Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Peony Scarf

 

     This project began in 2009 when I drew my peony template.  I had this marvelous plan to make a stunning scarf of the many petaled flower which flourished in my families garden, until my home was demolished in 2012.  Over the weekend, my Mother told me that she remembered where she got our peonies as they were not purchased in any store.  The story goes that my Mother went over to an old doctors office in the neighborhood, as it had been gutted and left in between ownership, and she took the peonies which were planted there.  She saved them and then transplanted them into her own garden along side our home.  Recycled and tended to with care, the flowers were split many times over the 20+ years they thrived in our garden.  With fond memories of the lush electric pink peonies which bloomed without fail, I desired to create a scarf which would reflect all of their glory.



      The template, the plain drawing, took me three days to complete.  I originally wanted to make the scarf without a boarder; however, anyone with any experience with silk painting knows that to paint a white scarf ANY colour at all, and keep that colour even and flawless over large areas is practically impossible.  Therefore, I split my painting up using the leaves of the peony and the boarder.  Until I master the art of painting larger areas without flaw, I will use the boarder to help the transition.



      The above photo is three days worth of painting.  As I have listed before in my blog, resist cannot keep on the silk longer than five days.  The longer is sits, the more the wax within the product spreads, thus making it difficult for the dye to hug the resist lines.  Something which I was experiencing into day two of my painting.


     In the end, this scarf was a marvel.  I have not yet steamed it and I am a little concerned with it's welfare; that is why I took so many pictures of it.  This is the scarf where I have broken all of the rules of silk painting.  I have not purchased any new supplied since 2010, they are expensive and I have lots and lots of the old ones.  The problem with my particular silk dyes is that they are advertised to last only two years on the shelf.  For mine, it's been at least five.  As for the resist, I purchased and did not open 1L of resist in 2011.  It has been three years, and when I finally opened it, there were little flecks of mould growing in it at the lid seal.  I have shaken up all of my dyes and stirred up my resist, and the below picture is my final result.


  
     Peony scarf: 15" x 72".  I have broken every rule in the silk painters book with this one and I am excited to see what it turns out like.  In the end, I am very satisfied with how it turned out and I hope to make many more in the future. 

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Finally: New Dahlia Designs

   
 Dahlia: 12"x12"


      It has been so long since I have updated this blog!.  Finally, after four years I can, hopefully, ignite my passion for silk painting again.  For four years I have been thinking and dreaming up different patterns in a variety of sizes.  Now, they are beginning to make their way to paper and I could not be happier.  Still the same subject matter, in honour of my parent's garden; however, I have some ideas to spin.  These are the first templates with the last of the paper I bought seven years ago.  The new paper lacks tooth, which is a little bit of a disappointment; but, I'm sure I'll get used to it.  I look forward to sharing the finished products with you.  Keep your fingers crossed.

Dahlia: 31"x 31"


Dahlia:  10"x 55"





Friday, February 10, 2012

Everything Zen

Have you ever worked really hard at something and then after you spent all that time, effort, and love you stood back and realized what a colossal mistake it was?. I think that this scarf pretty much sums that experience up for me.

A part of my process when I design a painting is colour matching. After I purchased all of my dyes, I made colour swatches for them and super glued them to the caps of the corresponding dye bottles. This was to ensure that I had an accurate estimation of what the saturation was of the dye.

When the resist has set and I am ready to paint, I always pull out my dyes and carefully colour match as best I can. I line up all of the bottles that I have chosen, and when I am confident that the colours will look good together, I begin.

However, there is one thing that I cannot account for - BLENDING. When I was in high school, one of the exorcises we had to complete in painting class was blending our own tints, shades, and hues of colours with only three paints. You know those colour swatches on the bottom of your cereal box?. Yup, those are what we had to use in order to come up with over 140 colours (plus white for the tints). It was a FANTASTIC exorcise, and I think the one that I did which really gave me confidence and understanding of colour. Unfortunately, liquid silk dyes are not student grade acrylic paints and are unpredictable.

Some dyes are more dominant than others and that means that the more dominant dye colours will cling to the silk better than the non-dominant. This scarf is a perfect example of that. The yellows I chose for the dahlia were Bright Yellow and Yellow with a little bit of Citron Green. My ratio of Yellow was low and Bright Yellow was high so that the deep yellow would not overpower the Bright. But, when it came time to steam and wash, the darker yellow didn't hold. I lost the boldness of the yellow and the result is a washed out looking yellow Dahlia.

You can imagine how upset I was when I saw this. This scarf took me hours and hours and I went over each petal several times with different brush thicknesses to get the desired effects. My low back was killing me after bending over for so long and my feet ached like I'd been walking for hours. After all of that care, and love, it didn't turn out.

This is one of the scarves which didn't sell. I see it as a failure, which as an artist we are taught to never admit. You are always to brazenly push your art upon a viewer with no apologies!. This scarf I do regret. The design held special meaning to me as my family used to run a seasonal flower business. The business is how I got through College. I was, "The Flower Girl". Every summer from the age of 16-19, our family set up shop on the corner of Oxford and Wharncliffe Rd. N in London, ON and we would sell Gladioli and Dahlias. Dahlia's were my Dad's favorite flowers, and the Yellow one was his absolute favorite. It's blossoms could grow larger than your face. When this scarf didn't turn out how I had wanted it to, I was so upset.

This scarf taught me a valuable lesson about being extra cautious about choosing your dyes. It also opened my eyes to accepting things beyond your control, which is something I have trouble with.

In my day job there is always a "right" and "wrong" way of doing a drawing or executing an animation. It's always your fault when what you do isn't good enough because you can always erase and make it better. In this art form, you have NO control over the outcome. Sure you can recognize which dyes work which ways, but as for the final result, you will never know until the piece is ironed.

Even though I view this as a failure, I still think that it's a marvelous piece in parts. I'm happy I learned more about blending with dyes when I painted this. Now, I know to not get too emotionally attached to what I am doing and try accept that the chips will fall where they may.





Saturday, December 17, 2011

Victorian Clematis

Growing up the daughter of avid gardeners with green thumbs, I never saw this variety of Clematis. On East the side of the house grew the "Blue" Clematis (I will never understand why in the world of botany everything purple is called "Blue". I'm guessing it's because that's what hue the colour is leaning toward - But, not even blue berries are blue. They're PURPLE!!. Ahem, moving on...), but my parents never grew the white.

After completing this scarf, I was shocked at how many people commented they enjoyed the colour scheme. It reminds me of Victorian wall paper. I can picture a dark library with a wood burning fire place and kerosene lamps catching the glint of the white clematis through a pipe tobacco haze.

The lady who purchased the scarf from me was a background/layout painter where I worked. She has been painting backgrounds for many, many years and it was a huge complement to me that she liked what I painted. Compared to my other scarves, this one does have an air of sophistication and old world class.

I guess I could add this to my, "Evening at the Opera" collection of scarves.












Thursday, December 15, 2011

El Dorado

This is a marriage made. My passion for animation meets my lust for fine art. When I was in high school, my classmates would always tell me how much patience I had. Many commented that they could never possess the patience that it would take to complete a painting like this.

El Dorado was meant to be outlined in gold. I have the foil, and I could still do it. But, I have bigger plans for another scarf of this magnitude which will be dripping in gold foil outline. The art of Dreamworks "Road to El Dorado" was fantastic. This scarf is my homage to that brilliant animated film and was an immense challenge to paint. I still feel very strongly that it's an evolutionary shortcoming to have only two arms.

Thankfully, a good friend of mine had downloaded all of, "Agatha Christie's Poirot", and I spent three days painting away and listening to that funny little Belgian solve crimes and teach me how to open a mango.

El Dorado - 12" x 72".







The War of the Roses

I haven't painted in months. It's my art therapy, and I love it so much. Animation is my life, but when I'm not animating this is what I LOVE to do. IF my whole life worked out to be perfect, this is what I would do day in and out. Painting is so amazing, and if I could ever enter craft shows with enough inventory I would.

This is a new scarf you haven't seen yet:

"Rose" Scarf - 11" x 60"




Tuesday, September 29, 2009

New Scarves


Yes, I have finally updated my Blog! Here are some new scarves for you to see.
Again, all of them are totally available for purchase.




Orchid scrarf- 8" x 48"




































Belle scarf- 8" x 48"




























Hibiscus scarf- 8" x 48"




































Hollyhock scarf-11" x 60"








































Blazing Dahlia scarf- 11" x 60"
































Georgia Iris- 8" x 48"