Printing on tea bags tutuorial
‘I have a large bowl that sits on my
counter that I toss my tea bags in after I use them. When it gets to the point
where it is overflowing, kind of like now, I tear each one open and dump out
the tea.
Then I flatten them out and put them
in large ziplock bags.
I am saving tea bags not only for my
own use, but also for my upcoming Tea & Ephemera
workshops at Create in August.
I really like the tea bags that are
folded in half with a staple at the top because they make a nice sized piece of
paper and if you are lucky you can gets some pretty nice little labels too.
Good fodder for collage.
In the Tea and Ephemera workshop we
are going to be playing with several different ways to use the lowly tea bag as
an artistic component in mixed media textile collage.
Why the tea bag? Well, tea bags are a
thin light weight paper that is translucent allowing one to see through them,
they have a lovely tea stained patina giving them a vintage paper look and they
are so thin that when it is adhered to fabric it literally disappears. It also
has the benefit of being paper so media like inks and colored pencils work
beautifully on them.
One of the things that is fun to do
with tea bags is print on them. The way to do this is scan an image into your
computer or find some copyright free imagery on the net, and print it out on your printer. I have a black
and white toner printer that I bought for this purpose, because toner ink will
not bleed if it gets wet the way ink jet will.
Place a tea bag over the
printed image and tack it in place with a small piece of scotch tape on each
corner.
Place the paper with the tea bag on
it in the paper tray in the correct position to print out, usually it is face
down top of paper going into the printer first. To double check place an x or
other mark on a blank piece of paper and print your image on it, making note of
how you placed the paper in the paper tray and the direction of the image when
it came out.
Here is the printed tea bag, ready to
be collaged.
Another thing to try, is printing a
color image on a tea bag.
This is a photo I took recently at a
garden center and altered in Photoshop.
Follow the same procedure as with the
black and white toner image, lining up the tea bag on the printed photo and
tape in place.
After printing out the image spray a
coat of fixitive on the tea bag to keep image bleeding to a minimum when
adhering it to the fabric. I usually use gel medium to glue the tea bags to my
fabric, but in this case I might opt for using Mistyfuse.'
Sourced from Judy Coates Perez
Creative alchemist
Oct 23rd 2012
http://judyperez.blogspot.com.au
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