Laravel

Resitdyeing - Blog Posts

4 years ago
I Am Currently Working On Making A Modrotlac Print, Which Is A Traditional Slovakian Way Of Resist Dyeing
I Am Currently Working On Making A Modrotlac Print, Which Is A Traditional Slovakian Way Of Resist Dyeing
I Am Currently Working On Making A Modrotlac Print, Which Is A Traditional Slovakian Way Of Resist Dyeing
I Am Currently Working On Making A Modrotlac Print, Which Is A Traditional Slovakian Way Of Resist Dyeing
I Am Currently Working On Making A Modrotlac Print, Which Is A Traditional Slovakian Way Of Resist Dyeing
I Am Currently Working On Making A Modrotlac Print, Which Is A Traditional Slovakian Way Of Resist Dyeing
I Am Currently Working On Making A Modrotlac Print, Which Is A Traditional Slovakian Way Of Resist Dyeing
I Am Currently Working On Making A Modrotlac Print, Which Is A Traditional Slovakian Way Of Resist Dyeing
I Am Currently Working On Making A Modrotlac Print, Which Is A Traditional Slovakian Way Of Resist Dyeing

I am currently working on making a Modrotlac print, which is a traditional Slovakian way of resist dyeing with indigo. I have been trying to recreate this way of printing for a garment that I intend to make as part of my ‘Then and Now’ project. However, this process has been a lot of trial and error so far and it hasn’t gone as planned. I made a paste out of rice flour, plain flour, water and glycerine to act as the resist for the dye. I printed by patterns from stencils that I cut our from acetate and watercolour paper (acetate worked better). Then once the patterns had dried, I dipped the fabric into some navy blue dye. However, the flour mixture came right off. I have already tried to recreate the Modrotlac prints by using hot wax but this didn’t work either. I am going to try a new recipe for the paste which I am hoping will work, if not, then I will have to try hot wax again but in a different way.


Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags