Thursday, August 27, 2020

Getting it wrong to get it right

 


Throughout history discoveries have been made unintentionally. The English metallurgist Harry Brearley discovered stainless steel by accident and Alexander Flemming's accidental discovery of penicillin change the course of medicine.

On a more humble level my experiments in colouring fabric have led, by accident, to the discovery of an amazingly resilient colourant. To mark out a pattern on white voile I used a stick of yellow pastel in the belief that it would wash out afterwards. After all, pastel is the most difficult of all artists' media to preserve. But try as I may, my yellow lines would not wash out. This led me to try working designs directly in pastel. 

The opening picture is a selection of attempts ranging from batik to painting with the dyes you see on the pallet. The picture below is of a design first sketched with a  permanent black marker and then coloured with pastel.


The final image shows the effect of light penetrating the semi-transparent fabric.



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