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Monday, December 26, 2011
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Friday, December 9, 2011
Screen Printing Applications
Since the human has been aware of Screen Printing as a printing technique and understood its techniques and tools, different application for such a technique has been evolving continuously. The first application, according to historians, is accredited to the cave man who used his hands as stencils to paint different shapes using the available tools at his environment. No one for sure knows the reason for these paintings as some presume they are for mere decorations while others suggest they are for some religious ceremonies.
A variant of this technique was used in ancient china for book printing. It used wooden blocks that have the letters shape and some decorative patterns. Such technique of printing facilitated the process of producing books in great numbers, as it was much faster and easier than the common used way of copying the books by hand, which consumed a lot of effort and time.
Another variant, where stencils of different materials and shapes were employed, was used for religious purposes. Religious images were printed in large numbers to be distributed over those who believe in that religion. Another application for the same variant was for decorating walls or other materials where different patterns were used repetitively to produce the required design.
And with the continuous development of Screen Printing, which was known first as silk screen, and its existence in a form that is close to its current form, new application started to evolve. This technique was used for printing textiles. It was mainly used for printing different colorful patterns over textiles which were used for the purpose of decoration.
During the First World War, this technique was used massively for the production of banners and flags which were requested in large numbers. And then Screen Printing was used for the production of expensive wall papers. But different artists noticed the different capabilities this technique has such as its repeatability and its capability of reproducing their designs. And they started to employ it in their expressive visual works.
And with the flourishing of the commercial advertising and the awareness of its importance, different advertising companies resorted to this technique for the production of advertisements. Their choice was as a result of the easiness of employing this technique for mass produced or repeated advertisements and its low cost. It was first used by chain shops to produce their banners and wall advertisements. And then, it was employed for the printing of different ads over buses, labels and CD covers. And by the continuous development, it was found that this technique can be used to print a multitude of materials no matter what size or shape they have. This encouraged different industries to make use of it such as textile, clothing, packaging and electronic industries.
And with a quick look around, many products that employ this technique can be found. Ads, wall papers, t-shirts, bags, caps and other different decorative items include prints that are screen printed.
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Saturday, December 3, 2011
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Thursday, December 1, 2011
Crafting a Rag Rug - How Recycling Vintage Fabrics Can be Lots of Fun!
In the nineteenth century, rag rugs were very popular with Shaker and Amish communities who believed in living a simple life and wasting nothing. Crafting these rugs was seen as a wonderful way of keeping busy, but in a leisurely, enjoyable kind of way, and with the added bonus of a beautiful, and useful, piece of artwork at the end of the process.
Because rag rugs were generally seen as utilitarian, and so got a lot of hard wear, very few remain from the nineteenth century. In some households these rugs were laid upside down, and only turned the right way up to reveal their clean, bright colours when visitors were expected. They were moved from room to room as they became more worn, eventually being relegated to the kitchen or even the dog's bed before ending life on the compost heap!
There were various methods of making rag rugs at that time. Early American settlers simply plaited strips of old cloth and coiled them round, rather like a giant seagrass table mat, whilst in Scandinavia they were handwoven on looms. Usually though, old jute feed sacks were used as a backing through which strips of fabric were hooked or prodded. Once the feed sack had been unpicked and washed, a design would be drawn upon it which varied in complexity depending upon the skill of the artist. It could be flowers, fruit, animals, geometric motifs or perhaps a simple message or Biblical text. The rags were then torn up, into short strips for prodded rugs and longer ones for hooked rugs, sewn into a single long strip if necessary.
Rag rugs fell out of fashion in the 1920s and their fall was complete with the introduction of fitted carpets after the Second World War. Today as we become much more conscious of the need to save and recycle, and more aware of the beauty of vintage crafts and fabrics, they are gaining in popularity once more.
If you want to try making a rag rug for yourself, do choose cotton or wool fabrics as synthetics attract dirt more. You can use any old fabric you have to hand, and it's a great way of recycling worn or outgrown clothing that really is beyond wear. Be sure to wash all your fabrics before you begin to ensure they don't shrink unevenly when you need to wash your rug.
You will need loosely woven fabric for your backing. If you are keen to recycle, then you can try to obtain old hessian sacks, but if you can't get hold of these, then hessian can be bought new quite easily. The only equipment you'll need is a rug hook or large crochet hook. You will find it's easier to handle your rug if you attach it to a rectangular frame. Don't be too ambitious to start with - for your first attempt go for a very easy design and a smallish size of rug so you don't become discouraged.
Once you've cleaned and hemmed your backing fabric, then draw your design directly onto it with a wax crayon. The rug is worked the right side up from side to side and top to bottom if you are using a frame, or from the centre outwards if you're working without a frame. Hold a strip of fabric beneath the hessian with one hand with one end at the place you want to begin. Then push your hook down through the hessian and pull the end of the strip up through the fabric. Make your next hold as near to the first as you can and bring up enough of your fabric strip to make a loop about 1 cm or 1/2 inch high. Continue until you reach the end of your fabric strip, pulling the end up and trimming it to the same length as your loops. Start your next strip in the same way as the first.
And that's it - it's really that easy! Good luck with your first rug, and I'm sure you'll find that reusing vintage fabrics is fun, as well as great for the environment.