SQUARE DEAL: Bright colours and geometric designs make modern-looking eggs. A graceful vintage wirework holder displays three of them. To create the pattern, pieces of electrical tape are shifted slightly between two dips in dye. For chiken eggs, 1/2 inch squares were used; for the larger goose eggs, slightly bigger squares were used, as well as rectangles. When layering hues start with the paler one and move on to the darker one.
COLOUR LESSONS: These overlapping circles stenciled onto eggs beget a batch of new hues. The design pays homage to CMYK printing, which combines cyan, magenta, yellow and "key" black to yield a spectrum. Here, food colouring is dabbed inside vinyl stencils that were cut with a craft punch. For the dark egg, red and blue dots are made first, and then circle stickers are smoothed onto the shell. After a dip in inky-black dye, the stickers are removed.
Photographs by Johnny Miller
3 comments:
I always look forward to seeing how Martha is decorating her eggs this year. I love all of these!!
I found the April issue yesterday (just in time for Easter) and was keen to see what ideas Living had for Easter Eggs, but these are far too hard for me to even attempt. I think I will stick to glittering and gluing, but they are really pretty and fun.
I think they're just very time-consuming. But the effect is amazing. The whole concept seems to be based on the theme of a colour printing press with its layers of tonalities, which is really ingenious.
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