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Saturday, December 5th, 2009

printing on fabric – playing with surface design

October 24, 2007 by Chloe Findlay-Harder  
Filed under Home & Living

I’ve been printing on fabric for quite a few years now.  It’s amazing to see how you can transform an everyday piece of fabric into something spectacular – with not a lot of effort!

There are lots of different ways to print on fabric, but I tend to like the low-tech method of stamping or block printing.

I’m currently working on a series of garlands using this:

printed faery hieroglyph fabric

It’s taffeta printed with Lumiere fabric paint & my own hand-carved stamps.

I like to use this stuff:

It’s called “E-Z Cut Printing Blocks” and has the texture of a rubber eraser – but comes in big sheets.

You’ll also need these:

Lino cutters with a handle – I personally like the Speedball brand.

You draw an image onto the EZ Cut & then use the lino cutters to carefully cut out around the lines.  Everything that is removed becomes a blank area on the finished fabric.  An easy way to check how the print looks is to use a crayon and make a rubbing of the surface on a sheet of paper.

I use a foam brush to apply the paint to the surface of the stamp.  Carefully lay it on the fabric & press down to print.  Peel the stamp off carefully & voila!  You’ve made your own unique fabric!

If you don’t want to make your own stamps, foam stamps are great for printing on fabric.  Their simple lines usually print beautifully onto fabric.

Remember to use a fabric paint & to heat set it afterwards if you’re planning on washing the fabric after :-)

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Comments

5 Responses to “printing on fabric – playing with surface design”
  1. Very inspiring, Chloe. I’m going to refer my Quilting and Patchwork readers to this post.

  2. Anita says:

    Oh Chloe those fairies are amazing! And I have never seen those E-Z cut printing blocks. I’m certainly going to try them.

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Check out what others are saying about this post...
  1. [...] My daughter enjoys painting and dyeing fabric, creating original canvas, so to speak, for her quilting and fabric art work.  Chloe, at Tangled Thread, has a very interesting post, printing on fabric – playing with surface design. [...]

  2. [...] Chloe shows us how to turn ordinary fabric into something truly spectacular. [...]

  3. [...] Chloe shows us how to turn ordinary fabric into something truly spectacular. [...]



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