and iron smooth.
Draw a done-shaped pattern 14" (35.5 cm) wide and 11" (28 cm) tall. Use it to cut two pieces of batting. Tear the large
piece of silk into strips about 2" (5 cm) wide. Place two silk strips right sides together in the middle of one batting piece
and sew along one edge through all the layers with a 1/4" (6 mm) seam allowance, using the cozy thread and a walking
foot. Finger press the top strip over onto the batting and pin.
Continue to sew new strips, right sides together with the previously sewn strips, until half the batting is covered. Then
cover the other half in the same manner. Sew the strips at an angle if you wish so the widths are irregular. Repeat for the
other piece of batting. Trim the fabric even with the batting. Sew around each piece 1/8" (3 mm) from the edges to
stabilize them and prevent them from raveling.
Cut the small pieces of silk into very rough flower petal and leaf shapes. Place a candle firmly in a holder and set it next to
a container of water. With the tweezers or forceps, hold each petal and leaf in the side of the candle flame to singe and seal
the edges. Avoid the top of the flame because it will put soot on the silk. Gently blow out any flames that are burning too
far into the pieces.
Note: Douse the silk in the water if the flame gets out of control.
When cool, pull off any hard charred bits of silk.
Arrange the silk petals and leaves on the tea cozy halves and pin them in place. Topstitch close to the edges, using a
darning foot and invisible thread. Place the two completed halves right sides together and sew the curved edges together
with a 1/4" (6 mm) seam. Turn right side out.
Cut two lining pieces according to the pattern and sew right sides together along the curved edges, leaving a 3" (7.5 cm)
opening in the middle of the curve. Slip the lining over the silk piece, right sides together, and sew all around the straight
bottom edge. Turn the tea cozy right side out through the opening in the lining, and sew the opening closed. Tuck the
lining up into the inside of the tea cozy. Topstitch the bottom edge, if desired.
distressed felt
For those who are really adventurous, there are techniques in which you apply
heat to fabrics to burn, melt, or distort them.
Soldering irons, changeable-tip heat tools, heat guns, regular irons, and hair dryers all are being used to
alter fabric. Cotton or silk fabric that is applied to a synthetic fabric creates areas of resistance to the
heat. You can also build up heavy concentrations of thread. On this project, synthetic felt was used with
cotton appliqus and thread, and then a heat gun was used to melt and distress the felt creating holes and
discolorations as well as shrinkage in the overall piece. Remember to do this outside or with proper
ventilation, as the process will create fumes.
Holey moly! Heat and felt and fanciful fabric turn into a
lacy decorative accent when put together in a few easy
stages.
Iron fusible web to the back of the printed fabric, following the manufacturers instructions. Cut out two or three motifs,
leaving a generous 1/8" (3 mm) around the edge of each design.
Peel off the paper backing from the cutouts and fuse the motifs to synthetic felt. Do not worry if the felt starts to shrink
from the heat of the iron.
Satin stitch around the printed motifs with matching cotton thread. Set the machine for free motion stitching, drop the feed
dogs, and change to decorative cotton thread. Stitch all over the background, using either a standard stippling design,
triangular stippling like the sample, or loops. The stitching will hold the piece together when you melt the felt away.
Turn the piece over and heat over the entire piece with a heat gun held about 2" (5.1 cm) above the surface. The felt will
start to shrink and discolor slightly. Keep heating the felt until holes start to appear. Turn the piece right side up and heat
some more, trying to get holes and discoloration evenly spaced around the surface. You decide when the piece is finished
some people have hardly any felt left when they are done!
Susan Suggests
If you want significant changes in the character of your textile, use synthetic fabrics. Natural fibers
tend to create ash when burned instead of melting or distorting.
Fabric artists have adapted fusible webwhich once simply hid between layers
of fabricinto an art element.
This fine web of fusible adhesive can be painted and then used as an overlay, a background, or an
appliqu.
Using a thin fabric paint to add color to the web while it remains on its paper backing causes the paper
to crinkle, which adds pattern to the web. The decorative web can then be fused onto a piece of printed
or solid-color fabric.
This technique is perfect for people who like serendipity in the final product because the web often
releases from the paper backing unevenly.
Susan Suggests
Once the painted web is ironed to the fabric, you can further embellish it with foil, ribbons, or other
fibers because it still has adhesive properties.
Lay a piece of fusible web on the table, web side up. Cover the web with transparent paint, working quickly. Apply as
many colors as you like, using a separate brush for each color. You may add water to the paint if you want a diffused
effect. The paper backing will crinkle when it gets wet enough, so do not rework an area or you will flatten out the texture.
Let the paint dry or speed up the process with a hair dryer.
Cut a piece of completely dry, painted fusible web to your chosen size. Place it web side down on the front of your
background fabric, and iron over the paper backing for a few seconds. Make sure the edges are secure. Let cool and then
peel the paper backing off of the web. Some areas of the web may stay on the paper backing, but that is part of the fun of
this technique. Cover the fabric with parchment and press the web thoroughly into the fabric.
Cut a motif from the appliqu fabric. Place it on the background fabric. Protect all exposed web with parchment and press
the appliqu thoroughly until it is secure.
Note: If an area under the appliqu lacks fusible web, sprinkle a little bonding agent on the fabric before
heat setting.
Cut a second piece of painted web (perhaps a piece that reflects a color from the appliqu) and iron it over the motif, being
careful to protect any exposed web with parchment. Cover the motif completely or partially, as you prefer. Peel off the
paper backing, cover with parchment, and press the web thoroughly into the fabric.
With a rotary cutter, ruler, and mat, measure and cut a piece of Mistyfuse 7" (18 cm) wide. Place it in a large plastic
sealable bag and add about 1/2 teaspoon of Pearl Ex powder. You may use more than one color, but they will blend rather
than give two distinct colors when applied to the web. Close the bag and shake to distribute the pigment powder fairly
evenly onto the web.
Cut a piece of fabric the same size as the painted Mistyfuse. Place the web over the fabric and cover with cooking
parchment. Use a dry iron to press the web onto the fabric. Make sure the web is securely attached to the fabric so that the
foil in the next step does not pull it off.
Place a piece of fabric foil, color side up, over the painted web. With the edge of a dry iron, rub over the foil sheet quickly
three or four times to transfer the foil to the web. Light strokes will give you a better look than heavy ones. Leave some
areas without foil for contrast.
Cut a piece of stiff interfacing and a piece of paperbacked fusible web the size of the fabric. Using a dry iron, press the
paper-backed fusible onto the interfacing, let cool, and pull off the backing paper. Iron the painted fabric onto the fusible
web, using a piece of cooking parchment over the fabric to protect the iron. Cut the fabric/interfacing piece into four 41/2" 6-1/2" (11.5 x16.5 cm) rectangles. You will trim them to their final size later.
Cut out motifs from printed fabrics or choose ribbons, silk leaves, skeleton leaves, lace, and trims that coordinate with the
painted web, foil, and background fabric. Place the items on the postcards, cover with cooking parchment, and fuse in
place. If the Pearl Ex and foil have exhausted the adhesive properties of the Mistyfuse, place another piece of web under
the motifs, ribbons and so on.
Trim the cards to an exact 4" 6" (10 15 cm) rectangle (U.S. postal requirement). Do seed stitching by hand or add
machine-stitched details. Sew embellishments such as buttons or beads to the postcards by hand or machine. Make sure
that any decorations are very firmly attached to the cards. Even if you ask for hand cancellation at the post office, the cards
will still go through various machines on the way to the recipient. One way to protect delicate embellishments is to cover
the whole front of the card with netting.
Make four backs for the cards from sturdy white cotton cut 4-1/2" 6-1/2" (11.5 16.5 cm). On the left side of the fabric,
rubber stamp a quotation using ink or use a fabric pen to write a personal message and add your return address. On the
right side of the backing piece, put the recipients address. For postcard exchanges, I use photo transfer fabric sheets to
print the return address multiple times and make a sheet of recipients addresses, which can then be applied to the back of
the card with fusible web when the postcard is completed.
Center a postcard front over a backing piece with wrong sides together. Set the machine for satin stitching and thread the
machine with variegated thread on the top and white or variegated thread in the bobbin. Satin stitch the edge of the
postcard and then trim off the excess backing fabric. Use a self-adhesive stamp on the back and burnish it onto the fabric
securely with your fingernail. Drop your postcards into a mailbox and prepare for rave reviews!
Susan Suggests
Gather a group of friends and have a postcard exchange. Set a deadline and decide on a theme
otherwise, anything goes! One of the best exchanges Ive been part of was based on dots.
Imaginations ran wild with everything from yellow polka-dot bikinis to quilt pox to elegant dots
made from satin.
angelina fiber
Make Shapes
Place a thin layer of fibers on a piece of parchment. Cover them with another sheet of parchment.
Briefly melt the fibers into a sheet that barely holds together. Cut it into squares, triangles, or any shape
you like. Place a layer of uncooked fibers in a contrasting color on a piece of parchment, arrange the
shapes on top and cover with another very thin layer of the fibers. Cover with parchment and iron to
fuse everything together.
Susan Suggests
Angelina is washable and fun to use on a garment. Additional heat applied to the fibers will continue
to change their appearance, so hand-wash your garment and dry it flat.
A good resource for additional information is Between the Sheets with Angelina by Alysn MidgelowMarsden.
Angelina hot fix fibers are synthetic fibers that will fuse to each other when
heat is applied.
They are very shiny, come in luscious colors, and can trap other fibers and embellishments when they
are formed into a sheet. For a fun project, make a jar wrap and display flowers or other items in it or
make a cone to hang. Be sure to protect your iron from touching the fiber and prepare to have a sparkly
sewing room and clothing!
Measure your jar by running a tape measure down the side, across the bottom, and up the opposite side. Allow for 2" (5
cm) extra to make the ruffle around the top. I used a 14" (35.5 cm) circle. Draw a circle with your final measurement as
the diameter onto a piece of cooking parchment, using a string taped onto a pencil as a compass. It does not have to be a
perfect circle, because it will be used only as a pressing guide.
Pull apart the Angelina fiber and lay it out on the parchment paper in a thin layer, using as many colors as you wish. Make
sure you cover the circle over the drawn lines and cross the fibers over each other. Too thick a layer will require too much
heat to melt the fibers and the colors will change and dull.
Make a small sheet of Angelina fiber in a contrasting color by using an iron to fuse it quickly between sheets of parchment
paper. Cut it into small squares or other shapes. Distribute the sequins, trims, or cut-up bits of Angelina over the unmelted
fiber.
Add a small amount of Angelina fiber on top of the embellishments so they will be firmly caught in the Angelina sheet
when it is melted.
Cover the Angelina with another sheet of cooking parchment and heat the surface with an iron set for silk or wool (irons
vary, so experiment with the temperature). The Angelina should fuse to itself and capture the other embellishments.
Note: The more time and pressure you put on the iron, the more the color of the Angelina will change.
It is possible to turn the Angelina completely black, but it is more likely that you will just dull the color
if you leave the heat on too long. Do some testing before you make your jar cover.
Place the jar in the center of the circle of fused Angelina, pull the sheet up around the jar, and tie the ribbon around the top
of the jar. Use several narrow ribbons together for a different look, or use some of the exciting knitting ribbons and add
charms to the ends.
Angelina Cone
Make a pretty cone of Angelina to hang on a tree, decorate a window, or serve as a delightful party
favor. Following the steps above, make a circle of Angelina fiber 12" (30.5 cm) in diameter or smaller.
Make a cone of stiff paper and tape it together for a form. Wrap the fused circle of Angelina around the
form and glue it along the edge.
Wind the cone with ribbons and glue them in place. Make a hanger out of ribbon and glue it to the top of the cone. Add
trims as desired, and then remove the paper form.
Susan Suggests
After it is fused into a sheet, Angelina fiber can be foiled, painted, burned along the edges, and
further embellished. Spend a little time exploring!
ribbon netting
Take advantage of the gorgeous trim, ribbon, and yarn available today and
create a work of art.
Stitch a delicate, airy network of colorful, textural fibers to make a chic accessory or quick gift. Sew the
ribbon netting to fabric to add a textural aspect, or use the trim to make an impressive wall hanging.
Start with a water-soluble stabilizer, sew the trim or ribbon to it, and then dissolve the stabilizer away.
You may find this addictive!
Grab your favorite ribbon and trim and in just a few short
steps, construct a colorful scarf or a work of art...or
maybe theyre one and the same!
Cut two pieces of stabilizer slightly larger than the planned size of your finished project. Cut several pieces of ribbon the
length of the stabilizer.
Place a ribbon parallel to the edge of one piece of stabilizer. Sew down the middle of the ribbon with a narrow zigzag
stitch, backstitching the ends. Continue to add ribbons, spacing them about 1" (2.5 cm) apart, until the stabilizer is
covered. The ribbons do not need to be perfectly straight, but draw guidelines on the stabilizer with a permanent marker, if
you like.
Lay the second piece of stabilizer on top of the first piece and pin in place. Sew additional ribbons perpendicular to those
forming the first layer and backstitch at the ends.
Soak the piece in warm water to dissolve the stabilizer. If you feel any stickiness, soak again in clean water. Any
remaining stabilizer will make the netting stiff. Reshape on a terry towel to dry.
Susan Suggests
Make a scarf using the netting technique. Cut a 20" 60" (50.8 152.4 cm) piece of stabilizer. Cut
eight to twelve pieces of ribbon 72" (183 cm) long. Sew the ribbons lengthwise over one-half of the
stabilizer, letting an extra 6" (15.2 cm) hang off both ends to form fringe. Fold the stabilizer over the
ribbons. Cut approximately 60 pieces of ribbon 10" (25.4 cm) long and sew them perpendicular to
those forming the first layer, and backstitch at the ends. Dissolve the stabilizer.
Misty Fuse is a fusible web that is very sheer and not sticky, so you can layer up
netting, lace, or other open weave fabrics with ease.
The fusible web will not come up through the holes or stiffen the fabric. Collect mementos of an event
or highlight a favorite fabric motif, even trap dried materials under netting for an unusual look.
Print an 8" by 10" (20 25.5 cm) photo onto fabric on the computer or copier and lay aside to dry. Or you can cut a 8-1/2"
11" (21.5 28 cm) piece of fabric for your background. Cut a piece of Misty Fuse the same size. Iron the Misty Fuse on
top of the background or photo, using parchment paper over the top to protect the iron.
Note: Its always a good idea to put a piece of cooking parchment under the background in case some
fusible web goes beyond the edges.
Lay the mat over the background to determine how much area you have to cover. Most mats have openings less than a full
8" by 10" (20 25.5 cm). Arrange ribbons or trims over the Misty Fuse. Try to keep them as flat as possible. Lay on
pieces of colored cheesecloth.
Arrange cut-out fabric motifs, dried materials, ticket stubs, commemorative buttons, award ribbons, silk flowers, etc., on
top of the layers.
Lay a second piece of Misty Fuse over the assemblage and then cover the layers with tulle, netting, or chiffon. Cover with
cooking parchment and iron to secure all the elements.
Add trims or other elements to the top of the sheer layer with fabric glue if you wish. Make sure you check the opening in
your mat before gluing anything down.
Back the assemblage with batting so it will round out the edges when you add the mat. If you want to, you can add hand
stitching to accent certain elements or give texture, sewing through the assemblage and the batting.
Run a bead of glue around the back side of the mat opening. Place the mat carefully over the top of the assemblage and
press down firmly. Place books over the top to weigh down the mat while the glue is drying.
Glue the cardboard on the back of the mat to cover and support the assemblage. Weigh the mat down with books until the
glue dries. You can decorate the mat to coordinate with the assemblage, and be sure to sign your artwork.
Susan Suggests
Place the matted assemblage in a frame, possibly with a second mat added to set the artwork away
from the glass or set a grouping of matted pieces without frames on a long, narrow shelf along with
coordinating accessories.
Collage has been done with paper for many years. Here we adapt it to fabric to
create texture and dimension.
Most of the projects in this book involve fun and spontaneous techniques, so why not forgo the exact
seam allowances, perfect corners, and precise measurements that normally make up a wall hanging and
let yourself play. Collect trim, fabrics, beads, buttons, embellishments, orphan quilt blocks, fibers, and
ribbon. Toss in the new techniques youve discovered in The Complete Fabric Artists Workshop, and
create a piece that tells your story!
Susan Suggests
For even more freedom, try using quilt-as-you-go methods. Of course, you will want to make a larger
piece after doing this journal page, and a fat quarter would be a good size for a larger background.
You can either finish your project at that size or add borders or other pieces later.
Select a background fabric for your collage. From your stash, gather trim, accent fabrics, buttons, anything that will
coordinate with your background fabric and the theme youve chosen for the piece.
Cut a piece of background fabric and a piece of batting to 8-1/2" 11" (21.6 27.9 cm). Cut a backing fabric to 9-1/2"
12" (24.1 30.5 cm). Layer the background fabric (right side out), batting, and the backing fabric (right side out), and fuse
them together with an iron, following the batting manufacturers instructions.
Cut small pieces of accent fabrics, ribbon, and trim, and glue-baste them onto the background fabric, auditioning
everything that might work. Relate elements to each other by overlapping them or connecting them with a ribbon or trim.
If you have a digital camera, take photographs of different arrangements before you decide on one. Stitch around the edges
or through the centers of the elements, through the batting and backing.
Press the extra backing fabric around to the top. Glue-baste the turned fabric to the journal page top to create a binding,
folding in the corners as you go. Topstitch or satin stitch the edge of the binding. Hand sew beads, buttons, and charms
onto the background fabric through all the layers.
Quilts are becoming more and more personal, not just in color selection and
labeling, but also in composition.
Collage allows us to collect all sorts of elements and embellishments that convey a message or mood
and then sew them onto a small background piece using relaxed methods of construction.
Celebrate an event, portray an emotion, remember a vacation, or just enjoy using your favorite images.
Then display your collage on the wall where it will be enjoyed daily. Start collecting!
Collect orphan quilt blocks, small sun prints and screen prints, rubber-stamped images, ribbons, lace, buttons, beads,
photos transferred to fabric, skeleton leaves, yarns, etc. that coordinate in theme, color, or mood. Put them up on the
design wall with possible choices for background fabric.
Press and straighten the background fabric. For the border, cut three 3" (7.6 cm)-wide strips using a rotary cutter, ruler, and
mat. Cut 25" 29" (63.6 73.5 cm) pieces of batting and backing fabric. Cut 2" (5 cm)-wide strips of binding fabric.
Lay the backing fabric on the batting, and fuse together with steam. Turn over and steam-fuse the background fabric in the
center of the batting. The borders will be added later. Place the quilt sandwich on the design wall.
Arrange the larger elements such as the screen prints, sun prints, old quilt blocks, etc. on the background. To make these
items pop out visually, center them over black fabric cut 1/2" (1.3 cm) larger. Remember the art theory that odd numbers
look better than even numbers. Vary the sizes and shapes of your elements. Use diagonal lines and on-point placement for
interest. Keep in mind that you will be adding more embellishments, so dont fill every space. Pin the elements in place.
Connect the larger elements with ribbons, yarn, or other directional items. You want to unify all the various parts of the
collage, carrying the viewers eye around the piece and holding her interest. Some of the ribbons or yarns can go under the
larger units and some can go over the sides or edges. Pin everything in place.
Choose threads that coordinate or contrast with the parts of the collage. Stitch 1/8" (3 mm) in from the edges of the larger
units, appliquing and quilting in one operation. Stitch down both sides or down the middle of the ribbons. Stitching down
the middle will raise the edges and give more dimension. Stitch over the yarns with a zigzag stitch and invisible thread.
Cut one strip of border fabric in half, and trim it to the exact horizontal size of your background piece. Place the top and
bottom border strips right sides together with the background fabric and sew through all the layers with a 1/4" (6 mm)
seam. Open up the border strips and steam to the batting. Sew the side borders on in the same way.
Add smaller embellishments such as cut squares or triangles, leaves, or appliqus, extending them onto the borders, if
desired. Sew around the edges of each unit or use detail stitching to attach them, such as using veins in a leaf to sew it
down instead of edge stitching. Trim and bind the edges of the wall hanging and add a casing to the back for hanging.
Hand-sew or glue fragile or hard elements such as skeleton leaves, beads, buttons, and feathers. Sign and date the wall
hanging with a permanent pen.
Susan Suggests
Fresh flowers or three-dimensional items such as rocks or shells cant be stitched to your collage, but
you can still include them. Lay them directly on an inkjet copy machine, print a fabric sheet, and add
the print to your collage instead.
Influences
by Doroth Mayer
Photo transfer, rust-dyeing.
Fantasy Vine
by Susan Stein
More than twenty different techniques on leaves.
Asilomar Reverie
by Susan Stein
Photo transfer.
Dye-na-Flow Sampler
by Susan Stein
Nine different Dye-na-Flow painting techniques.
Feather Discharge
by Sue Kelly
Discharge and paint.
Leaf Montage
by Susan Stein
Rubber stamping, screen printing, and sun printing by Diane Bartels; shibori dyeing by Deb Lunn; overdyed background
by Wendy Richardson.
ing
by Tina Hughes
Various techniques.
Silk Surprises
by Susan Stein
Lasagna dyeing with Dye-na-Flow.
Orchid
by Elizabeth
Palmer-Spilker Photo transfer.
resources
Art Supplies
www.joggles.com
www.dickblick.com
www.artquiltingsupplies.com
www.quiltingarts.com
Hand-dyed fabrics, organza, and twill tape
Wendy Richardson, www.qtstudio.com
Hand-dyed fabric bundles
www.cherrywoodfabrics.com
Paint, photo-transfer paper, prepared-for-dyeing fabrics, textile medium, books, Jacquard
Discharge Paste, Anti-Chlor, dyes and chemicals, and information online
www.dharmatrading.com
Painting books, classes, and rubber stamps
Sherrill Kahn, www.impressmenow.com
Paintstiks, stencil brushes, original rubbing plates
Cedar Canyon Textiles
www.cedarcanyontextiles.com
Photo-transfer paper
www.transferartist.com
Print paste SH, dye, Synthrapol, soda ash, urea, and Pebeo Setacolor paints and medium
www.prochemicalanddye.com
Printed images
Ready to Use North American Indian Motifs, Dover Publications, 1996
ReVisions Stencils by Diane Ericson
www.dianeericson.com
Rust-dyeing supplies and instructions
www.rust-tex.com
Silk fabric and scarves
www.thaisilks.com
800-722-7455
Silk roving
www.treenwaysilks.com
Stencils, paint sticks, foil for fabric, and foil adhesive
www.lauramurraydesigns.com
Thermofax screens
Nancy Mambi, email address:
[email protected]
acknowledgments
Thanks to so many wonderful friendsDiane Bartels, Laura Murray, Mary Johnson, Wendy
Richardson, Shelly Stokes, Elizabeth Palmer-Spilker, and Sue Kellywho have opened my eyes to the
joys of playing with fabric in new ways; to students who have taught me a lot more than I have taught
them; to my husband, John, who encourages me always; and to the staff at Creative Publishing
international, who have always believed in me.
Susan Stein started quilting in 1977 and has delighted in getting other people obsessed with quilting
and surface design ever since. This former president and show chairman for Minnesota Quilters was
named Minnesota Quilter of the Year in 2003. An energetic and passionate quilter, Susan has shared her
talents as the author of four books and as a contributing author to numerous others. She has taught many
classes in Minnesota and around the country. Many of the hundreds of quilts produced by her hands
serve as wall hangings, publication pieces, and store samples, while others are on public display or in
personal use.
index
A
Angelina Fiber
fusible appliqus, 203
fusing, 202
materials and tools, 201
preparation, 202
shaping, 203
stamp-embossed shapes, 202
washing, 203
Angelina Jar Wrap
cone design, 209
embellishments, 207, 209
ironing, 207, 208
layering, 206
materials and tools, 205
measuring, 206
ribbon-ties, 208
B
Brayer Painting
fabric, 24
loading, 24, 31
materials and tools, 23
nature printing, 48, 49
plaid patterns, 24
preparation, 24
quilted/painted folder briefcase, 35
rollers, 23
stripes and grids, 25
texture, 23
textures, 25
Brayer-Painted Lunch Bag
fabric, 28, 29, 30
ironing, 30
layering, 28, 30
materials and tools, 27
practicing, 31
preparation, 28
rubbing patterns, 27, 29, 30
sewing, 30, 31
Burned-Edge Appliqu
burning, 179
cutting, 178
fabric, 178, 179
materials and tools, 177
paint, 178
preparation, 178
sewing, 179
Burned-Edge Appliqu Tea Cozy
burning, 184
materials and tools, 181
paint, 182
preparation, 182
salting, 182
sewing, 183, 184, 185
tearing, 183, 185
C
Collage with Fabric
cutting, 222
embellishments, 223
fabric, 222
ironing, 222
materials and tools, 221
sewing, 223
Collaged Wall Hanging
border strips, 229
connecting elements, 228
cutting, 226
elements, 227
embellishments, 229
fabric, 226
materials and tools, 225
steam-fusing, 227
Color Discharge with Bleach
doodle bleaching, 115
edgy designs, 114
gel stamping, 115
materials and tools, 113
misted abstract motifs, 114
neutralizing, 115
preparation, 114
Resisting Paint, 71
D
Discharged Dye Pillow
discharge paste, 119, 121
fabric, 118
ironing, 119
materials and tools, 117
precise edges, 121
preparation, 118
quilting, 120
sewing, 120, 121
stencil, 119
stencils, 121
Distressed Felt
cutouts, 188
fabric, 188, 189
heating, 189
materials and tools, 187
sewing, 189
F
Fabric Beads
cylinder beads, 150
decorative touches, 151
frayed beads, 151
materials and tools, 149
preparation, 150
tapered beads, 150
Fabric Bead Necklace
embellishments, 156
fabric, 154
foil, 156
fusible web, 154
materials and tools, 153
mixed media, 157
rolling, 155
silk, 157
stringing, 155, 157
Foiling Four Ways
dimensional foiling, 147
direct-to-fabric foil stamping, 146
materials and tools, 145
preparation, 146
shaped foil, 146
Lasagna Dyeing
fabric, 80, 81
materials and tools, 79
paint, 80
preparation, 80
Lasagna Painted Silk Throw
fabric, 84, 85
ironing, 86
materials and tools, 83
paint, 84, 85
quilting, 86
ribbons, 87
sewing, 87
M
Monoprinting
butterfly effect, 53
fabric, 53
materials and tools, 51
preparation, 52
sheet protectors, 52, 53
Monoprinted Placemats
fabric, 56, 57
heat-setting, 57
mat board, 58, 59
materials and tools, 55
paint, 56
preparation, 56
print variations, 58
stamping, 57
table runner project, 59
N
Nature Printing
accents, 49
brayer preparation, 48
brayer technique, 48, 49
materials and tools, 47
outlining, 49
preparation, 48
spraying, 48
No-Sew Matted Assemblage
embellishments, 217, 218
framing, 219
gluing, 219
materials and tools, 215
Misty Fuse, 216, 217
sewing, 218
P
Painted Fusible Web
cutting, 193
ironing, 192, 193
materials and tools, 191
paint, 192
preparation, 192
Painted Fusible Web Postcards
cutting, 196, 198
exchanging, 199
ironing, 197
materials and tools, 195
Misty Fuse, 196, 198
rubber stamping, 199
sewing, 198, 199
Painted Tabletop Screen
bubble wrap print, 76, 77
materials and tools, 73
painted plaid, 74
paint over pleated foil, 76-77
preparation, 74
resist-painted stripes, 74
salt patterning, 75
sun print, 75
Paintstiks Technique Quartet
appliqu effect, 15
finishing, 15
materials and tools, 13
preparation, 14
rubbings, 14
soft forms, 15
stenciling, 15
writing and drawing, 14
Paintstik Decorated Apron
bias tape, 20
custom rubbing plates, 20
fabric, 18
ironing, 19
materials and tools, 17
pattern, 20, 21
preparation, 18
rubbing plates, 18, 19, 20
Photo-Transfer Mail Sorter
copying, 128
cutting, 128
materials and tools, 127
pockets, 131
sewing, 129, 130, 131
steam-fusing, 130
Printout to Fabric Transfer
gel medium, 135
image transfer, 135
inkjet printing, 134
laser printing, 134, 135
materials and tools, 133
preparation, 134
Q
Quilted/Painted Folder Briefcase
brayer painting, 35
discharge paste technique, 37
fabric, 34
materials and tools, 33
pocket, 35
preparation, 34
quilting, 34
ribbon handle, 36
sewing, 35, 36, 37
R
Resisting Paint
Color Discharge with Bleach and, 71
glue resist, 70
materials and tools, 69
Painted Tabletop Screen, 74
preparation, 70
Rubber Banding, 71
String-Tied Patterning, 71
tape resist, 70
Ribbon Netting
paint, 110
preparation, 110
shaving cream, 110, 111
Silk Cocoons and More
carrier rods, 164, 165
cocoon preparation, 164
embellishments, 165
freeform hankie painting, 165
materials and tools, 163
paint, 164
preparation, 164
tassels, 165
Silk Fusion
embellishments, 161
layering, 161
materials and tools, 159
preparation, 160
shampoo, 161
silk fibers, 160
Splash and Puddle Painting
backgrounds, 62
bubble-wrap patterning, 63
color choices, 63
color pleating, 63
materials and tools, 61
preparation, 62
salt patterning, 62
Sponge Painting
color schemes, 41
materials and tools, 39
paint, 40, 41
patterns, 41
preparation, 40
stencils, 40
watercolor effect, 41
Stamping with Found Objects
button stamping, 44
carved eraser stamping, 45
incised Styrofoam stamping, 44
materials and tools, 43
preparation, 44
string and bubble-wrap stamping, 45
Sunprinting with Paint
fabric, 66
layering, 67
materials and tools, 65
Painted Tabletop Screen, 75
paint, 66
preparation, 66
sun blocks, 67
Copyright 2011 Creative Publishing international, Inc. This book is a compilation of the authors
previously published books Fabric Art Workshop (2007) and Fabric Art Projects (2009).
All rights reserved. No part of this work covered by the copyrights hereon may be reproduced or used in
any form or by any meansgraphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording,
taping of information on storage and retrieval systemswithout the written permission of the publisher.
Due to differing conditions, materials, and skill levels, the publisher and various manufacturers disclaim
any liability for unsatisfactory results or injury due to improper use of tools, materials, or information in
this publication.
First published in the United States of America by Creative Publishing international, Inc., a member of
Quayside Publishing Group 400 First Avenue North Suite 300 Minneapolis, MN 55401 1-800-328-3895
www.creativepub.com Visit www.Craftside.Typepad.com for a behind-the-scenes peek at our crafty
world!
Digital edition: 978-1-61058-133-2
Softcover edition: 978-1-58923-663-9
ISBN-13: 978-1-58923-663-9
ISBN-10: 1-58923-663-7
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Copy Editor: Karen Levy
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Book Design: Tina R. Johnson
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Printed in China
Permission to reproduce the printed images from Carol Belanger Grafton, ed., Authentic Chinese CutPaper Designs, Dover Design Library (New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1988), used in Printout to
Fabric Transfer, granted by Dover Publications, Inc.