Batik - Lesson & Rubric

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Grade Level: Grades 7-12 Time Required: 3 weeks General Objective: To introduce students to the decorative and textile arts. Specific Objective: Students will create a batik as fine art. Vocabulary Batik: Chop Stiks: Fiber-reactive dye: Fixative: Tjanting: Wax- resist: Arkansas Frameworks: A wax-resist method of creating designs on fabric Copper stamps that transfer wax to fabric in a uniform manner A water-soluble coloring agent that bonds with natural fibers A chemical that makes a dye permanent and lightfast. (pronounced "chanting") wax tool or pen with a well and fine tip for creating thin lines with melted wax. The use of melted wax to impregnate fibers so the fibers will not absorb dye See end of document Teacher/ Student Materials: 24 x 35 flat cardboard white bulletin board paper Utility muslin Beeswax/Paraffin mix (sold as Batik wax or 50/50 mix) Small crock pots for melting wax (do not use for cooking) Old bristle brushes for waxing Tjantings (wax tool) size small and medium Cold water dye in various colors (Procion) Baby food jars Watercolor brushes for dyeing Old steam iron Newspapers and clean newsprint (18X24) Resources: Work in various stages of completion to demonstrate process Student exemplars Books showing various Batik artists (BATIK for Artists and Quilters by Eloise Piper) www.batikguild.org.uk 1

Preparation: 1. (Optional) Wash fabric to remove sizing then soak in soda ash solution over nite. 2. Pre-cut dry fabric 18 x 24 3. Make sure wax is melted prior to each class session (requires up to 2hrs to melt, using a security timer that plugs into the outlet is recommended!) 4. Pre-mix dyes in plastic bottles 5. Students my find a colorful image from the internet that inspires will their batik composition. Print out this image for their visual. Introduction: Batik is a process of creating two-dimensional designs on fabric. The process is at least two thousand years old - evidence of this process has been found throughout the Middle and Far East as well as parts of Africa. The Batik designs created on the island of Java in Indonesia are the most well-known today. The designs reflect the culture, religion and natural surroundings of the Javanese. The process involves waxing areas of fabric so that the fibers cannot absorb dye. Areas of fabric that are waxed first remain white (or what ever color the fabric is before starting the process); areas waxed after dyeing remain the color of the dye. This process lends itself to images that are exotic in nature and have clear contour lines (or can be simplified through drawing contour lines - (show some images of stained glass and some contour drawings that would work well) Tropical fish, reptiles, and birds are good choices. Stained glass designs work well since the leaded joints become a contour. Ceremonial masks, Mardi Gras figures, Chines New Year images, kites, hot air balloons, and sunsets, are all possibilities. Expressionist and Post-impressionist paint styles also work well. The work of artists like Gaugin, Klee, Klimt, and O Keefe can all provide inspiration! Tattoo art, known as "flash", also works well. Flash art can be found on many internet sites as well as in body art magazines. (Remember we should not copy others work directly even if it s a different medium from that which we are working in -- we can use a work as inspiration and work from it without copying. Students should be made aware of plagiarism and copyright infringement policies within the school.) From whatever source you take your image, keep the following things in mind: The image will be 18 x 24 and should not include areas of color smaller than the tip of a pencil eraser (its nearly impossible to wax around such a small area without filling it in!) The image must have all the elements of good composition - it should be balanced in terms of space, shape, color, and value. It can be symmetrical or asymmetrical with repeating patterns - as long as it is visually dynamic and well planned! 2

Process Preparation: 1. Students look for images on the internet or in magazines or resource books. Have them draw thumbnail sketches of images. Discuss the following issues with each student: Contour lines around each color, where colors will be placed, color choices, size of areas (too big will look simplistic, extremely small areas will be difficult to wax without filling in accidentally.) 2. Upon approval, have student draw final image to the full size 18 x 24. The students can draw directly onto the fabric if their drawing skills are sufficient or onto white paper otherwise. The fabric can then be place over the drawing and the drawing can be traced onto the fabric. 3. Have students prepare their large cardboard cover with large sheets of white bulletin board paper. 4. Students lay several flat sheets of newspaper on top of their cardboard and then flatly lay muslin on top of this. Waxing Demonstration: 1. Waxing demo of tjanting tool: Draw a picture of a tjanting to show how the well holds wax and how the slant of the tip prevents wax from dripping during transport from the wax pot to the work. 2. Cover work surface with newspaper. Place fabric on the newspaper close to the wax pot. Holding the tjanting in one hand dip into the melted wax (initially the tjanting must be in the wax for 30 seconds to melt any solified wax and to heat the well up). Hold the tjanting tilted up to prevent drips (hold over a paper towel in the other hand if drips are a problem!). Place the tjanting s tip on a drawn contour line - without hesitating draw the line until the well runs dry or the wax comes out translucent instead of transparent (the wax is then too cool to penetrate the fibers). 3. MAKE SURE THAT THE WAX IS PENETRATING THE FIBER - the cloth will look darker and the wax will come through the other side. If it is not penetrating, the dye will bleed through the contour line into other sections! Remove wax that has not penetrated and re-wax those areas. Remove by picking off with fingernail. Or draw another line of wax along side the line that did not penetrate. 4. Return the tjanting to the pot and refill the well. Repeat the process until all the contour lines are drawn in. 5. If any larger areas are to remain white, fill in using an old bristle brush dipped in wax. 6. Reinforce that the DYE ARE SHOULD NOT BE WAXED UNLESS IT IS COMPLETELY DRY. 3

Dye Demonstration: 1. Students mix color dyes that correspond to the visual color scheme. Mix colors according to value. Start with water then drip brush into the lightest color dye and color the water. Test the value on a white sheet of paper. Select the darker color that will be mixed with the other color using a clean brush and dipping it into the darker color and mixing it with the first color. More intense colors will need less or no water. ALWAYS start with the lightest color and add darker colors to this mixture. Do this process for all colors 2. Using a watercolor brush begin filling in the spaces intended to be that color. Work from the interior of the space out to the edges - this way if a wax contour is not fully sealed the dye will bleed through slowly instead of soaking completely into the next space. If you discover a problem, stop that section and continue with another. Once the fabric dries you can use more wax to seal the leak. 3. Once you have filled in all areas for one color you must allow the fabric to dry. 4. You can do additional colors if they don t touch areas just done (too much wet dye can cause runs and leaks that will bleed colors into each other. 5. Once the dye is dry, wax in those areas to seal. The entire design will eventually be covered with wax -- this keeps all the fabric feeling the same after it is ironed out. 6. The last stage is to dip the batik into black dye to create the interesting batik lines. Leave in dye for about 10 min. Remove and try off the standing dye. Let dry overnight. THINGS TO THINK ABOUT: Colors dry lighter Multiple coats of dye will produce more vibrant or darker colors Colors can be mixed on the fabric for interesting blending but the results are unpredictable - test on scrap fabric for color and technique. Wet on wet will fully blend, wet onto dry will blend less and will leave a water-line or stain at the intersection. Ironing demonstration: 1. Ironing demo: Place several layers of newspaper on the ironing surface. Place fabric on top of newspaper and cover with several additional layers of newspaper. With an iron set on high, iron over the entire surface until the wax melts through the paper. Change paper as it becomes saturated with melted wax. 2. Continue this process until the newsprint picks up no more wax. (If the newspaper ink seems to be transferring, use un-printed newsprint instead) 3. Crop work down to the desired dimensions after ironing. Work can be mounted on matboard using acid-free mounting tape. Or the finished fabric can be made into pillows, sunglass cases or cell-phone pouches, or potpourri sachets. (see examples) Closure and Grading Criteria: (See attached Rubric) A self-reflection regarding the choice or imagery and the use of color to support the chosen theme is a standard part of the grading and is used as a starting point for a critique. 4

Arkansas Frameworks: 7 th grade 5.7.1, 5.7.2, 5.7.3, 5.7.4, 5.7.5, 5.7.6, 5.7.7, 5.7.8, 5.7.9, 5.7.12, 5.7.13, 5.7.14, 5.7.16, 5.7.1, 6.7.1, 6.7.5, 6.7.6, 6.7.9, 6.7.10, 6.7.12, 6.7.14, 6.7.14, 7.7.1, 7.7.3, 7.7.4, 7.7.5, 7.7.6, 7.7.7 8 th Grade 5.8.1, 5.8.2, 5.8.3, 5.8.4, 5.8.10, 5.8.1, 5.8.12, 5.8.13, 5.8.14, 5.8.15, 5.8.16, 6.8.1, 6.8.2, 6.8.5, 6.8.6, 6.8.9, 6.8.10, 6.8.12, 6.8.14, 6.8.15, 7.8.1, 7.8.2, 7.8.3, 7.8.4, 7.8.5, 7.8.6, 7.8.7 Art 1 F.1.Al.1, F.1.Al.2, F.1.Al.3, F.1.Al.4, F.1.Al.5, F.1.Al.6, F.2.Al.1, F.2.Al.2, F.2.Al.4, F.2.Al.5, F.1.Al.6, F.1.Al.7, F.3.Al.1, CP.4.Al.1, CP.4.Al.2, CP.4.Al.3, CP.4.Al.4, CP.4.Al.6, CP.4.Al.8, CP.4.Al.9, CP.4.Al.10, CP.4.Al.11, RR.5.Al.1, RR.5.Al.2, RR.5.Al.3, RR.5.Al.4, RR.5.Al.6, RR.5.Al.7 Art 2 CP.1.Al1.1, CP.1.Al1.2, CP.1.Al1.3, CP.1.Al1.4, CP.1.Al1.5, CP.1.Al1.6, CP.1.Al1.7, CP.1.Al1.9, CP.1.A1l.11, CP.1.Al1.12, CP.1.A11.14, CP.1.A11.15, CP.1.A11.16, RR.2.A11.1, RR.2.A11.2, RR.2.A11.5, RR.2.A11.6, RR.2.A11.7, RR.2.A11.8 Art 3 / 4 CP.1.Al1.1, CP.1.Al1.2, CP.1.Al1.3, CP.1.Al1.4, CP.1.Al1.5, CP.1.Al1.6, CP.1.Al1.7, CP.1.Al1.9, CP.1.A1l.11, CP.1.Al1.12, CP.1.A11.14, CP.1.A11.15, CP.1.A11.16, RR.2.A11.1, RR.2.A11.2, RR.2.A11.4, RR.2.A11.5, RR.2.A11.6, RR.2.A11.7, RR.2.A11.8 5

NAME TEXTILES: Batik CLASS/PERIOD: Grading Criteria Tell what you think Here s what I think 1.) Preplanning: Did you acquire your idea and visual on a timely manner? Were you ready to start the batik process with the class? 2.) Originality: Is your image produced in an original way or is it similar to other students work? 3.) Craftsmanship: Waxing and dye are neat and precise. 4.) Use of Color: Your color choices make sense based on your visual. No one color stands apart unless it is a planned focal point. 5.) Safe use of wax/iron: Did you observe all the safely considerations presented in the demonstrations? 6.) Openness to criticism: Were you willing to listen to my comments/did you consider and act on those comments when appropriate? 7.) Studio maintenance: Did you clean up after your self and return supplies to the correct locations? 8.) Use of Class Time: Did you use your time wisely (no working on homework or socializing until after the project was done?) 9.) Deadline: Did you meet the deadline? 10.) Self Reflection: Did you put in writing what you liked and did not like about your batik and why? Final Grade 100 X 3 = 300 100 X 3 = 300 6