Friday, 16 December 2011

jacket first assembly

IMAGE 1 FOURTH ASSESSMENT PIECE; NORFOLK BROADS JACKET I AM STILL WORKING ON THE BOTTOM BORDER BUT THIS IS THE FIRST STAGE OF ASSEMBLING THE JACKET.

Friday, 25 November 2011

jacket alterations

Image 1 Side view of mounted bird and sample of coloured pelmet vilene Image 2 Top view of mounted bird secured at wing tips, tail and beak with sample of coloured pelmet vilene.
Image 3
Altered colour of triangular border (left side ) for comparison (temporarily tacked on at present.).

Friday, 18 November 2011

Progress 4th assessment piece

IMAGE 1 WORKING ON THE BACK PANEL
IMAGE 2 THE BACK PANEL INSET INTO THE BACK FABRIC TOGETHER WITH THE EDGED FRONTSIMAGE 3 WORKING ON THE SLEEVES
IMAGE 4 CUTTING OUT THE BIRDS
IMAGE 5 THE PLACEMENT OF THE BIRDS.The on the right of picture front (actual left front) are placed under the net and will be fastened down flat on to the base fabric. The birds on the left of picture front (actual right front) will be placed on top of the net and caugh down at the wing tips, beak and tails to give a curved effect so that they stand proud of the background.

Thursday, 10 November 2011

Totem/memory stick

A photograph taken on a recent cruise to the Norway and the fijords. I thought this would provide good source material for my totem/ memory stick on my theme-- Life at the Margins; where land and water meet.
I first made a series of sketches of various different sections of the photograph, some were across the whole piece while others were working on very small sections of the original .I used a variety of different mediums to translate the designs into A5 size images. Here I used painted tissue on muslin and worked on the bands of colour which run along the base of the interior surface of the 'cave' in the photo.
This was an intrepretation of the same band of colour made in coloured acrylic gel
A charcoal sketch on cotton rag paperAn acrylic paint view
Acrylic paint scraped back to the paper in sections
A soluble pencil sketch
Concentrating on one line of fissures I made a cross section in stencil film and used Markal paint sticks on the edge of the stencil , sponged on to black paper The same origins as the one above but Markal paint sticks on white paper
Oil pastels on cotton rag paper
Paint on very wet paper.
IMAGE 13 SIZE A4
I scanned in all the above images and then used them to make a collage.
IMAGE 14 SIZE A4
Another collage arrangement
POSTCARDS FROM THE EDGE.
I then used thin coloured card to frame each sketch. I then made three laminated images from the original photograph and cut them up to form joining strips across the frames. Each strip of photograph has within it an element of the original which is represented in the sketch .The laminated strips wer then taped at the back to form joining strips for the collection . The piece was photographed flat on the floor.
IMAGE 16 SIZE 40 INCHES X 20 INCHES
In lifting up the previous image from the floor it became apparent that a slide/ transparency effect could be achieved by holding the image up to the light. It is particularly effective in the muslin tissue samples and those sketches done on lightweight paper.
tTime taken 25 hours

mockjacket

Saturday, 29 October 2011

mockups 4th assessment

IMAGE 1.Full size paper mockup of back of jacket.
Following your suggestions I have prepared this paper mockup of the back of the jacket in full size. Measurements are therefore --Centre Back Length 26ins, Back width at hip level 22 ins, Sleeve seam ( excluding cuffs 13 ins.)
Mock up shows actual size comparison between border fringe and back triangular panel, Actual size of dragonfly wings and actual size of sleeves. The sleeves have a much more lace like feel than the rest of the garment . The body of the sleeves will be made in screen printed fine organza in a patern to linked to the reed borders ,overlaid with lacy windmill sail panels. The fabric either side of the triangular panels will match that of the front panels and the reed border will surround the whole garment at hip level.
SIZE OF PANEL 15INS AT WIDEST PART AND 18 INS DEEP.
Following my original construction of the corded insert piece, this has now been dyed and overlaid with a green organza. The cording has been oversewn with narrow dyed ribbons to emphasise the lines and to achieve the 'aerial view' of broadland river, lake and meadow scenery The side border of the triangular panels, the segmented dragonfly bodies, has been made from a metallic fabric overlaid with an iridescent toning fabric. It was constructed from a rectangle of the two fabrics stitched together with long running stitches at 1.5 inch intervals . The piece was then gathered along these stitching lines and rolled into a 'sausage'.The gathered segments were then emphasised again with metallic threads wrapped along the stitching lines.
The sleeve sections show the initial screen printing of the organza fabric from which the sleeves will be constructed ,overlaid with paper windmill shapes , actual size. The panels between the sleeve and the dragonfly segmented bodies are filled with the fabric being used for the front panels,the bottom border here is still in paper format but is, again shown actual size.
IMAGE 3 DEVELOPMENT OF FABRIC FOR FRONT PANELS
Following on from my previous post, with the suggestion for using long silk fibres, this has now been further deveoped. The actual body shape of the front has been cut from green silk and a layer of a bondaweb type fabric. The long silk fibres have then been bonded to this by ironing under baking parchment. This gives a softer and suppler fabric to that achieved by a 'silk paper' process . Once the silk'sandwich' was in place a series of stitching and couched threads was laid over the surface and secured through all the layers.This has a number of purposes , both practical and artistic. The added stitching and couched threads gives added strength and durability to the fabric while the patterns achieved give a further feel of the local landscape.
The bottom edge is in the process of being worked with the reed border. The front paper edging , again in actual size, is a pattern for an assymetrical front border to be made by a felting process and dyed to match the colours in the main fabric. The sleeves show the same screen printed organza overlaid with paper windmill sails.

Wednesday, 12 October 2011

fourth assessment piece development

IMAGE 1 Original design for Broadland jacket IMAGE 2 Paper and paint mock up of central back triangular panel and lace sleeves
IMAGE 3
Paper and paint mock up of reed border,fabric for birds, fabric for lace sleeve panels and fabric for dragonfly wings.
Fabric for birds is made in silk paper.Fabric for dragon fly wings ispainted bondaweb on organdie. These will be hand-stitched with feather stitch. The fabric for the lace windmill sail panels is a scrim and muslin stiffened sandwich. The lace sail shape panels will be stitched with a wing needle to give an open work effect.
Image 4
Fabric and threads for front panels prior to stitching. Begining of placement for reed border.
Fabric for front panels is dyed long mulberry silk threads bonded onto a silk lining. The surface will then be stitched using a variety of toning threads.
IMAGE 5
Fabric for front panels and fabric for birds prior to cutting and stitching.
Bird shapes will be cut from the silk paper fabric , bonded on to stiff pelmet vilene and then mounted above the surface of the silk fibre fabric.