As part of our discussion in class, we talked about various ways of getting images onto fabric. I have played with this idea before (here and here) but have never come up with one that I think is wonderful. It was fun to do and I learnt about the program and the process but I haven't had a good idea for its use yet.
In desperation, I went through some old files and came across some playing I did with Photoshop. I have quite a lot (QUITE a lot) of photos of Penny swimming in the Yarra.
I took one of these, at some stage, and played around with getting a textured background image. I can't quite remember which picture I used but it will have been very similar to this one.
I cropped part of the water and then played around with colour.
![]() |
The middle one is from the actual photo, then I played with hue and saturation. |
I can't remember where I saw this idea (if I didn't misread or imagine it) but I tried it today.
I took another image I had, enlarged it quite a bit and played with hue until I got it to a bluish colour. It turned out quite pixilated but I decided I didn't mind the effect and went ahead and made it A4 sized.
Then I cut a piece of interfacing to A4 size, taped the leading edge to a piece of photocopy paper and put it through the printer - hoping like mad that it wouldn't mess up the printer!
![]() |
It is not quite as pale as the photo makes it look but it is paler than on the computer. |
I have an image. I don't know how colourfast it will be. I am leaving it to dry for 24 hours and then might take a piece and see if it is washable. Not that I intend using it as a wearable or quilt piece, it is just for experimenting with at this stage.
The interfacing is heat adhesive on one side, so I hope the heat sets the print as well. I haven't looked to see if our cartridges are pigment based, which are the more recommended sort, so it might all be just a waste of time. I suppose I will find out soon.
I am not going to fuss about the text at this stage, it is stopping me from playing as I can't think of anything exciting to include.
With a quick glance at the thumbnail picture, it looks like a platypus with a yellow bill swimming! have you tried Bubble Jet 2000 for treating fabric for your printer?
ReplyDeleteI have a bottle but it is so old that I doubt that it is still effective! One of those purchases that seemed good at the time.
ReplyDeleteI may try it, just to see if it still works although, finding out about UV fastness won't be a quick thing to discover.