in case you wanted to know, but perhaps never thought to try
this is what happens
when one wraps a piece of damp kelp
in a piece of silk
and then
forgets to unpack it from the compost at the bottom of the suitcase
on returning home from far away
i found this fragment last night
when scraping out the depths of the Green Monster
in preparation for onward wandering on Friday
it hasn't been boiled or steamed
just quietly sulking for a month
in my very cold room
slow dyed but not at all mindfully
in fact
out of sight and out of mind entirely
[there goes that theory!]
i did wash and dry it before i made the photo
cos it was a tad slimy
but the silk doesn't seem to have been damaged at all
even though the kelp was fresh from the sea
[originally]
now i think a silk dress
wrapped in kelp
and left to rest a while
might be a very beautiful thing indeed
time is your friend...
Compost maps on silk - lovely stuff.
ReplyDeletebet that silk was smiling away to itself
ReplyDeletetucked away out of sight and out of mind
[ in perfect solitude ]
waiting to be discovered..
loving those dark and holey, holy marks
Have you just discovered a whole new and beautiful creative outlet?!
ReplyDeleteMAGIC!
ReplyDeleteFacinating India, what could have caused the yellow-orange blobs? they add interest.
Also I agree entirely about Facebook, can't get into myself, let alone twittering.
sometimes the nearest friends are forgotten a bit in the madness of life...but if you think of them they are the most beautiful most dear ones.
ReplyDeleteIt made me think when I saw your forgotten seaweed result.
The facebook thing...sigh....
doeidoei
Hmm, when I get home I may try this, plenty of kelp at home.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful result, probably almost impossible to create again, but it will be interesting trying.
ReplyDeleteQuite an illustrious definition of *compost* you have here! At the risk of sounding like an old Jefferson Airplane song (HAH), viewing your results of this biological process has fertilized and conditioned the soil of my mind :>]
ReplyDeleteYes, what about those yellow-orange blobs? Maybe algae?
p.s. I kinda think of f'book as a tool...useful at times, totally useless at others, like all tools. Still, miss you there.
magical
ReplyDeletevery coool!
ReplyDeleteStunning... the silk dress idea sounds amazing.
ReplyDeleteWonderful! Must try that on a silk dress and perhaps become a mermaid. Or at least dress like one.
ReplyDeleteConsidering the mindfulness part: perhaps you were mindful elsewhere, which could count too?
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ReplyDeletenatural stipple!
ReplyDeletemapping here, it seems. wonderful surprise (could have been compost) the best kind. really wonderful.
ReplyDeleteDid the sniffer dogs not smell the seaweed? Obviously not what they were after. Beautiful marks and the yellow a bit like my solder spots.
ReplyDeletePam
I like it. A map. KelpMap Forest on Silk. la-de-da.
ReplyDeleteHey, I was just going to ASK you that!!! -J
ReplyDeleteyvette your comment was fantastic...India it is amazing, I love the pattern. It would be easy to hide in the green monster . I'm surprised we haven't seen you on border security...Have a great trip.
ReplyDeleteha ha they were actually filming when i arrived into Sydney a few trips back but the little men at Customs didn't even want me to open the Beast...
ReplyDeleteon the other hand, the sniffer puppies sometimes pick up on the scent of plant-dyed cloth which makes for very amusing conversations and much praising of the dog for its perception of 'residual aromas'
oh and i forgot to mention, the comment that i removed was from someone offering sex and dvds in between a lot of Japanese text. i'd rather folks didn't advertise here, if that's ok?
ReplyDeletei can only think of mermaids....
ReplyDeleteGreat result India, what a beautiful cloth.
ReplyDeleteSo love this story Indi!
ReplyDelete...and what's even better is the results which to my mind are stunning.
Lucky you had to pack up and set off again... this seems just the right moment to have found it!
Wow!!! amazingly beautiful..
ReplyDelete...low maintenance dying.. my kind of dying.. Thanks.
away from the sight, but still in the heart....
ReplyDeletehi India
ReplyDeletefirst of all, thank you dearly for your visits & comments, I was truely surprised & honored to see you had stopped by :)
then ... wow the colors & imprint the kelp left on that silk, that's really amazing. From the most unplanned or unexpected events, comes the most amazing results. Thank you for sharing with us. A silk dress wrapped with kelp & left to dye by itself would be breathtaking, I suppose !
thank you very much for your observation about blue flowers, I have so much to learn (more particularly from you, for sure) I love experimenting, and mistakes make the "trip" more interesting. We learn from mistakes, don't we ? :)
thanks again
Sometimes the best things happen "by accident." I think there is so much beauty in this now.
ReplyDeleteawe for accidents
ReplyDeleteI've just moved back to Tasmania... there's kelp galore here :-) It smells very bad when rotting on the beach, how did your experiment go - stinkwise?
ReplyDeletesmell not too bad...but it was jolly slimy!
ReplyDeleteThat is totally amazing! It looks so much like careful stippling (as Jude said above).
ReplyDeleteI had a friend visiting from British Columbia grab me a bag of it and have just started the experiment :)
ReplyDeleteReminds me of rust dyeing fabric. Love your results.
ReplyDeleteWill you be creating more 'art' with kelp? I hope you do and share your creations with us.
warm quilt hugs, sue in CA
but of course...just waiting for it to wash up at my feet...
ReplyDeletearen't you happy you forgot it?
ReplyDeletewhat a lovely design & beautiful colors.
Did you ever try this with a silk dress india?
ReplyDeleteNot yet...but I have a plan for my next visit to Lopez. Bundle and leave
Deleteuntil I wash up there again.
Which could be fun!