After praying the silk by stretching it on a frame, then adding resist lines, I began. I found the Inketense must be used wet on silk, either by wetting the silk first and applying the color or wetting the color and applying it to the silk. They simply do not work dry on dry. Also, the colors need to sit for 24 hours, then should be heat set. I did this, then rinsed out the resist lines the next day to find that, once the silk painting dried, the color faded some and it was not as intense as before the rinsing. After it dried, I pressed it and all was well. I compared the Inktense on silk and on paper. The final results are below. The piece on paper is on the left, the one on silk is on the right. The second photo is of the pieces before rinsing out the resist. You can see how bright the colors are on the silk piece ( lower right) prior to rinsing.
I have been painting silk scarves for several year and experiment with different inks and dyes. I bought inktense pencils and blocks thinking they might enhance my repertoire. Your blog just verified what I learned after trying the product a few times. The color does fade even after heat setting....I can continue to experiment by doing a second coat with other products but do not think that the time would be worth the result. Thank you for the blog!
ReplyDeletei have one question, if silk stays soft ? or we can feel harder leyer of color ?
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