Ema Hossain Design Portfolio

Take a look at my other blog EmaHossainDesign Portfolio to see more about my design work

hand dyed t-shirts using natural dyes

I use Dylon fabric dyes for the t-shirts that I dye and sell. They come in two types the machine dye and hand wash dye. I use the hand wash dyes because I like the hand dyed look they create. The dyes need salt adding to them to open up the pores of the fabric to help them take dye but the mordant which fixes the dye to the fabric is already present.

Recently I experimented  with making dyes by boiling fruits and vegetables to create natural dyes from from things I had around the house. Things like blueberries, turmeric and onions.

Natural dyes do produce beautiful gentle colours but they don't stay on the fabric unless they are fixed with a mordant, which are mostly chemicals that I don't have at hand.




I started by boiling the washed white fabric in a salt water mix to prepare the fabric to take the dye.


In another pan I let the crushed blue berries, onion skin and lemon pieces boil  in water to release their natural colours.  
The fruits produced lovely lilac shades 


After taking out the plain fabric from the salt water I added the dye to the pan of water and added the
t-shirts , you can see the lovely lilac colours it created. 



Natural dyeing is great fun and the results always have that element of surprise as you never know exactly how it's going to turn out, there are usually small flecks and patches where the fabric may have been folded, creased etc, but that adds to the beauty of it

The Natural History Museum natural dyes page is a great introduction to natural dyeing fabric which the kids will enjoy doing with you. 




hand drawn cards

I often make hand drawn cards for family and friends and have been doing so for many years.
I'm often asked why I don't just print the design. It's simple really I don't like wastage of materials and I am faster at doing thing by hand anyway so it's the cost effective method for me! So no printer inks to pay for, no cost of running the printer or paying for professional prints besides I enjoy a freestyle of working with the ink directly onto paper and this makes each artwork unique. I also buy things locally and so try to work in a "greener way"
Here is some tea time inspired designs currently  in my Folksy shop.

Here is one of my favourite designs which I have used in the past few years for laminated place mats and drawings. Here I have done a coloured version as a greeting card


Hand drawn card (copyright Fatema Hossain) 

Here is another favourite one, this time I added patterned paper to the tea cup
Hand drawn card (copyright Fatema Hossain)