A way to preserve flowers is to pound their essence and color into a sheet of paper. Handmade paper, measuring 6x4, with deckled edges, was the perfect background for pounding some of my garden flowers.
I started my flower pounding with violets. Years ago, I transferred some from the woods into my garden beds. I have hundreds of violets in my grass and flower beds in early spring. I don't mind them at all. I pull them out if they overwhelm my perennials or annuals. Because they sow seed, there will be many more to take their place next year. They are also a great ground cover for areas I don't want to weed weekly. The leaves are a host for the fritillary butterfly.
The beautiful violet color is easy to transfer. I place the flowers and leaves on the handmade paper, then, using a piece of tracing paper to see what I'm doing, I place this over the flowers and pound them flat with a small hammer. It is easy to work in a corrugated box based on the floor rather than on the floor itself. Some flowers stick to the handmade paper. I let these sit for a few minutes, and then gently remove them. VoilĂ , there is an impressionistic-type print of the flowers.
After drying the paper out for about two weeks, I used a 005 permanent marker to create a few lines, using the photos I took before I pounded the flowers as a reference.
I love the way the finished product turned out. I will continue pounding flowers all summer, labeling each pounded flower print with where it was taken from in my garden or other places. At the end of the summer, I intend to make a handmade book containing all the prints.
Those flowers are gorgeous and lovely end product. It looks very arty :-D I love the paper style too :-D
ReplyDeleteI'm excited about trying some new flowers this week. Thanks!
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