Really interesting. I wonder if they could be steamed in a pressure cooker? I'm going to give it a try. I'd wrap the screw tips in a piece of cotton to prevent holes in the fabric. You just got yourself a new subscriber. Thanks for sharing.
@@shivanipriya7077 I was thinking of a pressure cooker, also. It seems everyone has an instant pot these days... But does the steamer or pressure cooker need to be dedicated just to the fabric? non-natural materials probably are not good to mix with food. ?
Hello Nina, to achieve this you wrap fabric around a pole or tube, bind it tight with string across the entire width and ruche the fabric to create waves and ripples. Steam or boil it in the same way, then untie once cooled. Hope this helps. Ceri
That is cool, but would you be able to machine wash this fabrics if you use it in clothing? I assume you can not let it dry clean because they also use steam right.
How did you die/colour transfer the red and yellow fabric? And to those screaming this isn't shibori, please be informed that she isn't the one who gave this technique the name. It's widely known as boiled shibori. Go find the one that started calling it shobori.
To achieve this you wrap fabric around a pole or tube, bind it tight with string across the entire width and ruche the fabric to create waves and ripples. Steam or boil it in the same way, then untie once cooled. Hope this helps. Ceri
You appear to be calling this shibori- this is not shibori which has nothing to do with creating surface texture. It is a technique of binding and dyeing to create patterns...tyeing things into fabric and leaving them there is not shibori.
Veronica Aldous you don’t leave the objects in the fabric, after it dries you remove the objects and are left with the patterns. What sense would it make to use fabric that has nails hanging out of it?
Hello Veronica - You are right shibori is traditionally a dyeing technique, however in this instance we have used the method of binding to create 3D textiles instead. Both techniques can be very interesting!
I bet you thought you were intellectual when you wrote the above huh... WTF. They never said it was SHIBORI, they have said: "Textiles Heat Manipulated Methods: The Basic 'Shibori' Method" It is all in the punctuation dude. CLEARLY they are saying they are applying heat to a fabric to give it a Shibori 'look'.
Really interesting. I wonder if they could be steamed in a pressure cooker? I'm going to give it a try. I'd wrap the screw tips in a piece of cotton to prevent holes in the fabric. You just got yourself a new subscriber. Thanks for sharing.
Did it work?
@@shivanipriya7077 I was thinking of a pressure cooker, also. It seems everyone has an instant pot these days... But does the steamer or pressure cooker need to be dedicated just to the fabric? non-natural materials probably are not good to mix with food. ?
Hi, how did you make the pleating blue sample please?
can you give example how to make the wrinkle one with pleats technique please? thankyou
Hello Nina, to achieve this you wrap fabric around a pole or tube, bind it tight with string across the entire width and ruche the fabric to create waves and ripples. Steam or boil it in the same way, then untie once cooled. Hope this helps. Ceri
Is it possible to make 2 metres of fabric at once?
This is beautiful
That is cool, but would you be able to machine wash this fabrics if you use it in clothing? I assume you can not let it dry clean because they also use steam right.
Woooow so so interesting 😍😍😍
can you use an iron? or put the fabric in a bowl over boiling water?
How did you die/colour transfer the red and yellow fabric? And to those screaming this isn't shibori, please be informed that she isn't the one who gave this technique the name. It's widely known as boiled shibori. Go find the one that started calling it shobori.
Excellent tutorial. Thank you
Might be a dumb question but does this only work on synthetic fabrics?
It’ll burn if it’s not synthetic
how can i make it without this machine please?
You place the fabric in a pan of boiling water for 30 minutes
Nicole would a heT tool on it work
L Gene I’m not sure but I think it needs steam, not just heat.
Just use ordinary steamer that you insert in saucepan- only costs a few dollars
@@Nicole-lz6dgin the water or is it better to put it in a bowl over it??
Please tell how the wrinkle came on fabric
To achieve this you wrap fabric around a pole or tube, bind it tight with string across the entire width and ruche the fabric to create waves and ripples. Steam or boil it in the same way, then untie once cooled. Hope this helps. Ceri
Que pena que.no sea en español
You appear to be calling this shibori- this is not shibori which has nothing to do with creating surface texture. It is a technique of binding and dyeing to create patterns...tyeing things into fabric and leaving them there is not shibori.
Veronica Aldous you don’t leave the objects in the fabric, after it dries you remove the objects and are left with the patterns. What sense would it make to use fabric that has nails hanging out of it?
Hello Veronica - You are right shibori is traditionally a dyeing technique, however in this instance we have used the method of binding to create 3D textiles instead. Both techniques can be very interesting!
Wrong, she’s not leaving them in and this is shibori
a simple veggie steamer
ciao, grazie,
U
Talk louder please
THIS IS NOT SHIBORI WTF
I bet you thought you were intellectual when you wrote the above huh... WTF.
They never said it was SHIBORI, they have said:
"Textiles Heat Manipulated Methods: The Basic 'Shibori' Method"
It is all in the punctuation dude.
CLEARLY they are saying they are applying heat to a fabric to give it a Shibori 'look'.
Lol! This is not shibori
arwa haveliwala
No, that is why the title clearly states it’s using the shibori “method”.