PILLOW TALK
Giving your couch a splash of colour
CONCORD, N.H. Watercolour paintings certainly can brighten up walls. But why stop there? Applying a watercolour effect to fabric and covering pillows with it lets you display abstract artwork on your sofa or bed as well.
Looking to add some decorative contrast to my grey couch, I recently tried three tutorials on achieving a watercolour look on fabric. I then washed and dried the fabric to make sure the colours wouldn’t wash out. While the basic techniques — brush strokes on fabric — were similar, they used different materials and slightly different procedures.
Here’s what I found, with each method rated from one to 10, with 10 indicating the least expensive, easiest and best results:
FABRIC PAINT
The Brit + Co website (http:// go.brit.co/2uFtdYV) features a tutorial for making water colour effect table linens, but the method is easily adaptable for pillow covers.
The directions call for using a sponge brush to dampen small portions of fabric, and then painting on the damp area with a liquid paint that has the consistency of water and spreads like dye.
The paint recommended for this project, Jacquard’s Dye-Na-Flow, is considerably more expensive than the materials used in the other techniques but because it’s made for textiles, no other product is needed to make it permanent on fabric.
This method produced vibrant colours that stayed true even after washing and drying. COST: 5 EASE: 7 RESULTS: 8
CRAFT PAINT
The owner of the Lovely Etc. blog (http://bit.ly/2uM3RZO) describes her mission as “creating lovely for less,” and her technique for watercolour pillows was indeed the least expensive of the three I tried.
Her method involves mixing about three drops of acrylic craft paint with 10 drops of fabric painting medium and a few tablespoons of water, and then painting onto fabric. Small bottles of craft paint can often be found for about a dollar each, and fabric painting medium — which produces a washable, permanent substance than adheres better to fabric — for a dollar or two more.
This technique was really easy, but unfortunately, my results were somewhat disappointing. I painted abstract circles with light red, pink and lavender, but as the fabric began to dry, the colours faded to pale pink, and all definition between the shapes was lost. I didn’t, however, notice any further fading after washing and drying the fabric. COST: 8 EASE: 8 RESULTS: 5
WATERCOLOUR PAINT
Of the three techniques I tried, this one from the blog Tidbits (http://bit.ly/2i8GmEi) was the only one that used actual watercolour paint. But because the paint on its own would wash out, it also uses fabric painting medium to make the paint colourfast.
While the tutorial calls for using solid watercolours, I used student-grade liquid watercolours. In this method, you paint with watercolours on the fabric and then, using a clean brush, swipe over the fabric with a mixture of fabric medium and water. The colours stayed bold as they dried, and after a trip through the washer and dryer. COST: 7 EASE: 6 RESULTS: 7 The Associated Press