io design & illustration, inc.
fun and functional design & illustration services for print and web

Textile Patterns and Fabric Arts

We offer textile pattern development with from the ground up illustrations set into repeating prints. Print design services also include modification of existing art to meet production specifications and alternative colorways. We have experience developing prints for both the domestic and international markets. Other fabric art projects include garment specific artwork, t-shirt screens, embroidery design and quilts.

Below are examples of textile patterns, quilts and garment specific art creations.

Illustrations for Roly Poly Garments

Banana bike illustration on t-shirt. Photo courtesy Roly Poly Crafts.

I just competed a series of line drawings for Roly Poly Crafts to screen print on garments: t-shirts, baby one-pieces, diaper covers and the like. Roly Poly owner, Ruth, has a wonderful sense of hip nostalgia in the selection of images she asked me to draw for her. The illustration style is line art, with no shading, designed to be printed in one color.

Illustrations include a banana seat bicycle, high top sneakers, a prancing unicorn, a folk/country singer, iconic trees, and “Mixed Tape” cassette.

View more images and shop Roly Poly Crafts at Etsy: http://www.etsy.com/shop/rolypolycrafts

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Posted in Illustration and Products and Textile Patterns and Fabric Arts by alice


BIG Quilt

Participating in the Asheville Cotton Company’s Quilt Club has helped me a great deal in learning about piecing and all sorts of tricks of the trade. There are some amazing quilters in the group.

The first year I participated I chose to do the holiday color option: red/green/gold. Each month we made a different block, for a total of 12 blocks. The blocks were all pretty intricate pieced patterns and being that piecing was a new skill for me I decided that I needed to make each block more then once. Therefore I made three companion blocks to each club block with each of my blocks focused on one color: red, green or gold.

And to make it even more a challenge, I reduced the number of fabrics to four no matter how many had been called for in the original pattern. The goal each time was to keep the focus of the block the same even with the reduced number of fabrics and colors. I had some real misses requiring reworking a few of the squares over the 18+ months I worked on this quilt. I certainly learned a great deal.

About half way through, I decided I would gift this quilt, when completed, to my in-laws. Knowing that they prefer blue tones and that they would appreciate a quilt that could be used outside of the holiday season, I decided to make the reverse side of the quilt a snow theme in blues. Since I was planning to “stitch in the ditch” on the holiday side, I decided to make the blue side predominately big squares, but with a fun border along the sides. (I had already decided to put a fun border on the holiday side.)

And, of course I needed to add another challenge, I decided to use a modified quilt-as-you-go technique. Turns out that was a very good choice as the quilt by the end was BIG and would have been extremely difficult to quilt as one piece on my small machine. One of the images in the slideshow shows me standing in front of the quilt. With my boots on I’m a little over six feet tall, so that gives you the scale of the overall quilt. I told my in-laws they would need to buy a bigger bed.

 

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Posted in Textile Patterns and Fabric Arts by alice