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Saturday, February 14, 2009

and now some digital work

digi background lace

This post was the prelude to the postcard pictured here. The seamless pattern created in the tute was printed on tyvek and then stamped over in some parts with metallic paint.
Over the week i got a message from Arlee in which she generously offered to share some pages on lace embroidery which i very gladly accepted. The embroidery is well above my present skills, but nonetheless, it gave me some ideas and a new direction.
And here's the latest on the lace chronicles.

The week has flown between studying Japanese and joining teams and further exploring Etsy and it's possibilities. It is a lot more than a venue for virtual shops, that's just the surface. Lots of time also spent on Facebook trying to sort things out. Feels like having a 9 to 5 without a paycheck. LOL!

dw-scarf
In planet weaving the scarf was finished 2 weeks ago, but i' mot cutting it until i finish the rest of the warp.This is called discipline and also trying to weave something for the complex weavers study group i'm in before i get kicked out for not submitting a project .
i feel i need a dyeing distraction session :)


neki desu



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Friday, February 13, 2009

helping hand



Both Vero and Annica gave me the helping hands award for which i'm truly grateful. Makes me feel good that in my own small way i can contribute to the on line community giving back some of what i get from it.

Here is how it works;select 10 bloggers, 5 you consider your Helping Hand
and then Pay it Forward to 5 additional new bloggers, in support and encouragement for their efforts.

My turn now:Helping Hands
Jude, Glennis, Elisabeth Marshall,the Missus, Ruth Mclaughlin

Pay Forward: most of them are not new in blogland, but helpful nonetheless.
Bhakti, Sandra, Cally ,Leigh ,Deepa


neki desu


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Tuesday, February 10, 2009

creating seamless patterns




The P program has endless filters that you can play and be happy with. But you can go beyond and create your own seamless pattens. Note that the pattern generator filter in filters creates patterns but you can see where the tiles meet, therefore they are not seamless.

There are many ways of creating a seamless pattern.
You can start from scratch with an image do the tessellations and build it up.
There are also plug ins that do all the dirty work for you, so why not take advantage.
i'll show you how to use a nice little plug in that helps you with the task and it works with CS onwards. This mini tute presupposes you know the basics of how to handle the P program.
  • First go to mehdi and download kaleidoscope.2 plug in. While there browse around as there are many cool and useful plugs ins.
  • save it in a folder in filters.
  • go to file new and make it 300x300 px.
  • then you can draw simple shapes or scan an image.
We'll concentrate on a scan here to narrow down the possibilities into a manageable tute.
  • get your image and copy it to the 300x300 px file you created.
  • make any adjustment you wish.
  • flatten layers.
  • go to filters and look for kaleidoscope.click to open
  • change settings by working with the sliders until you find something you like.
  • adjust pattern size to desired by clicking the bar under the picture.
  • click save.
  • check pattern by creating a new file let's say 800px
  • go to define pattern in the edit menu and click.
  • use the food fill .voila!! seamless pattern background!


i'm presently working with lace and here's a rough run of my process in pictures.




(apologies for the last picture.a glitch prevents me from uploading one w/out th white border (GRRRR)

This is the base for many surface design techniques.
You can then print the background to any substrate, make a thermo fax screen or simplify the image and carve stamps.

Hope this is useful to ya'll :-)


neki desu









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