I recently became a bit addicted to making covered buttons. With this addiction I decided to make some bracelets; the buttons are just sewn tightly onto sheering elastic. Volia lovely hand made gifts.... If I ever get round to giving them away that is...........
Monday, 9 January 2012
Dresses dresses dresses
So I like dresses. I have too many dresses! But at least I've started making my own not just buying them...
My good friend Kelly-Jayne taught me how to make these circular skirt dresses over the phone! She's got a blog too about making clothes and up-cycling, its over here... Ethal Nunn
The white dress was meant to be just a practise run; hence the mis-matched fabrics but it worked really well so i added a peter-pan collar and i wear it all the time! I think its made from an old table cloth and a bed sheet; just some random bits and bobs I found in my ever expanding fabric box.
The lovely green fabric was donated to me by a friend. In return I have to make her one of these dresses... which I promise I will be doing soon; I've said it on the internet now so I'll have to!
Rusty & Musty
I like to call this project my rusty
musty collection, but I'll probably have to give that re-think soon to
make it sound more appealing!
I have been looking into eco-friendly
ways of applying design to fabric and for this I have been
experimenting with rust dying and up-cycling used garments.
These
first two examples started life as plain men's shirts.
I
took the pattern from one of my original charity shop rag bag finds (left) and given that I could not bring myself to cut or dye the orginal I made a brand new, well not
strictly brand new, top in the same style with a bib front and gathered in waist.
To be truthful the first
example was a complete revelation! Feeling slightly disheartened with my
work at the time I made this mock up out of an old shirt and literally shoved it
in a bucket full of damp rusty nails. I forgot about it for two days and
when i took it out it revealed this beautiful rusty pattern. I then used shibori to gather in the fabric and give it a crumpled effect.
So
after my first success I tried a different approach and made a second
top out of another mans shirt and laser cut into the collar and edges to
make a slightly lacy looking finish and brought the waist in with a
couple of carefully positioned stitches.
Further developing this idea; I
began using iron fillings to create the rust and a paper stencil to
produce more intricate patterns on the fabric. This is something I am
still experimenting with and will have more examples to show soon!
To this i wanted to add colour. An eco-friendly way of doing this is heat transfer printing. These are some examples where i tried combining shibori, transfer print and rust dying onto found bits of polyester.
The trouble with using clothes I have found in the rag-bag is that the fabrics they are made from indefinitely determine which techniques I can use on them. As it turns out people don't give away nice silk shirts or cotton blouses... Most of what I come across is dreaded polyester! But it does present an interesting challenge and is something I want to persist with. Being a man-made fibre it does not breakdown at all and therefore it is essential that it is re-used as much as possible and not just thrown away.
and in any case I have come across so many interestingly shaped garment it is an exciting challenge to make them into something new and desirable.
Saturday, 7 January 2012
"Empty Dresses"
These garments were destined for the
rag-bag. I saved them after lots of rifling and sorting through the, rather musty, unwanted clothes bags at Cancer Reasearch UK Swansea.
They are part of my lastest up-cycling project.
More about this another time......
Photography by the lovely Dan Carroll Time's Relentless Melt
No waste dress
My first foray into "no waste" pattern cutting. The designs and initial drawings were inspired by naturally occurring fractals like those found in cracked paintwork or mud. I used a rectangle of material and applied the design randomly with tie-dye, discharge printing, embellishing and embroidery. I then only made a few simple cuts into the rectangle and draped the fabric on a mannequin to finalise the design. No fabric was thrown away, just added.
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