Archived textile pieces
Washaway Blues, 2009
Handpainted calico, machine and hand embroidered
Washaway Blues (detail),2009
Handpainted calico, machine and hand embroidered
Washaway Blues (detail)
Handpainted calico, machine and hand embroidered
Washaway Blues (detail)
Handpainted calico, machine and hand embroidered
Washaway Blues (detail)
Handpainted calico, machine and hand embroidered
Suspended Flight 2017
Machine and hand embroidery on Perspex background
Feathers (left) and Transparent Avian (right) Stitched and carved perspex using dyed monofilament.
Feathers (left) and Transparent Avian (right), 2017, Stitched and carved perspex using dyed monofilament.
Transparent Avian (detail), 2017, Stitched and carved Perspex, dyed monofilament.
Transparent Avian (detail), 2017, Stitched and carved Perspex, dyed monofilament.
Suspended Flight on display at Colac exhibition in 2017
Machine and hand embroidery on Perspex background
Fluffy Fledgling (detail)
Machine and hand embroidery, appliqued onto damask background
Fluffy Fledgling (detail)
Machine and hand embroidery, appliqued onto damask background
Preparing for Adulthood
Machine and hand embroidery, appliqued onto digitally printed background
Preparing for Adulthood (detail)
Machine and hand embroidery, appliqued onto digitally printed background
Heading into the Sunset (detail)
Machine and Hand Embroidery on Perspex background
Heading into the Sunset (detail)
Machine and Hand Embroidery on Perspex background
Checking the Boundaries (detail)
Machine and hand embroidery, appliqued onto digitally printed background
Checking the Boundaries (detail)
Machine and hand embroidery, appliqued onto digitally printed background
Magpie in Flight (detail
Machine and hand embroidery on Perspex background
Magpie in Flight (detail)
Machine and hand embroidery on Perspex background
Transformations
Pieced digital prints on transparent and opaque fabrics
Murray River Gums
Digitally printed, machine embroidery
Murray River Gums (detail)
Digitally printed, machine embroidery
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Early batiks and the evolution into my current practice
Black Skyscape (detail) 1980 Batik on silk. Part of a triptych
Black Skyscape (detail) 1980 Batik on silk. Part of a triptych
Introspectrum 1980, Batik technique on silk. Naphtol dyes.
Introspectrum 1980 Batik technique on silk. Naphtol dyes
Introspectrum 1980, Batik technique on silk. Naphtol dyes.
Purple Sea Snails (illustration from a quote in The Water Babies by Charles Kingsley) 1980, batik on silk.
Purple Sea Snails 1982 Batik on silk
Purple Sea Snails 1980 batik on silk
Undersea Abstract, 1980, batik on silk
Bush Landscape I, 1982, batik on silk
Bush Landscape I, 1982, batik on silk
Bush Landscape III (detail), 1980, batik on silk
Bush Landscape III (detail), 1980, batik on silk
Bush Landscape III (detail), 1980, batik on silk
Lilies 1980 batik on silk
Lilies (detail) 1980 batik on silk
Lilies (detail) 1980 batik on silk
Bush Floor (Slice of Earth series) 1991 screen-printed fabric, appliqué and machine embroidery on cotton.
Bush Floor (detail), 1991, screen-printed fabric, appliqué and machine embroidery on cotton.
Bush Floor (detail), 1991, screen-printed fabric, appliqué and machine embroidery on cotton.
Bush Floor (detail), 1991, screen-printed fabric, appliqué and machine embroidery on cotton.
Bush Floor (detail)) 1991, screen-printed fabric, appliqué and machine embroidery on cotton.
Bush Floor (detail), 1991, screen-printed fabric, appliqué and machine embroidery on cotton.
Escarpment, 1993, Transfer printed polyester fabric, machine embroidery
Escarpment (detail) 1993, Transfer printed polyester fabric, machine embroidery
Interior Landscape 1993 Batiked and airbrushed cotton.
Interior Landscape (detail), 1993, Batiked and airbrushed cotton
Interior Landscape (detail), 1993, Batiked and airbrushed cotton
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My journey with textiles started in the 1970s. After attending numerous workshops in the batik technique, and finally acquiring a suitable studio space in which to practice, I built on learned skills and created a complex layered colour scheme. Like watercolours, dyes are transparent, and so with each new application of a dye bath, the coloured layers beneath affect each successive application of dye colour. Each layer likewise becomes darker simply through the overlaying of tones of colour. My most complex batiks involved removing wax halfway through the dyeing process and redying to create pure areas of contrasting colour. The batiks may have had as many as 15 to 20 immersions into dye baths and occasionally, some areas were additionally hand painted with thickened dyes. I used many dye types, including Indigosols and Drimarene K (similar to Procion) but mostly Naphthol dyes to achieve the desired colours. Fine dot and line work with the traditional tjantings contrasts with broken or cracked brushed on wax areas.
Later work in the 80s moved away from working with wax and dyes because I was concerned about their toxicity levels whilst my children were young.
My interests moved to surface embellishment with appliqué of screen printed, airbrushed and heavy machine embroidered fabrics. Eventually, transfer dyes started to be more prominently used as they were viewed by me to be less toxic in their application.
Living in the Blue Mountains of NSW till 1987, my main subject matter was the landscape. Moving from the Mountains and back into the suburban environment of Sydney altered my subject matter so that the landscape tended to become more of a memory in the later works and social and domestic issues tended to become the new subject matter.
As technology developed and particularly the widespread use of computers and digital cameras, their influence on traditional dyeing and surface design of textiles was something to be explored. I found a local commercial printer who printed with a dye sublimation printer and could print from .jpegs. A whole new world of exploration now opened up.