GUTTA TECHNIQUE
Paints or dyes spead on wet or dry silk. Gutta or outliner makes a waterproof line that stops the paint spreading beyond the area you want to paint.
Practise drawing gutta lines on a piece of paper first. To avoid a blob at the beginning of the line, hold a small piece of paper on the place where you want to start, begin there and move smoothly onto the other piece of paper. If you get a blob further down the line you can gently lift off some of the gutta using a small, slightly damp paintbrush. I prefer some irregularities or variations in the gutta lines as I feel it gives the work more character.
If the line is very fine, it may let the colour through when you come to paint the silk. If it is too thick it will take longer to dry.
Leave till thoroughly dry.
EXPERIMENTS WITH COLOUR
Have fun with colours and get a feel for painting on silk, you could turn these samples into greetings cards.
U Use a wet paintbrush dampen the silk. Don’t make it too wet, just touch the brush to the silk and watch it absorb the water. Then put colours onto the damp silk and watch them flow and blend.
O OR Try brush marks of red and yellow on dry silk. Put one colour next to the other, run one colour over another. Leave to dry then overpaint with more brushstrokes.
O
Below the red was diluted with water to make a pink, The background was made damp before painting with diluted blue.