I played around some more with Inkodye, the permanent, water-based dye that develops its color in sunlight. After making easy shadow prints using safety pins and leaves, prints using cardboard cutouts, and a design with a freezer paper stencil, I tried working with a photo negative that I printed at home.
For this experiment, I did a Google image search and set the filters to display large black-and-white photographs. I found an image online that I liked: this desktop wallpaper with a 1962 Ford Thunderbird admired by elegant ladies. "Betty, is that your new car?" "Yes, Shirley. Isn't it mahvelous? Good thing I have a massive driveway so I'll never need to parallel pahk this boat."
I inverted the image in Photoshop to make it a negative and printed it on some old 3M CG3460 inkjet transparency film I found in my closet.
I inverted the image in Photoshop to make it a negative and printed it on some old 3M CG3460 inkjet transparency film I found in my closet.
Even if you don't have Photoshop, you can turn any photo of your own into a negative. Bold photos with lots of contrast will work best.
Go to the online image editor Pixlr. Choose "Open image from computer" to upload your photo. From the top menu, choose "Adjustment">"Desaturate" to make the image black and white. Then select "Adjustment">"Invert" to create a negative image. You can also play with brightness, contrast, or levels to get dark blacks and bright whites for good printing. Finally, choose "File">"Save."
Go to the online image editor Pixlr. Choose "Open image from computer" to upload your photo. From the top menu, choose "Adjustment">"Desaturate" to make the image black and white. Then select "Adjustment">"Invert" to create a negative image. You can also play with brightness, contrast, or levels to get dark blacks and bright whites for good printing. Finally, choose "File">"Save."
Then print the negative onto printable transparency film. Order some from Amazon or the Lumi website. Follow the directions on the package for feeding the sheets through your printer.
If you need larger negatives, try splitting your image in half, printing on two sheets, and taping them together.
If you need larger negatives, try splitting your image in half, printing on two sheets, and taping them together.
Or if printing your own negatives sounds like a pain, you can download the Lumi iPhone app to order custom negatives delivered to your doorstep.
After printing out the negative, I got the fabric ready. A piece of cardboard wrapped with a plastic trash bag makes a great waterproof work surface. I taped my piece of cotton canvas to the board to hold it in place while brushing on dye.
Then I poured a little Inkodye into a cup and brushed it on with a foam brush. Doing this in a room with subdued lighting is important— you don't want the dye to start changing color before you're ready! Try to get an even layer of dye on the fabric. The cloth doesn't need to be soaking wet; just thoroughly coated.
Mix Inkodye with water in a 1:1 ratio to stretch it farther; you'll get the same vibrant color. Or add even more water to get lighter colors. Mix colors to create new hues if you want.
Mix Inkodye with water in a 1:1 ratio to stretch it farther; you'll get the same vibrant color. Or add even more water to get lighter colors. Mix colors to create new hues if you want.
I used a paper towel to blot off all the excess dye I could remove. Too much moisture can cause condensation on the negative, and this can mess up your print.
Then I laid the negative on top of the fabric, printed side up so the ink wouldn't get wet and smear. In case there was a slight breeze outside, I stuck on a piece of tape to secure the negative so it wouldn't blow away. Add more tape if needed, but I wouldn't recommend taping down all the edges or you'll trap more water inside, increasing condensation.
Then I carried the board outside into direct sunshine. See the little animation I made? That's what it looks like as the dye starts to change color from nearly clear to purplish indigo, and eventually to blue. Condensation started to appear which worried me; I've had prints ruined by that before, but this one turned out okay.
After 10 minutes of exposure, I took the board back indoors to a dim room and removed the negative.
Then I immediately washed the fabric with laundry detergent in hot water. The goal is to remove the undeveloped dye from the light areas before it turns color. Scrub really thoroughly or put your print right into the washing machine. The Inkodye company recommends washing it twice. The dye is permanent, so don't worry that you'll wash off the blue areas. They're there to stay, so you can dye clothing and bags and wash them regularly going forward.
Here's the final print.
I decided these ladies needed some friends, so I chose this McCall's pattern fabric for a lining and sewed this print into a zippered pouch.
You could make prints of your kids, your house, your Prius, or your Persian kitty. Print on aprons, t-shirts, hoodies, or pillows. Good times!
Brilliant tutorial, thanks.
ReplyDeleteI love it
ReplyDeleteAMAZING! Such helpful links too, thanks so much for posting!
ReplyDeleteSuch a great idea! Looks lovely. I absolutely love it :)
ReplyDeleteI love this! One more reason to get my hands on some inkodye!
ReplyDeleteFantastic! IF the sun ever shines again here in Oregon, I will have to give this a try.
ReplyDeleteLove this! Curious, what printer do you use? Mine doesn't print on transparency and I'd like to get a new printer sometime soon. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteCool! I love your Inkodye posts. I'll put it on the list of things to try.
ReplyDeleteI purchased some Inkodye based on your last post about it, but this is even more exciting! I must actually open the bottles and give it a try! Thanks for the inspiration and great teaching!
ReplyDeleteWow, that's really great! I loved the fact that you sewed, too! :)
ReplyDeleteMum
Yeah, it's a miracle.
ReplyDeleteI forgot about this technique, nice to see it all the way executed.
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot for the tuto it looks really impressive. I ordered online on lumi.co and will get it all the way in France to try this specific trick. I love blue and this pouch looks terrific.
ReplyDeleteFantastic tutorial! Thank you for sharing!
ReplyDeleteHello, your blog is very interesting, I'll observe. Greetings form Poland. Wellcome to me :)
ReplyDeleteI had a car just like that when I was 17. I was a tank! I loved it. I gave it up for an orange Gremlin. What was I thinking?
ReplyDeleteGreat tutorial!!!
Wow!
ReplyDeleteGreat!
Thank you!
Mary
looks nice ! what's the difference with a transfert ?
ReplyDeleteAnonymous, you were thinking orange is an irresistible color. No one can blame you for that.
ReplyDeletePatricia, I'm not sure I follow your question. Can you reword it?
I already thought this stuff was amazing but now even more so! It looks fantastic.
ReplyDeleteKali, I have a reeeeally old HP 2210. Before you get a new printer, are you sure you used transparencies designed for ink jet printers, if that's what yours is? One side of the transparency sheet should be rougher so the ink will stick. Printing on the smooth side I'm sure won't work. Just double checking to make sure it went into your printer with the right side down! Or if you have a laser printer, I think you can buy transparencies for that kind, too.
ReplyDeleteSo cool! Would it work with fabric paint?
ReplyDeleteEmily, nope, fabric paint is not designed to change color when exposed to light. This dye is photo-sensitive, and that's why the shaded parts of the design stay light and the exposed parts change color.
ReplyDeleteyou are just SOOOO crafty!
ReplyDeleteThat is very cool and creative!
ReplyDeleteAlba
http://macondoartisans.com/
Where can I buy inkodye in the uk?
ReplyDeleteI love this tutorial so much. It'd be great to give it a go - we just have to get a sunny day first!
ReplyDeleteOMG I love this!!!! Thank you so much for the inspiration. Can't wait to try it.
ReplyDeleteI want it!
ReplyDeleteWow, sounds like a really nice project to try! I love also your choice of fabric and the contrasting zipper. Congratulation!
ReplyDeleteyes, what is the difference with an t-shit transfer ? you know the transfer sheet that you put in your printer and you get on your textil with an iron.
ReplyDeleteOh, I see. In my experience, iron-on transfers leave the fabric sort of shiny in the non-printed areas because they apply a layer of film-like stuff to the fabric. And the prints end up a little stiffer, and after many washings the print starts to degrade and peel off a bit.
ReplyDeleteInkodye soaks into the fabric and colors the fibers instead of creating a film layer on top. The fabric stays soft and natural feeling.
Here's something fun--check out the Inkodye founder's blog where she creates a different dyed t-shirt every day!
I've just added inkodye to my shopping list as I want to immortalise my cat Monty on a tshirt for my fella. Such a neat way of creating something personalised. Thanks for bringing it to my attention x
ReplyDeleteThat is SO cool!
ReplyDeleteI just discovered your blog (or I might say rediscovered because I found a saved bookmark to one of your previous blog posts about paper bows on my phone), and you are definitely going into my list of blogs I follow on Bloglovin! This post is fabulous, thanks for sharing! Loved it :D
ReplyDeleteho... I see the diference now ! thanks for theses additionnal informations :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Elisabeth!
ReplyDeleteThis is brilliant! I bought some inkodye last year after seeing some of your tutorials. I always wanted to try a photographic print like this. Your instructions are really helpful. I'm going to give it a go this summer!
ReplyDeleteWhat a fantastic tutorial! Very detailed.
ReplyDeletewww.reesecarrozzini.com
What brand of transparency film did you use?
ReplyDeleteI used some old 3M CG3460 inkjet transparency film I found in my closet. I don't even know where the box came from, but it looks kinda 80s.
ReplyDeleteHi this is so amazing and I can't wait too try it, could you by any chance post a tutorial on how to make the bag at the end? X
ReplyDeleteHi! There are zillions of tutorials online for these. Try googling "zippered pouch tutorial." Here's one.
ReplyDeleteHi Jessica
ReplyDeleteNice print. I've spent the day scouring the internet for information on how to make a decent digital negative. There are whole forums and pages about this very subject and most of them are pretty complex. You seem to have figured this out, though, without any of the complication others are encountering. From what I understand, the problem is that the ink output of the printer is not heavy (saturated) enough due to color management profiles sent from Photoshop and other such programs. I've tried all day to get a decent print and all I get are hazy see-through images that wouldn't block the UV in any decent manner and would probably just make a dark mess with inkodye.
Would you mind sharing what software you printed from? I don't think it's necessarily what you used to edit with - your secret is probably stemming from the software that you used to send the print profile to the printer...or the printer itself.
I see you've already listed the printer. Maybe one of these 2 ingredients has bi-passed the color management issue. Whatever the case, it looks like your negatives are nice and rich. I have some of these inks, I can't wait to try them. Now if I can just figure out how you made your negatives...
Regards,
*J
I used photoshop. I didn't get perfect black coverage; the fabric turned faintly blue in the areas that I would have liked a little paler, but it wasn't too bad.
ReplyDelete