Batik 

138 creative works found

  • A composite image. Photographs taken in Vietnam

  • Just a little fun with a butterfly photo; hope someone likes this!

  • This is the second batik butterfly in my collection. I’d like to dedicate this image to Marianne Venegoni, a gifted photographer, who has been very ill and is trying to find her “wings” again. Marianne, may you scale even greater heights than before your illness! You can see Marianne’s impressive portfolio at photoeyes here on Redbubble.

  • Abstract with a batik-like texture, vivid colors

  • Get the batik look on your card without having to buy an expensive one actually made by batik technique. / Part of a wallhanging done in batik, shot in our living room.

  • Batik foot of Ganesh through small crystal ball balanced on a spoon.

  • / “Painted Batik” is part of the Faux and Techniques Collection...this collection of paintings work well when grouped together on a wall…they are many and varied…metal, patinas, design, stone, marbles, textures, wood et al, in oils, watercolour, acrylics and other mediums... Handpainted in Oil on Masonite to resemble a Batik on Fabric... /

  • This is an oil on canvas – semi abstract – landscape inspired and using batik related wax resist and sheer layering to build atmosphere via colour

  • Original design, working towards a feeling of excitement and joy. Machine pieced, handquilted

  • A photograph of some flowers manipulated in PS and enhanced reminds me of batik.

  • Batik with hand and machine embroidery. Featured in the groups: / - ‘Prize Challenges’ on 13th December 2008 / - ‘Buyers R Us’ on 18th December 2008 (after a sale!)

  • Best Viewed Large. Time. An odd concept. Relative, as some say … / Boxes. Too many. / Attempted to fit in one, two, three, more … / endless. / Fill them with color, I thought. / I did. / As vibrant and beautiful as I could find. / Still, boxes. / I didn’t fit in any. / Does anyone? / Piece the colors together, make your own quilt. / Wrap yourself up in it: solace, comfort, compassion, love, warmth. / Of your own making; amidst the boxes, against the boxes: / Vibrant and beautiful. / A tapestry of your own … as beautiful as stained glass, yet doesn’t break. / Threadbare in places, like the Velveteen Rabbit. / “At Last!” / Finally. / 38 years ago I left the womb, and have now my own quilt, of my own making. / It’s my tapestry, far from perfect – I wouldn’t want it any other way. / The colors and textures are rich, vibrant. / Perfection is tiresome … I still don’t like boxes. / And time remains a relatively odd concept. / I’m flawed, just like my quilt, and even this photo … yet I’m real (somewhat out of focus, threadbare in places, and relatively odd in my native struggling human self). / Isn’t that where the truest beauty resides? / My wish is that we could all see that in ourselves, as well as each other. / Much love, many blessings, in peace, light and wonderment, Emily Canon DSLR/xti

  • Batik wax resist on fabric provides the blurred background effect, embellished with hand embroidery in the foreground to create the impression of an Allium seedhead. Featured in the groups: / - ‘Aqua, Lime or Indigo’ on 16th December 2008. / - ‘Visual Texture’ on 22nd December 2008.

  • From an original Batik by Morag Lloyds. Inspired by the seabirds and nature around the west coast of Scotland. Full copyright protected.

  • As with any of my coloring-in book pictures you my download it and color it in. It is still my copyright, however, so please don’t publish it as yours. I hope you enjoy coloring it; I have done so on this owl several times with several different colors. You might notice on the left and right middle-sides there’s a night blooming flower. / Enjoy: / Dayonda / Maka1967 colored these guys in and got them FEATURED in COLLABORAL DAMAGE / Thank you Maka1967! / What’s most wonderful to me about it is that Maka and I are on opposite sides of the world—he’s in China, and I’m in the US. The Internet lets us collaborate internationally. What a fantastic tool it is! / P.S.: / Here’s a trick I learned as a kid: Follow the directions at your own risk, and never turn away from kids doing this. / Buy the Owl on a white or very light colored shirt. Color in the blank spaces with regular Crayola type wax crayons. When finished, place several paper towels inside the shirt, under the colored area, and, if you have any, use waxed paper under your iron on a low setting to melt the color into your tee. If no waxed paper, use more paper towels and don’t “skate” the iron, but place it, hold it for 1, 2, 3 seconds, and move to another section. Replace the paper towels and press again two or three times. Rinse carefully in cold water, then “pickle” with cold water, salt and vinegar overnight or so to “set” the dye. Wash it separately, on cold, and hang it to dry. Never trust it with your other whites, nor in the dryer. You’ve now made an alternate style batik where the wax carries the color instead of blocking the color. Good luck, and listen carefully: I’m not responsible if you muck it up! I’m just telling you what I used to do as a kid. -=DS

  • This beautiful bird is dressed in the latest plugin called Fractalius and models a colorful coat of feathers in Batik like style. I hope you enjoy this. Mary Ann

  • A lone tree with textures applied. My photography. Panasonic Lumix DSC FZ-28 All the Material in this Gallery is Copyrighted & May not be reproduced, copied, edited, published, transmitted or uploaded in any way without my permission. / © Enchanted Images: Using this Image for any purpose without my prior permission, may lead to legal action. All Rights Reserved.

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  • A Batik Iris, end of May bloomer in my yard. Chelsea, Michigan. Canon Digital EOS Rebel XT / aperature: f4.5 / exposure: 1/500 sec / focal length: 54 mm / ISO: 400

  • Made with Ultra Fractal, making me think of warm seas and batik that I used to do as a teenager. Thank you very much for the support and faves. :)

  • FEATURED in ‘Creative Cards’ October, 2009

  • Acrylic batik abstract. Melted wax used. / / /

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