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The current theme on the Artful Ideas group is 'Fabric Atc - Vintage Ladies'
The image was transferred onto cotton fabric with Golden Gel Medium, then stitched down with lace and ribbon. The ric rac and flowers are felt.
A page from my Image Transfer Art Journal - an image printed on fabric using an inkjet printer. www.linda-matthews.com/tag/image-transfer-art-journal/
My first! Well, really my second because this is a resend! This one turned out better than the first!
A page from my Image Transfer Art Journal - an image printed on textured paper using an inkjet printer. www.linda-matthews.com/tag/image-transfer-art-journal/
Four shrink plastic pins and three sets of buttons (2 polymer clay image transfer, one shrink plastic) I created for another crafter in the March 2011 Birthday Swap on Craftster.org.
images from around the recipient's house, the virgin mary hanging in the front room, and the porch and front entrance.
blogged here!
Etsy seller Ephemera Obscura kindly donated a bunch of vintage photos for our party. Seattle Handmade donated floss and needles. We know the best people.
I think this is my favorite of the image transfer projects. A library on one side and a fire on the other. The overlap makes it seem like that library is in trouble! (not that I'm into burning books - it was just really creative)
This is a little goofy, but we were doing various exercises to get the energy up in this session (one of my earliest with one of my most consistent models, A co-worker, I photographed at work.)
Series of solid polymer clay pendants made with image transfers of strange creatures I've created in GIMP. Pendants are reversible, and will be strung permanently on buna cord with polymer clay bead closures glued on. At least one of these will be made into a men's necklace.
These pendants are made in many stages. For those interested these are:
1) Create image in GIMP and print on transfer paper.
2) Bake transfer with paper until barely set, not a full bake.
3) Cool fully. Make an image for the back side, join with the front image and bake lightly again.
4) Sand through several grits of paper, buff with jeweler's lathe.
5) Frame and build the bail out of black clay. bake again for a full cycle. Quench in ice water when they come out of the oven after this baking.
6) After cooling, I coat them with several coats of acrylic before stringing.
These are labor-intensive, and I can see that the images aren't going to be everyone's cup of tea, but I like them a lot and am having fun making these. Ultimately, that is all that counts.