Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Website

If you have trouble getting to my new January 2012 updated pages - showing an orange Albatrosses & Archaeopteryx Journal at the top - try either Internet Explorer, or type this URL http://www.christinelinton.com.au/index.html - I hope to fix this problem soon!

Friday, December 23, 2011

Feathers of White Ibis

You may notice I have updated my logo.  It is now the feathers you see on the right, instead of the embroidered bottle brush flower.  This is part of my revamp of the website, which I will be uploading by the end of December.  I decided to go for the feathers as part of my artistic development, showing the things that are more important to me right now, and that I am using in my work.  New Year is a good time for a new look.

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Preserving leaves

For my Nature Journal I have been preserving leaves in glycerine.  You dilute one part glycerine to 4 parts water, and stand the stem in it for about two weeks.  I have found this is quite successful for gum leaves, and you can soak the whole leaf instead if it has no stem; however the leaf has to be fully green or it doesn't work.  Not all leaves take to it - geranium leaves just wilt and die within a few hours.  I have used some gum leaves, attached to a machine-made cord and a tassel made of silk thread, as a decoration to my Nature Journal.

The journal cover is a fabric collage which I machine embroidered, then made in the normal way into a cover for the A4 sketchbook I am using.  I also added a machine-made cord as a bookmark for inside, attached to the top of the spiral binding like the decorative elements. 

If you have been experimenting with papers and/or fabrics, try using your results as a book cover.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Albatrosses and long line fishing

Below is the centrespread of my textile journal Albatrosses and Archaeopteryx.  I have used my hand-dyed fabrics on which I linoprinted my fishing boat and attached beading wire as the long lines which attract seabirds but drag them under to drown if they are not quick enough to untangle themselves.  The albatrosses are appliqued, with the focal bird incorporating bits of rubbish and mesh to depict other threats from us they tackle every day.  Fishing line and net waste is a major killer of seabirds.
I enjoyed the making of the book which you can see more of on my website when I have finished updating it over the next few weeks.