Friday, October 30

Momiji Art Doll Contest

I’m happy to share the project I’ve been working on for awhile now: Little Sister!




I got very excited about Artforum’s “Momiji Couture Competition,” -- I love Momiji!


—so I got to work on a design right away. I knew I couldn’t get attached to whatever the resulting piece became because she had a mission: win the competition.

Knowing I had to send her away soon I decided we could go out and play for a little bit first – a perfect way to make a nice memory and say goodbye.


I had found her a perfect sized box, but even though I’d prepared to send her off. I had imagined her travels and the joy of opening the box to see her for the 1st time. . . even though I comforted myself thinking of how she would surely win and I’d see her again (in a gallery) I couldn’t let her go. I had been so excited about the competition that I believed the disappointment of not “going for it” would out-weigh the sentimentality I might feel and that sentimentality would be all I felt. 


Looking back I can now say it's not so! Little Sister is the potential -- a beginning of new art for me. Of course she had to stay! Still, I’m happy Momiji started the competition and that I used that surge of energy to create something exciting.
Can’t wait to see what comes next!
(Techniques I used include plant dyes, machine and hand embroidery.)

Tuesday, October 6

Plant-based dye




So my current plant-based dye experiments are done for now. My aim was the elusive color blue on a non-woolly fiber. I knew going in this was an uphill battle (as my resources are very limited) so I was mostly looking to experiment and find alternatives. I might have gone far from the blue, but I gained some valuable info on processes! I'll show you.
The 1st test strip happened using the remaining water after boiling red cabbage. I had to boil the fabric in a moderant (in this case a vinegar solution) first so the color would fix better. The fabric is still a little damp here. The true colors are not quite as bold as this.

My second tester. This time I used blueberries. Definitely not blue! For berries the moderant solution is salt. This image shows the true color well.

So I was pretty unimpressed with the hues from my blueberry dye. While lovely pinks and lavenders I was looking for something deeper. So I mixed some of my remaining cabbage dye in with the blueberry dye. I am very novice at all of this, so I'm not sure if mixing dye baths and moderant baths "works," but I tried it anyway.

I still was off though. Simmering the fabrics in the dye baths for hours or letting them sit in it all day still wasn't saturating the way I hoped. I had been trying to achieve a nice gradient on the final fabric pieces, and in doing this I was leaving parts of the fabric to hang on the dry sides of the pot. Funny thing; the places I wanted to have the palest hues where getting some rich and interesting coloration and patterns. So I rigged up a new system with the cookie sheet. It's sitting on two burners both on medium setting. The knife under the glass lid to let steam escape (don't need to explode anymore glassware). The dry areas are where the dye would burn into the fabric.
Using this technique I got
fairly nice saturation and had so much fun with my discovery that I could
over look the lack of blue results. Besides, the medium dictates where the final piece is supposed to go regardless of my preconceived ideas.

Below are the two dried fabric pieces. They look very similar for the most part, but the "burned" experiment one (bottom-most on the right) is a bit brighter than pictured. It's fibers also feel very crispy.

I am doing all this for a project so I'm not intending the pieces should ever be washed. Through this process however, I've learned that washing these is out of the question: the color will fade.

Other disclamier stuff: the fabric "burning" is something that requires constant adult supervision and even then it's tricky. Be really careful with this if you try it; I don't want to hear someone burnt down their house or something. Also I was only using materials and solutions that are food safe. Most sources recommend separte containers for dye processing. This is espesally important if you use a synthetic or metal-based soultion.

"...judging art is the least popular goal among American art critics, and simply describing art is most popular: it is an amazing reversal, as astonishing as if physicists had declared they would no longer try to understand the universe, but just appreciate it." -- Elkins, What Happened to Art Criticism?

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This work by Rosalina Angelou Zindler is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.