Nan, mais il est pas trop mignooooon mon Miffy dans sa petite boîte ?? On dirait une photo de calendrier de la poste ! Il a été sympa il ...
Plonger dans l'univers de la sérigraphie artisanale a été une aventure riche en émotions et en découvertes pour moi. Après des mois d'apprentissage autodidacte, parsemés d'échecs et de succès, le moment est enfin venu de partager mes réalisations. Ce processus créatif a non seulement renforcé ma détermination mais m'a également…
Comment faire des pochoirs de sérigraphie. Si vous savez comment faire des pochoirs de sérigraphie, vous pourrez faire des créations uniques pour des clients ou simplement pour votre propre plaisir. Ces pochoirs peuvent être faits de trois...
Siebdruck selber machen ohne Sieb - geht das? Einen DIY Siebdruck könnt Ihr mit einem Feinstrumpf selber machen! Und mit Kleber erstellt Ihr Euch einen wiederverwendbaren Stempel.
Si la sérigraphie vous intéresse, il vous faut obligatoirement un cadre spécialement conçu à cette fin. Nous vous proposons de le fabriquer vous-même à peu d...
Je vais ouvrir un atelier de retouches et de couture et j’envisage de proposer à ma clientèle un service supplémentaire, en créant des tee-shirts ou autres vêtements avec des motifs personnalisés. Je voudrais savoir s’il existe un kit de « survie » pour pouvoir créer en boutique des produits de ce type. Je voudrais quelque chose de […]
Aujourd’hui on fera plutôt un lundi broderie, ça fait longtemps. Et comme vous avez été nombreux à me le demander sur Instagram, voici un pas à pas pour faire des impressions sur tissu, et en…
A handprinted screenprint with the text 'ARE WE THERE YET?' printed in black on a vintage thick poster from a dutch driving school. Part of my series of upcycled screenprints! Perfect for floatmounting. Please not that because this is a vintage poster it has marks on it, which is part of the charm :-)
I 've seen a lot of easy screen printing set up in my time but this has to be the easiest and most genius. Heather over at Skinny Laminx ...
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Learn how to create multicolored prints with ease! Our step-by-step tutorial shows you how.
keeping it DIY... my hand-made one-color press I'd been itching to design and print my own line of shirts from age 10, and now as a l...
DIY Tea towels you can make using blank tea towels or flour sack towels. You can paint on them, dye them or even sew them. So many diy tea towel ideas. Have you ever tried to customize a tea towel? There are so many different ways to do it. I have tried a couple but now I want to try even more. Check out all these ideas and see if there is one you want to try today. All of these are fairly simple and quick to do. A perfect afternoon craft project. These Striped Watercolor Napkins are very fun and can be made with a variety of colors. These seersucker tea towels are so fun and can be made with a different patterns. And these marble ones are amazing! These are dip dyed napkins but I imagine they'd perfect to do with tea towels. These painted tea towels are so easy to make and fun to do. Shibori Tea towels would be a fun way to try shibori tying I love these citrus printed tea towels. These nature printed towels are so fun as well. A fun idea to use animal or insects stamps on a tea towel to add a little charm to your kitchen. I made these snap leather towel holders which are perfect to hold up those tea towels. This applique tea towel is adorable and a fun way to use up old favorite scrap of fabric. And these painted tree towels are so easy and simple to do. This post may contain affiliate links. Thanks for supporting Sisters, What!
Learn how to make a beginner friendly Cyanotype print using the sunlight in our complete guide to making a DIY cyanotype print.
When I tell people I'm a printmaker, it's often followed by the question, "What's that?" My short and sweet answer is that it's playing with big stamps. In truth, it's so much more than that. When you start learning about prints, the jargon, techniques, and terms can be overwhelming—photogravure, pochoir, serigraph, mezzotint, collagraph, linocut. And that's just scratching the surface (pun intended, for all you fellow printers). But when you break it down, all of these fancy names and techniques fall into just a few categories. There are four main categories for traditional printmaking: relief, intaglio, lithography, screenprint. I would say that digital printing is the modern fifth category as well. I'm not sure where this image originated, but I love how concisely it visually represents these four categories. If you would like to learn more about how all of this printmaking business works, MoMA has a super interactive guide that walks you through the basics for each process.
Knowing how to Screen Print is the gold standard for DIYers. Popularized in the '60s by artists like Warhol, this easy skill gives you DIY cred. Learn how!