I don't think I'm giving anything away about this technique by letting you know the colour bases for the different effects. First coffee
These are (expired) food colouring
I had to have another session trying some more delicate colours with Tsukineko inks I had been gifted a couple of years ago.
And then a third session from a bonus lesson with Ricki Midbrod...cos fabric! I used the same inks above combined with the coffee to grunge them up. And then we had another bonus lesson with Tiffany Sharpe where she shared more tips I had to try : different fabric play where you get dyed paper and fabric from one process
It's great to have so many options with colours that co-ordinate and also have different values of light to dark. So lucky I've been on holiday and could get so deep into these techniques.
Taking a photo of the tags reminded me of the tag project Liz shared in the Free Fodder challenge in July last year which I didn't have time for. I also modified the lesson from Karen Elaine to make a pocket fodder book that could work with larger tags. All those July lessons are also available if you join Fodder School 2.
And here's a video of the entire book - I love the sounds of the paper and tagsYou may have seen that the title of this post is Part 1. I will share again when I use the piles of goodness to create the project - less than a week until those lessons drop. I'm sure you'll also see these elements appearing in my other work. You can still join us in Fodder School and/or Liz has a class and a book (available Feb 2023 - currently you can pre-order) where you can explore some of these techniques (although lessons in Fodder school had a unique spin I believe). What a fabulous way to start the year with so much inspiring colour and texture.
Love the video
ReplyDeleteI love the sound the paper makes!
DeleteDeep into it, indeed! You have some fantastic pieces for your project. I love the deep color you got with food coloring. So far I bought an iron to sacrifice to the process and worked on the corrugated material. But you've inspired me to get to it!
ReplyDeleteThere are so many possibilities and I adore that we can use the techniques on fabric too. I look forward to seeing what you do
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