This included bamboo leaves, hydrangea leaves and flowers, a rose flower and leaves, dill heads, Queen Anne's lace, nasturtium flowers, arborvitae branches, English ivy, canary grass, hops leaves and other bits of things. I used various papers I had on hand including water color paper, computer paper, rice paper, some old nearly translucent typing paper, and paper towels.
I sandwiched the plant matter in between folded sheets of paper. Stacked all the folded papers together, sandwiched those between two ceramic tiles. Tied the whole shebang together with wire, then put it all into a water bath to cover.
I also added a cup or so of vinegar and some rusty pieces of metal. I used my old dye pot, not something from my kitchen. I brought it to boil, then simmered it for a couple of hours on my wood stove. After cooling I began to unwrap my bundle. Oh my....
This is my favorite. Bamboo leaves on paper towel.
If you hold your mouse pointer over the pictures you will see what plant matter is used.
Another favorite, hops leaves on computer paper.
It was so much fun, and only took one day's work.
6 comments:
Oh you did it! These are really lovely. So interesting the various colors that come through, and all subtle and pleasing. I'm still skirting around the edges of this project- just not ready to do it, but love seeing what others have done. Some day. You had a wealth of flora to try it with. Nicely done.
What great results!!! Thanks for having the name(s) on your photo file...I'm sure you follow Nancy's blog (http://quiltnans.blogspot.com/) and you'll get some cool ideas on how to use these papers. Nancy is great at creating journals!
They're all keepers! Yesterday I used fabric I'd dyed years ago.
They don't go bad with age and these are magic!
Beautiful Jan! They turned out so cool. I’ll have to give it a try!
Great result. I've loads of comfrey, might have to try before they wither away. So great for the compost pile though.....I like using staghorn sumac and do it in an old cast iron pot inside my solar oven. Might be too chilly for that now. Could do it on the charcoal grill. Looking for some new journals? That would be fun. xox
Very interesting! I have never heard of this technique. I really like the subtle shading and batik look the plant give.
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