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Hand-made Paper

8/22/2019

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Since I launder all the dish towels I print, I've been collecting 100% cotton dryer lint for years.  That, coupled with off-cuts of white bond paper I use for mailing labels makes a perfect combo for hand-made paper.  Twice a year, I fill a plastic tub with the lint and shards of paper, run cold water over it, then send the glop through my blender.  Once I have what seems like a manageable amount, I dip my form (I think it's called a deckle)  in, wave it around a bit, then whack it off the frame to dry.  Sheet by sheet, I grow a stack of damp paper which I carefully lay out on flat surfaces in my studio.  The sheets take days to dry.   I use the sheets for little cards that I send with on-line orders.  Are they wavy and irregular?  Yes.  Of course they are!  But trust me, they have a certain charm.  







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    Lynn has been working with cotton since 1986 when she took her first quilting class.  From there, she dived into dye with a passion.  She's played with  natural and synthetic dyes for more than 20 years.  It was in 2001 that she started painting with dye. 

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