Fabulous Fused Fabric Flowers

Daren Redman dyes fabrics to "paint" her fused fabric flowers.

That's Clever! : Episode HCLVR-247 -- More Projects »
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Project by Daren Redman from Nashville, Ind.
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Growing up in a modest household, Daren Redman had to make her own clothes. So from a young age she became very familiar with using fabrics and patterns. A few years ago, she took a quilting class and loved her quilts so much that she decided to display them on art canvas. When she isn’t working in her big, red barn studio she likes to play her violin, play with her cats, and on weekends, she and her husband bike at least 50 miles.

Materials:

digital camera
computer
inkjet color printer
fiber reactive dyes
3 four-gallon buckets or plastic shoebox size containers
3 glass jars with lids
measuring spoons
mixing spoons
measuring cups
microwave
100-percent white cotton fabric
urea
soda ash
warm water
old-fashioned hand crank wringer
clothesline
washer and dryer
artist's canvas
fusible web for 100-percent cottons
rotary cutter
cutting mat
clear quilter's ruler
scissors
iron and ironing board
dust mask
safety glasses
rubber gloves
apron
picture hanging hardware
black permanent marker

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Figure A
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Figure B
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Figure C
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Figure D
Steps:

1. Take digital photos of flowers.

2. Download the photos onto a computer and make an 8" x 10" print (figure A). Enlarge to about 20" x 20" in black and white at a copy store (figure B).

3. Pencil sketch the flowers onto a white piece of fabric 3 inches bigger than the artist’s canvas (figure C).

4. Cut 100-percent white cotton into 36" x 44" pieces and soak in one cup of water for 15 minutes in 4-gallon buckets or shoebox size plastic containers. No need to wring out.

5. Wear mask or respirator, safety glasses, apron, and rubber gloves to mix dye solutions (desired colors of the background and flowers) of 2- to 4-tablespoons of powdered dyes with warm water (heated in the microwave to about 110-degrees F) and 2-tablespoons of urea in a glass jar with a lid (figure D). Stir until dissolved. Leave the gloves on. Take off the rest of the protective gear.

6. Pour the dye solution over the white fabric scrunched up in a ball in the plastic container and gently squeeze the dye into the fabric.

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Figure E
7. After 15 minutes, pour a soda ash solution—9-tablespoons of soda ash to 1-gallon of water—over the fabric and dye. Over the next hour, gently squeeze and massage the fabric to incorporate the dye color all over the fabric so there is no white fabric showing (figure E).

8. Take the fabric out of the bucket and wring the excess dye out with an old fashioned hand wringer attached to a sawhorse.