When I
reviewed my embroidery samples, I realised that my colours appeared flat
because they were pre dyed synthetic fabrics. In weave, I was keen to add even
minimal shifts of shades to differentiate the way that the texture of the yarn
affects the appearance of the colour throughout. I learnt that you do not need
to change colours drastically to achieve depth within the sample and imagery.
Although
I worked individually, it was very useful to have group critics on my work
because it enabled me to look and explore various processes and takes on the
same brief. I found my group tutorials had a big affect on the progress of my
work. From my first tutorial I was advised to broaden my colour palette and to
do a more extensive range of drawings for my visual research.
Some examples of my samples before I broadened my colour palette. |
My contextual research was vital to my understanding of the uses of and variety in passimentrie. I looked across the art platforms to inform my visual research. Piet Mondrian's style of drawing the structure of trees informed my mark making, and transformed my drawings from being solid blocks of colour to now having contrasting marks and colours, which I found particularly useful for my woven passimentrie. My new visual research had movements of vivid colour being revealed from a darker shade. I found that darker yarns with small sections of vibrant ones lift the whole sample. I placed these vibrant colours in occasionally to prevent the pattern from looking to regimented, because my drawings are loose with sudden moments of colour.
Acrylic painted Sketch book page with a woven sample inspired by this page. |
I experimented
with dyes and colour transfer processes, which were not always successful
due to the synthetic materials I had used in my samples on. The dye would lift from the synthetic ribbon but the threads stayed to the original colour. The threads dyed in the dye baths, however the ribbons colour didn't really take, the colours went moody. This did give some depth to my flatter samples, but was still disappointing, in reflection I should have used natural materials.
This then affected my fabric choices to using mainly natural fabric like wool and linen in my embroidery samples so that I would have the option of reprocessing them if I wanted to. I decided that my process of practice works more efficiently when I construct a pattern instead of embellishing readily patterned fabrics. It was easier to create embroidery samples after I had a body of weave pattern designs to influence my work. I chose chenille yarn to use in my weave because it empathised the linking structure of the pattern more prominently due to it being a thicker yarn. To relate my embroidery samples to my weave samples I enlarged key moments in the patterns formed in the weave, with flocked ribbon and mock suede because they resembled the chenille well.
This then affected my fabric choices to using mainly natural fabric like wool and linen in my embroidery samples so that I would have the option of reprocessing them if I wanted to. I decided that my process of practice works more efficiently when I construct a pattern instead of embellishing readily patterned fabrics. It was easier to create embroidery samples after I had a body of weave pattern designs to influence my work. I chose chenille yarn to use in my weave because it empathised the linking structure of the pattern more prominently due to it being a thicker yarn. To relate my embroidery samples to my weave samples I enlarged key moments in the patterns formed in the weave, with flocked ribbon and mock suede because they resembled the chenille well.
Woven samples. In the middle; chenille yarn with larger proportions. On the right; chenille yarn with ribbon weft. |
During
this project, I have learnt a new technique, which with additional time I would
have chosen to develop. This was a combination of a weave and embroidery
technique, where you create a warp that is bound together with a dissolvable
fabric and stitch. With this process, I would have liked to make my own ribbon
that I would have embroided down on to fabric with the 21 braiding foot. This
could have given me more control over colour and would have been an interesting
way to combine weaves into embroidery.
Overall,
I am pleased with the progress of my work through Unit X. Generally, I have
stuck to the concept of roller coaster structures and linking shapes. I have
learnt that my embroidery approach is stronger when I construct new patterns on
the fabric. I feel that my embroidery samples improved after I had woven my
weave samples. I feel that it was because of the strong pattern of linking
shapes in the double cloth warp structure. My weave samples provided me with
compositional ideas and colours that I then reflected in my embroidery samples.
I am pleased I progressed from my original
colour pallet, because my newer varied colours allowed my compositions to have
moments of contrasting colour to show that the pattern isn't too regimented. I
feel that my colour palette has been the biggest challenge to overcome through
unit X. In the beginning I trapped myself in a limited palette, which affected
my visual research that was feeding my ideas for embroidery processing. I think
that I managed to overcome this problem by introducing complementary and
contrasting colours to the red hues.
I am also aware that
synthetic fabric will not dye very well so I decided to use natural linens and
wool fabrics to allow me to experiment with dying and heat transfer
processes.
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