Showing posts with label printing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label printing. Show all posts

Saturday, April 4, 2020

Shorts to Skirt Refashion with a bush chook

A friend donated me this pair of shorts to do as I liked with them.
 They had an initial printing session, but I felt that they were missing something...
 So I decided to turn them into a skirt. I cut the leg seams open, turned them inside-out and sewed straight lines down the front and back.
 It made them into a nice little skirt.

#lovelypennypatterns

Friday, May 31, 2019

Dragon Age Inquisition Cosplay - Orlesian Skirt

My Dragon Age Inquisition cosplay has been only a thought for a couple of years now,  but I'm determined to finish it in 2019. So I got the pattern out one night and cut out every piece of the layered skirt.


Layer 1 - Underskirt

I scrounged some fabric from my many boxes and made a simple, full-length, A-line skirt that I could wear on its own, separate from the cosplay.
See the odd black pattern on the back where I JUST ran out of fabric? Ha ha! This pattern uses a lot of fabric.

Layer 2 - White cotton underskirt.

Looks like I mostly forgot to take a photo of this in progress, but you can see it on the final skirt.

Layer 3 - Moth wings

These were the complicated part of the skirt, because I had elected to do them in satin for the more formal ballgown look. And satin is slippery.
I did them as separate 'petals', so that the layers and drape would look more like the original gown. 


Once sewn, all of the moth eyes were fabric printed on using the lino cuts I had designed and carved for this project.
It's always a slight risk printing directly onto your finished, sewn product, but I was confident. As long as I let the black dry before I put the copper on, it would turn out fine.
Each part was a top layer, sewed together with a bottom layer, and turned through so that the seams were on the inside. A lot tidier than simple hems, particularly with the satin.
It was a LOT of sewing with very slippery fabric....
And I had it draped everywhere!
But it was coming together according to my plan.
I sewed the wing designs on rather than paint them, so that the effect was subtler. 
Lots and lots of pinning followed, trying to work out how the individual layers would hang. The white underskirt and all of the satin were sewn together as a single skirt, with a substantial, solid waistband to hold all of it up.
But can you see how it all came together?

I think you can really see the moth wing effect at the front!

The finished skirt! 

Just the matching corset top to make, and the hand-painted stand-up butterfly collar.....
#lovelypennypatterns

Thursday, October 25, 2018

Printing leaves and stencils onto eco dyed clothes again!

I did my last fabric printing day before my craft stall last week - and boy was it hot out in the carport! The weather is stinking up here, I can't wait for the rain to come.
As before, I had some plain clothes and some shirts that I had dyed that hadn't come out with strong patterns that could use something extra.
The metal circle printed well on this linen top, but everything else is a bit vague.
None of the stencils that I had suited, so I went and clipped a small palm frond from the garden instead.
I rolled paint over the top of it to create an outline and was very happy with it.
Looks like a different shirt now, huh? Very tropical!
What I did on another shirt was to then turn the leaf over and press it down to create a print.
I love the detail that came through.
I'm not responsible for the dye on this shirt, but I'm really happy with the overall look now.
And with this other one, too. Layers of leaves on this one.
The leaf got a lot of use!
 Other shirts got lino prints.
Simple but effective. I thought about layering colours of these prints, but decided it was too much.
And of course my favourite - the bush chook. Though I printed them in brown this time instead of black.
To get the two colours I tape over the legs, print the body, and then remove the tape to do the second colour.
The brown goes well with the eco dye.
Not to mention on other colours.
 My sundew stencil also got a workout.
 These pants are now officially funky - pity they're too small for me!
 A few little arrows on this one in the small blank bit. The bike chain links printed well on this shirt.
 These may need some more work, but they remind me of gardening around my place.
Hopefully someone will enjoy owning them as much as I have enjoyed making them.
#lovelypennypatterns

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Fabric Painting Day - lino, scrub fowl, plants and fun

I was determined to print as many things as I could in a day. I had plain tops, shorts, and some eco dyed clothes that hadn't turned out as well as I had liked. And I set up inside under a fan this time instead of outside in the heat - pretty warm here now!!
No shortage of bright colours 😊
A friend came and joined me, too, so we had a lot of (messy) fun! Her prints were funky:
My new bush chook stencil turned out great! I tried to capture the movement of them, how they skulk around the garden.
They would have looked lonely on their own though, so I printed them in pairs on this skirt.
And another sneaky one on a shirt: 
 This skirt was one of my favourite pieces of the day.
 And I printed some baby clothes for a couple of friends who are expecting. It's hard to make gender-neutral clothes sometimes!
Some of my eco dyed clothes hadn't come out with strong patterns, so I used stencils to jazz them up.
 The vine pattern came from some op shop stencils.
I've done this totem pole kind of effect before on shirts, I like how it turns out.
I was really unhappy with how this shirt had dyed, but now I love it with the dragonflies! It's a struggle not to put dragonflies on everything! 😁
 I started mixing paints at the end of the session, for some colour wash effects.
Really happy with how these dragonflies turned out:
I put a lot of dragonflies on things....
I eco dyed more clothes on the day, so there are still some more things to print on. Watch this space!
#lovelypennypatterns