A great article from Cloth,Paper,Scissors for those of us who add or are starting to add fabric to designs! What I especially love is the comment at the very end of the article in reply to the writer's 7th grade home ec teacher telling her that using fusible webbing was "cheating." How silly! In our art classes, we often use a template to help encourage new painters to enjoy the experience of painting. As they take more art lessons, the desire to "hand draw" their subject matter comes naturally and without the guilt that someone is always too ready to impart! Art is fun. Let everyone enjoy it at their own level and pace :-)
Don't Stitch, Just Press and
Go
When I first came to work at what
was then Quilting Arts, I heard a lot about WonderUnder®. I honestly thought it
was some kind of bra for about a week. Turns out (for those of you as clueless
as I was), it's a brand of fusible web that holds two textiles together, instead
of stitching, for quilting and other fabric art.
The only personal experience I had
with a product like this was Stitch Witchery®. I used this fusible tape in 7th
grade to hem my skirts. I thought I was clever, but my home ec teacher
criticized me, as she considered it “cheating.”
Imagine my delight in discovering that in art quilting, fusing was not only not frowned upon, it was encouraged! Fusing fabric makes it easy to appliqué or create a fabric collage without having to stitch a million little seams. You just press your fabric into place. Well, it's almost that easy. Each fusible product works slightly differently, so it's important to read the manufacturer's instructions. And you want to match the fusible to the fabric. WonderUnder and similar products work well for cotton fabrics. MistyFuse™, a gossamer fusible with no backing paper, works best for sheer or lightweight fabrics, such as silk. In her comprehensive book Vibrant Quilt Collage: A Spontaneous Approach to Fused Art Quilts, artist and author Bethan Ash offers tips on how to get the best results from fabric fusing. Here are some I think are most helpful.
Once you have your fabric fused,
you can use the series of simple hands-on exercises in Vibrant Quilt Collage to help you develop your instincts
for free-cut and fused fabric collage.
I call that “liberating,” not
“cheating”! |
No comments:
Post a Comment