Saturday, 12 September 2015

Experimenting with lichen

Spring always brings some fascinating growths on our plum trees.



One morning I contemplated what might happen if I soaked and boiled some of the lichen and the used the resulting liquid to dye paper.


As soon as it began to heat up the smells transported me back 30 years to Koromatua, and memories of preparing natural materials for wool dyeing. They produce such rich aromas which I always loved.




 
The resulting colour in the bottle was a rich golden orange which I hoped would transfer a similar shade to the paper. As with many natural dyes, this was not to be the outcome, but the paler gentle watercolour shade will  still be useful.

 
My next experiment was with the boiled lichen.  With this, I decided I would blitz it in the blender to see if it could be turned into a suitable pulp for making paper. Again, the outcome was not quite what I was expecting. The fibres did not break down completely and the pulp was very crumbly. However I drained it on a papermaking screen, couched it and put it on the press overnight. 


The "paper" is a fascinating blend of autumn colours up close but a lovely rich earthy brown  at a distance. (Yep, it does also look a bit like something you might find under your shoe if you don't watch where you are walking!)
Now I just need to think of something to make with it.

Saturday, 18 October 2014

Northland Chapter monthly meeting

Piano hinge binding was our challenge for October.  Anne found the instructions on this lovely blog http://bumblingacrossletterboxes.blogspot.co.nz/2012/08/how-to-make-piano-hinge-book.html  practiced a few samples in advance, and undertook to guide us through the day. Precise measuring and cutting were required in order to produce even hinges and a book which opens easily.  This style of binding results in a journal which would lend itself to holding photos or other such ephemera, such as small sketches or paintings.
Ngaire's book top view
Ngaire's book showing weaving on hinge posts
Inside Kaye's book with rods still to be woven and cut to length
The day's work including Anne's 2
Kaye's outside with weaving on bottom posts
 

Thursday, 11 September 2014

Tuesday, 9 September 2014

Springtime in the shop

My friend Carol has an awesome garden and every year she brings me waratah flowers from her trees.

Saturday, 6 September 2014

Woven Album

Exploring with new binding techniques.  This one uses strips of strong paper, woven through specially cut slots, to create a checkerboard effect on the pages and cover boards. Because of the extra thickness the weaving provides at the spine the finished journal is perfect for holding ephemera or photos. An awesome place in which to record your travels.

Saturday, 23 August 2014

Fathers in fiction

http://www.bookish.com/articles/father-knows-best-know-it-all-dads-in-fiction

Saturday, 9 August 2014

Hemingway's metafiction

Photo by Robert Capa / Magnum
How often do we spare any thought to the many rewritings an author may execute before he or she is satisfied enough for the work to finally be published. In this recent article from the New Yorker,   Ian Crouch examines the outside influences and the changes made by Hemingway as he worked and reworked The Sun Also Rises http://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/hemingways-hidden-metafictions