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Welcome to Mountaintop Quilting Studio

This is where you find me exploring a variety of creative adventures mostly about but not limited to quilting. I'm a firm believer that one increases their creativity by being open to and playing with a variety of cretative endeavors ... at least that my excuse for today. Enjoy your sourjourn through my studio playroom. May you find encouragement and inspiration, and on occassion, a little pin-prick that may be thought-provoking or spark your imagination. Thank you for stopping by.


    STITCH THEN PAINT WORKSHOP

    Posted by mountaintopquilting on Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

    metalmicaThis last July at our retreat in Sisters Ruth Bass was our fearless leader as we played with some of her artbox supplies. The concept: Stitch It Then Paint it. If you've been following along for any length of time you will have read several different posts and had some journal peeks as I explore this process.

    Some conclusions ...

    Fabrics: PFD (prepare for dye) or batiks works best. It's the high thread count that helps achieve most consistent results as well as having a luminous quality creating a reflective property to your art piece. Up until this time I've been playing and exploring techniques trying to "develop my hand" with muslin as a foundation. Looking back, I say, "Jump in and go for it!" The quality of your supplies really makes a difference in the final outcome. Perceptions can be skewed with a less than quality foundation material and supplies, and in the end you'll probably spend less if you start right off with good paints, fabrics, and other color mediums.

    Paints: I love the Stewart Gill paints  which are available from Artist Cellar. My favorites are Colourise: fully saturated color ... and ...  METAMICA: yummy metalics ... and what a very soft hand when the project is all finished.

    ruth inspiration

    ... our inspiration and eye candy while Ruth explained her project process from beginning to end ...

    artbox

    ... Ruth's artbox ... our hands itching to dig in and experiment, explore and play ...

    dye procress

    ... Ruth does a demo on the dye process while explaining the different products available for this process ...

    playtable

    ... our play table ...

    As you can see we played with other coloring agents ... fabric ink markers, colored pencils, Shiva oil paint sticks, and a couple of different options for simple fabric dye techniques.

    The bottom line: the best part about our mini-workshop was the sharing amongst all the members of our group as we set aside time and gave ourselves permission to play. It was so easy to paint our already-stitched-out designs I might yet have a Baltimore Album quilt ... just paint it rather than doing all the applique ??? Hmmmm ... I know - not sure there would be much of a time-savings but it's fun to think about it the possibilities. 

    Related Posts:

     


    Categories: Wholecloth Quilts, Inspiration, JOURNAL PEEK, ART QUILTING


    Comments

    • This is fascinating. I haven't seen this technique before but it opens up lots of possibilities. Thanks for sharing.
      by Melody on 29 September 2010 at 5:36 a.m.
    • Thank you, Kay. Very nice. And, I had a ball watching others get excited about painting on fabric!
      by Ruth Bass on 28 September 2010 at 8:57 p.m.

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