Monday, December 17, 2012

Notable Hands - The Magazine

Hi everyone!

This is the newest version of Notable Hands - the magazine.

You will find long form features from our favorite  designers, trend pages, shopping guides, and editorial shoots. hopefully you'll be inspired by it, and follow the showcased notable crafters that inspired us in the first place.

Enjoy and don't hesitate to comment!



Monday, December 3, 2012

Notable Hands - Craft - Dyeing Fabrics



Rodarte Fall 2008

Let's talk about dyeing fabrics at home.

This is also one of the essential tools in textile design, and one that designer usually opt for when they’re looking for specific shades in their own collections - ones that are not available from fabrics manufacturers.

Rodarte, the brand created by sisters Laura and Kate Mulleavy, works with a specialized fabric-dyer to get a unique shade for their collections. For instance, once they spent months looking of the perfect red-cock shade. This means that they use a lot of time, and resources for the coloring of their collections. That’s how important color is.

You can practice fabric dyeing at home too - either with natural, or synthetic colorants. Say you want a shirt to look ivory instead of crisp white; you can just dip it into a black tea pot for a few minutes/seconds until you see the perfect shade. Remember, after the fabric dries out, the fabrics looks lighter.

But when you are using strong colorants, it is always useful to try the exact shade you want with a small piece of the same fabric you’re using beforehand, and after you got it, you can actually dye the real fabric.

Some fibers are easier to dye. With synthetic materials, you might not even be able to change their shade, but wool, silk, cotton and linen are the best and friendlier materials to dye at home.

Dosa

Artisan dyeing fabric with indigo
DIY dyeing at home


Try it out, you’ll be surprised at how easy it is.

Image via Style.com, Streets and Yo's, Dosa, Google

Notable Hands - Craft - Embroidery


Let's talk about embroidery.

Beading and embroidery are techniques that usually get confused. Embroidery is the art if decorating fabrics and different materials with a needle and thread, or yarn - while Beading is the technique of sewing beads and sequins into fabrics.

Embroidery is a very exciting technique, because while someone can think embroidered fabrics look outdates, many luxury labels also used them to add textures and pattern to their original materials.

Embroidery entails everything from chain stitch, buttonhole or blanket stitch, running stitch, satin stitch, cross-stitch, when it comes to handmade techniques. However, embroidery can also be done by machine, but these pieces are less original and cliché examples.

Artisanal embroidery looks very unique, but once you know the basic technique, you can basically embroider paper, and furniture materials.

Chanel
Missoni


Maiyet - sold at Barney's

The possibilities are endless.

Images via Barney's and Style.com