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Showing posts with label materials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label materials. Show all posts

Friday, 28 September 2012

Meeting of Materials

Our first project of the second year is Meeting of Materials


The Brief: 4 Week project

The Joining and Meeting of material techniques and processes is a key issue for anyone work in the decorative arts.How we combine materials, utilise techniques and synthesis processes , can leads us towards new working practices and eventually to exciting finished work.You are required to produce a series of Object that demonstrate working in combination.

Through research today  I have found an excellent display of jewellery doing this at Lesley Craze Gallery, I especially like Tania Clarke Hall's Freeform collection.

Considering the idea of the meeting of material and concept, I am really struck by the work of Steffen Dam, his curious glass panels fuse specimen jars with the application of attentive glass work


Cabinet of Curiosities, 2010
Further consideration, in terms of the meeting of process and material, exciting work can be made like the surface design of Drummond Masterton where digital craft technology creates bowls like this: 


From the Star Tessellation series
 Other interesting combinations can be found in the work of Stuart Cairns. His extensive utensils collection are delicate, clever and compelling:


2 Tea spoons
Nail Ladle
South Korean Ja-kyung Shin similarly explores the act of making through materials and process, like here with In My Hands (2009) which concentrates on the process of electroforming:


Monday, 24 October 2011

Bookbinding with Heather Dewick

I went along to a Bookbinding workshop ran by Heather Dewick at Debbie Bryan's Studio. It was a great day punching, cutting, sewing and making (plus excellent chocolate brownies to keep us going!) We made a soft back medieval-type book with leather wrap around fastening.

Here's my book!
and in detail
Now lets look at the process....

we started by folding our paper...
taking an A1 sheet we folded it with the grain in half, cut it along the fold, then in half again. 
Then we slice down the fold 2/3 of the way
then folding over again we get this
an A1 sheet makes 8 of these sections
Then we're ready for marking out the cover! 

there was lots of leather to choose from...I chose a green goat skin, with complimentary brown fastening.
on the reverse of your chosen cover, place 1 of the paper sections on the front of the book cover and mark out guidelines for where you need to sew
using a ruler mark out 2 outer and 1 inner section
repeat guidelines until you have a grid
following the guides punch holes through the leather with a braddle tool, these will make it much easier to sew!
turn it over and you will have created this!
Next, mark out the equivalent holes in the pages. It can be useful to have a rule guide for this..
make sure you have all the folded 'tops' of the page sections in the same direction.
mark this side of the stack to keep you in check!
Now you're ready to get constructing!

lay your piece of leather out with what will be the front of the book facing you
starting at the guideline furthest away, place the paper section down and sew through following the guideholes
you are looking to create this type of effect on the spine. the larger sections on this example have been woven, you can embelish, or leave plain and simple, it's up to you!
as you are sewing, you may run out of thread! To knot on to the existing thread, loop the new thread around your finger
and pull it through. Pull this tight onto the old thread and carry on sewing

Once all the page sections have been attached it's then deciding how you want your wraparound
I really liked this one of Heather's
we looked at some other examples and I thought this one was great too!
We also talked about other methods and had a go at some Japanese binding 

looking at examples I really likes the simplicity of this one
and the ingenuity of the postcards used here!
I had been collecting envelopes ever since Claire told me about a  book she'd seen once made out of them so I had a go with the Japanese bind on them here! It's a bit crude if I'm honest but to experiment with the process this worked just fine
Heather also showed us a way of folding a single sheet of paper to create a book without the need for a cover!
Heather will be part of the Open Studios event at Persistence Works in Sheffield 18th/19th/20th November. I'll be off to have a look!

Thursday, 13 October 2011

Jan Svankmajer

Whilst in a tutorial today I was reminded of Jan Svankmajer I just had to upload these videos...they're brilliant!