Showing posts with label dryer lint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dryer lint. Show all posts

Thursday, May 1, 2008

2008 Weekly Mixed Media Project


Spring is definitely here in eastern Massachusetts. The forsythia is in full bloom, and the trees have leaves budding and starting to open. We had a number of very dark grey rainy days recently, that had thick white clouds in contrast to the grey sky. I wanted to recreate it for my eighteenth Weekly Mixed Media piece this year. Above is the front side and below the back.




To begin, I cut a piece of black wool felt fabric, that was about 10" x 10". On top of that, I placed a piece of dryer lint that had various colors of grey, mixed in with other colors, as well as small pieces of a tissue that had shredded in the wash.


On top of the dryer lint, I placed four pieces of a shaggy green and blue yarn. To enhance the small pieces of a tissue, I scattered tiny pieces of cut white yarn and also tiny pieces of what I think had been a dryer sheet, that was included in my gift bag of fiber scraps from the Lowell Fiber Studio, which I blogged about last week. For the forsythia, I used left over cut yellow pieces of yarn and wool felt from last week's mixed media piece and I scattered all of them on the dryer lint, below the white pieces. For the tree leaves, I cut a similar amount of pieces of two shades of green wool felt.


Next, I placed a piece of black bridal netting on top of everything to hold it down. The reason I did this was, last week after posting my forsythia piece, I got an email from a very nice reader of my blog, who told me about a needle felting website that described using netting when felting tiny pieces. The purpose is to stop the pieces from bouncing around, and getting stuck in the needles, as it did last week. It's almost impossible to see the netting in the above picture, but it is there. Believe me.

After I made this "sandwich" of lint/yarn/felt and netting, I needle punched everything in place, from the top down, making many passes over the whole thing to felt it well. In the process, the netting shredded, but that added to the really neat texture that occurred. I like the tiny holes in the felted dryer lint. If this piece was all wool, more mainly wool, I could wash it to remove the tiny holes, but I don't dare wash it with the dryer lint in it, no matter how felted it is.

After the felting was complete, I cut the piece down to 6" square. Then I sewed branches coming in to from the sides, using my sewing machine and black tread, sewing over the "branches" a few times to darken then up.


I apologize for this is a horribly out of focus picture. The needle guard is not in place (for this photo only!), but I wanted to share that by using the netting, only one tiny piece got stuck in the needles, and none jumped off the unfelted piece. Big improvement from last week, when many got stuck or bounced off.

You can see my 2008 weekly mixed media work (so far) on my website, and read about my process/progress here on my blog.

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Dryer Lint


The colors of my family's dryer lint change when my son is home on his winter break.

Monday, November 26, 2007

Dryer lint


I want to share another dryer lint sample I have. Why dryer lint? Because it's fun and unusual to work with.

You can read more dryer lint posts on my blog by clicking here.

There are two projects that include using dryer lint in my book The Uncommon Quilter. I hope that anyone who reads my book and creates either the two dryer lint projects, or there own versions, will email me to share their results. I'd love to see them. I can be reached at jeanne@jeannewilliamson.com.

Monday, October 1, 2007

Dryer lint


I'm posting dryer lint once a week for the countdown to the October 9th publication date of my book The Uncommon Quilter.

Dryer safety is very important. I clean my lint trap out after a few loads, not every one. If it is about to get thick and dense, I clean it immediately. Some would argue that not cleaning it after every dryer load is dangerous, but my understanding is what is most dangerous is the lint that accumulates in the vent. (To learn about dyer safety click here.)


If you clean your trap after each load, you can still have fun with your dryer lint. Carefully remove the lint from the trap. Lay it on a flat surface, and add layers of different colored lint on top of each other as you accumulate them. In The Uncommon Quilter, I have a project called "Dryer Lint Sandwich" (shown above) on page 133. The instructions explain how to cut through the different layers, and make a quilt with it. This quilt is made of three very thin layers of lint. Light grey is on the bottom, bright blue in the middle, and black is on top.

You can read more dryer lint posts on my blog by clicking here.

Monday, September 24, 2007

Dryer lint


I'm posting dryer lint once a week for the countdown to my October 9th publication date of my book The Uncommon Quilter.

A few people have asked me why my dryer lint looks the way it does, and if I plan it. No I don't plan it. I wear a ton of black, which makes black or grey dryer lint, and I wash my red bath mats every other week. I also separate my colors when I do laundry, so the dark, light and red lint are added in layers. That seems to have an effect on the look of my lint.

You can read more dryer lint posts on my blog by clicking here.

Monday, September 17, 2007

Dryer lint


I've been collecting dryer lint samples, and here is one of best I have taken out of my own dryer. I'm posting dryer lint once a week for the countdown to the October 9th publication date of my book The Uncommon Quilter. Why dryer lint? There are two projects in the book that show how to make small quilts using dryer lint.

You can read more dryer lint posts on my blog by clicking here.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

The Uncommon Quilter and dryer lint


In one month, my book The Uncommon Quilter will be released. Inside the book are two projects that include using dryer lint as a design element in small quilts. To celebrate dryer lint, and the countdown to my October 9th publication date, I'm going to post some examples I've removed from my dryer's lint trap, over the next few weeks.

The first sample is the first piece of lint that caught my eye in 1986. My son, who is now 21 years old, was in need of fall overalls when he was 10 months old. Clothing choices for baby boys was not good back then, so I decided to sew a number of multi-colored corduroy overalls for him. This dryer lint is the result of pre-shrinking the half dozen or so pieces of corduroy. I loved the little specks of corduroy in the lint, and saved it along with other baby memorabilia.

On August 20th, I made a blog entry about one of the dryer lint quilts in my book, and the inspiration behind it. Click here to read the entry.

Monday, August 20, 2007

The Uncommon Quilter


The seed pods that are now hanging from my neighbor's tree remind me of the small quilt I made about them exactly three years ago. The quilt is made with dryer lint and crayon rubbed fabric. You can read about the quilt, and see the instructions about how to make it, on page 106 in the Surface Design chapter, in my upcoming book The Uncommon Quilter.