Our group, Fiber Art Fusion (formerly known as the Contemporary Quilt and Fiber Art Alliance but nobody liked the acronym for our website -- caqa or the formality of the name so we changed it a few months ago) met a few weeks ago. Our workshop was led by an incredible artist named Heidi Miracle-McMahill. She does wonderful work with watercolor crayons and utilizes her art on fabric. We all experimented with watercolor crayons on paper and then on fabric.
I decided to test different methods of using watercolor crayons on fabric and then to test colorfastness.
I gathered my supplies: Twinkling H2O's from LuminArte Inc.. a bottle of Delta Textile Medium and a set of watercolor crayons. I used 100% PFD cotton from Dharma. I mixed 1 Tablespoon of Textile Medium and 1 Cup of water.
WATERCOLOR CRAYON EXPERIMENT:
For my first experiment I colored on dry fabric,
then I used a brush and brushed on the Textile Medium/Water solution.
I let the piece air dry, then ironed for 30 seconds with a hot iron and pressing cloth.
I cut the piece in two and washed one piece in the washing machine in hot water.
You can see the color remained virtually the same. This was the most successful test.
For my second experiment I soaked the fabric in the Textile Medium/Water solution. Then I colored with watercolor crayons.
then I used a brush and brushed on the Textile Medium/Water solution.
I let the piece air dry, then ironed for 30 seconds with a hot iron and pressing cloth.
I cut the piece in two and washed one piece in the washing machine in hot water.
You can see the color almost the same, with the right side fading just slightly.
TWINKLING H2O's EXPERIMENT
Twinkling H2O's are little pots of watercolors which when used on paper give you great color and a lovely glittery shine.
For my first test, I painted the Twinkling H2O's on dry fabric, using the Textile Medium/Water solution as my water. (1 Tablespoon Textile Medium and 1 Cup water.)
I let the piece air dry, then ironed for 30 seconds with a hot iron and pressing cloth.
I cut the piece in two and washed one piece in the washing machine in hot water.
The color faded significantly but the sparkles were remaining. This was the most successful test.
For my second experiment I soaked the fabric in the Textile Medium/Water solution. Then I painted the Twinkling H2O's on using the Textile Medium/Water solution as my water.
I let the piece air dry, then ironed for 30 seconds with a hot iron and pressing cloth.
I cut the piece in two and washed one piece in the washing machine in hot water.
Not only did the color fade, but there seemed to be a total lack of sparkle.
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5 comments:
Ooo, I like the twinkles.
I've used the watercolor pencils on fabric before, particularlly on the faces of some of my dolls. It gives a nice soft result with fairly easy control.
Thanks for being the testing lab. I'm bookmarking this page.
Thank you so much for sharing this...I have both of these products...maybe I'll get to try this and compare my results within the next week or 2.
This is the first USEFUL page I've seen concerning watercolor on fabric. Thank you.
Thanks a bunch, I've got a short amount of time to play today and wanted to try my new watercolor crayons, BUT I'm in the mood to make a cushion and didn't know if it would stand up to washing.
Find this blog right away so now I can go play. Yay!
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