Showing posts with label Scrim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scrim. Show all posts

Tuesday, 8 January 2013

Wheelchair Spoke Guards–Mixed Media Project

A lot of wheelchair users have spoke guards on their wheelchairs. These prevent your fingers and clothing getting caught in the spokes, and being a blank surface the size of the large drive wheels, they are also a brilliant way of expressing your individuality. There are websites offering off-the-peg and bespoke designs, but at a price. A few years ago I found a supplier of plain ones – clear or black, and bought several pairs.

My first pair I painted with pink flowers, to co-ordinate with the silk flowers I put down the front frame of my wheelchair. They have been much admired, but I never really felt satisfied with them, knowing I could do them better if I did them again! The problem was that I painted them from the back, to protect the front surface from getting scratched, and I had to completely rethink how I painted – painting the last bits first! It was really difficult. This is the result, on my old wheelchair.

Rolls Royce Spring Flowers Aug 08

On the black pair, I attached sparkly gems of various sizes. Here is my new wheelchair (a Quickie Helium) with Christmas decorations on it.

Side

I’ve had these black ones on for a long time now, and the flowers I’ve got on the front are looking very tired. The cable for the lights has snapped so they are inoperable. Time for a makeover!

Ever since I’ve taken up art more seriously, I’ve wanted to use these surfaces as a basis for art! What a beautiful way to express yourself by taking your art wherever you go! The idea has remained theoretical for too long, and today I decided to do something about it.

I have a spare pair of clear spoke guards, and I am using them as templates for creating new ones from papier mache and mixed media art. I have no idea yet if this idea is going to work – they need to be strong, but flexible. My power add-on system has three large spokes which go from the large hubs to the push-rims, and as you can see in the above photo, this does cause quite a bit of flexion in the guard. I also don’t want them to end up too heavy – the plastic ones do weigh quite a bit. It isn’t too much of a consideration with the power assist switched on, but in manual mode, every ounce counts! If the worst comes to the worst and they end up not being strong enough on their own, I shall just have to attach them to the plastic pair, but this is obviously not the ideal solution. (Perhaps I could make a heavy-gauge wire frame like a lampshade frame, and attach it to that!!)

This is what I have done so far. I apologise for the quality of the photos but they are frame grabs from the video I am making, which doesn’t yield top-class results, I’m afraid. When I’m in video mode, I forget all about taking still photos.

First I covered one spoke guard with cling film, and painted on watered-down PVA adhesive, to which I adhered a sheet of scrim fabric. The idea of the cling film is to enable me to lift the finished guard off the template guard underneath, hopefully leaving it unblemished.

01 Painting the Cling Film with PVA

02 Scrim Layer

In case you are wondering, those two dark objects on the left are my KNEES!! I am having to work on this project on the floor, because I haven’t got a large enough work area to sit at my table – this is something I am hoping to remedy when I eventually get my dream ARTHaven when we move… You can also see, in this picture, how transparent the spoke guard has become as the PVA has dried, and you can see the newspaper showing through.

After the scrim layer was dry, I started to apply small pieces of paper, also with PVA adhesive. I have a huge roll of butcher paper which the removal men left behind when we moved house, and I think this will work well if I build up sufficient layers.

03 First Layer of Butcher Paper

So that I don’t end up making it thicker in one area than another, between each layer of paper, I am sticking down pieces of tissue paper in a different colour, so that I can easily see which bits I have completed.

04 Laying Down the First Tissue Paper Layer

I am not sure how many layers it is going to take. The spoke guard is now in the airing cupboard drying off completely, after only 2 layers of each kind of paper – I am going to have to do considerably more than this, and I am hoping that it is going to be rigid enough, with the amount of glue that I am applying. The slightly domed shape of the spoke guard will help maintain the shape, and with the addition of gesso, gel mediums and acrylic paints etc. this should also add some strength.

I am reassured that the cling film does seem to have protected the spoke guard underneath, and that it peels away from the scrim OK. I have already trimmed off the excess papier mache that I have done so far. I didn’t want to leave that job till the end in case it was too thick and hard to cut easily.

The surface will be embellished with various textures to start with – I have some poultry grit and various other bits and pieces, including cord and some air-dry clay pebbles I made for another project, and I am intending to add some flowers too. They will be painted with acrylics. The palette will be fairly muted, I think, but there may be some splashes of accent brighter colours too. They need to be fairly robust, without too much projecting from around the hub region (my hubby delights in scraping them against door frames at every opportunity!! – lots of the little gems have been knocked off the black pair) – they also need to be pretty water-resistant in case I get caught in the rain, although that is to be avoided if at all possible because the power-assist system will not react well to getting wet! Any paper embellishments I make will therefore have to be either stuck down flush with the surface and completely covered with gel medium, or dipped in UTEE before being attached.

I am making a series of videos of the whole process, but I am not going to upload any of them until the project is complete, because there’s nothing more frustrating that the promise of a sequel on Youtube, only to find it’s never been made!

If this project is successful, I will never need to buy another set of spoke guards. Even plain ones are quite expensive, and how much more fun to use them as an expression of one’s creativity.

I am also trying to work out a way of making something similar to cover the front frames, which can be easily removed and replaced with alternative designs.

I’ve been hankering after doing this for so long, and I’m so fed up with how my wheelchair looks these days. It will give me a boost to have a new look! I have it in mind to design a steampunk set with lots of gears, and a nice rusty, metallic grungey look. I am thinking of laying down small sheets of embossed metal for that one, with faux rivets. Who knows? I may end up with a Zentangle wheelchair one of these days! How cool is that?

Wednesday, 3 August 2011

WOYWW 113

Another week gone by! I can’t believe this is my third WOYWW! (If you want to know what it’s all about, click the WOYWW link on the right.)

WOYWW 113 3-8-11

This week I’ve been working on the mount for the shadow box I’m making for our nephew’s wedding present. You can see the stamped butterflies which I’ve painted with acrylic glaze and then covered with Golden glass bead gel which really makes them sparkle! The frame itself, with its box, is balanced on the left, and you can just see the blue butterfly inside.

Also on my table is the pile of mounting board ATCs primed with gesso, and various pots of gel mediums, paints etc. My hubby bought me some Friendly Plastic pellets yesterday and you can see the pot at the back of the table.

At the front of the table are 2 ATCs I’m working on. These started as experimental pieces, painting on foil, which I thought I might use for the frame mount but then changed my mind and decided the silver mirror board was better. The ATCs have a bit of scrim added, which is also painted, and yesterday I added some beige embroidery thread and some small wooden beads to resemble the floats on fishing nets.

Immediately above the ATCs are a couple of packs of charms I got in the post today – they are metal and very pretty – one set is on a seaside theme, with shells, fish etc. and I’m going to make moulds of these with silicone mould-making putty, and cast some embellishments for the ATCs. Not sure what medium I’m going to use yet as I need to try a few things out.

It’s been a week of experimenting really – the shadow box project is moving forwards pretty slowly because I’m learning new techniques on the job. Also, I haven’t done much because of energy problems and having to rest. Hopefully I’ll have done a bit more by next WOYWW!

Hope you’ve all had a good, productive day and have lots of interesting stuff on your tables. Off to have a look in a minute!

Saturday, 12 February 2011

ATCs for the Crafter’s Companion Forum Swap

My friend Wendy has persuaded me to join my first ever swap! This is the February ATC (Artist Trading Card) swap, and I’m really excited about it. I’ve always thought I hadn’t really got time to do swaps, because when I’ve got the energy to do anything creative, it’s to complete projects I have to do for people’s birthdays etc. etc., but I thought, ATCs are small so don’t take too long, and it would be fun to have a go!

Single ATC - Timeless Love  11-2-11

The theme for this month’s swap is “Love/Valentine” (of course!), so I decided to do something with hearts and a red colour scheme. When I was at the craft show I bought some scrim from the mixed media stand and have been keen to try it. It’s a natural, unbleached colour, so I cut some small rectangles (really difficult to handle, so I damped it a bit, which made it a lot easier) and then I swiped my Fired Brick Distress Ink pad across my craft mat, spritzed it with water and mussed the pieces around in it till they were a nice shade of red. Afterwards I dried them using my heat gun.

I’ve got some lovely hand-made paper with leaves in it, and I tore some little rectangles from this, and hand-wrote some words on them. The “Love” ones I stuck with photo-mount spray adhesive to the dyed scrim pieces.

I created the background paper with Serif Craft Artist Platinum, the new digital scrapbooking software that I recently obtained – and still have to learn how to use. What I wanted was a hand-made paper look, with a small repeating pattern on it, which in this case is made up of two different heart embellishments.

The top part of this background paper was torn, and overlaid onto a piece of black and pink Core-dinations card which I scored in close parallel lines on my Scor-Pal board, and then sanded, exposing the pink core on the raised parts. This Core-dinations card forms the basis for the ATC.

I cut two hearts for each ATC, one in bright red and the other in darker red, and stamped the bright red one with a darker red ink. The hearts were then hand-embossed from behind, and adhered to the ATC with Pinflair glue to prevent them being squashed. The text pieces were then added, using photo-mount spray adhesive.

I printed the clock face images onto card, and cut them out by hand, and then picked out the Roman numerals with Perfect Pearls, using a very fine watercolour brush.

Finally, I punched out some small hearts from gold paper and stuck these randomly onto the card. I had designed some ATC labels on the computer, using a hand-written script which I have converted into a font, and I glued these onto the backs of the ATCs, completing the details (title, date, etc.).

They have now been sent off, and I look forward to seeing what lovely ATCs come back to me at the end of the month!

3 ATCs - Timeless Love 11-2-11

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