Week one has helped give my work a push in the right
direction to develop on from the summer project into a grounded weave project.
On day one I was feeling particularly lost, and as though my work had come to
and “end”.
After looking through my sketchbook for inspiration for my
warp I was particularly interested in one group of drawings (vertical lines,
soft edges, patches of colour, space between colour)
From these drawings I have decided on making a warp that
contained isolated sections to be either dip-dyed or painted with dye. I will
also be making another smaller warp to add on a separate beam to create a pique
weave, inspired by the wavy lines in my drawings. I have made a choice to use
undyed mercerised cotton as I have preferred to use this yarn in previous work
due to the strength of the yarn. I thought that mercerised cotton should be
relatively straight forward to dye.
As I am new to dyeing, having only had a health and safety
induction to the dye lab last year, I decided to first test out the different
coloured dyes on some smaller hanks of the mercerised cotton. This turned out
to be an excellent idea as I soon discovered that I was not very talented at
mixing up the correct colours. My first hank turned out to be a completely
wrong; brown came out purple and black turned blue. Once this hank was
transferred onto a cone, however, I actually thought that it looked a lot
better, despite not being true to my colour palette.
On Friday I left three more hank tests drying in the dye lab
to be picked up on Monday.
From my experimentation in the dye lab I have learnt that it
isn’t as straight forward as I first thought, I definitely need more practice
and will need to test the dye on a smaller hank before sacrificing my warp to
be dyed incorrectly!
***** Need to scan drawings from sketchbook and add photo of first dyed hank on cone *****
330 words
330 words
No comments:
Post a Comment