There is more depth to De's artwork than we realise. Each piece has its own journey from simply an inspiration through to a masterpiece. The texture basics range itself has its own story and De shares this with us below.
Check out De's website https://www.degillett.com.au
I was tutoring a 5 day textures and inking workshop, and one of my lovely students turned up with a length of book binding tape, called cobweb tape. We discovered that we could either glue it down to create a texture on the canvas, or, to preserve this marvellous resource, we could push texture paste through it, using it like a stencil. She gave me a piece to take home, and all was well with my world. Well, apart from it being only an inch and a half wide. That was awkward, working as I do on canvases up to 60 inches wide!
But alas, the tape really didn’t stand up to the rigours of repeated washing. After a few weeks with my precious little bit of tape, it was unusable. What to do? Sadly, I retired it. Years passed…
Enter the wondrous tool that is a Silhouette Cameo stencil cutting machine… With a $430 price tag, I had resisted the urge to buy one of these the minute I heard about them. Eventually, the lure proved too much, and I succumbed. After all, I couldn’t actually buy the stencils I wanted. What was a girl to do?
I wanted informal, suggestive patterns that were open to be interpreted in many ways, not the readily available formal mandalas and fleur-de-lis.
1. I taped down my precious length of cobweb tape to a black surface, and scanned it. Then I visually repaired the woven holes I didn’t want (too small), echoed and mirrored and repeated the patterns until I had what I needed.
I love the way that the very high quality of Kennard and Kennard fabrics captures every nuance and depth of my highly textured paintings on fabric, and I’m looking forward to wearing some of these fabrics myself! This art business would appear to be a long, long game with many side-tracks and byways, and I love every minute of it. I hope you enjoy sewing with these Texture basics as much as I enjoyed making them.