Friday, August 14, 2015

Hello Kitty


Happy birthday to my sister! My little sister turns 23 today and next week we are going to be celebrating her birthday at a baseball game. If you are a frequent visitor to BooBear Designs then you know that my family and I are huge Oakland A's fans. For those of you who don't know, the Oakland A's are a MLB baseball team located in California, across the bay from the San Francisco Giants. Anyways, my sister is also a huge A's fan and she also loves Hello Kitty. For her birthday, besides the ticket to the baseball game, I decided to make her a Hello Kitty A's t-shirt to wear to the baseball game. The t-shirt also matches a coin purse I bought her a few months ago. 

A few weeks ago I posted my tutorial on designing and creating t-shirts using freezer paper. In the post, I mentioned that it was helpful to use markers to outline the template or to color in pieces that you wanted to keep, etc. This was a necessary part for creating the stencil for the Hello Kitty t-shirt. When I designed the template and traced the stencil on freezer paper I hadn't considered how I was going to cut out the pieces and make a usable template. Outlining and coloring in the pieces of the template provided me with a visual to use when creating my stencil. I ended up cutting out each piece and then reassembling the pieces on the t-shirt to recreate the design. I fit the pieces together and then removed one piece at a time to paint. I decided on the pieces to remove based on color, going from dark to light. In general, you want to paint from dark to light as dark colors are easier to fix if you make a mistake. It is a lot easier to cover up a white spot on black then a black spot on white. 
For the most part, this t-shirt design worked up quickly and I was really lucky that the paint dried fast. As soon as I finished with one piece the paint was dry and I was able to start another piece. The face and hat of Hello Kitty took the longest because they required multiple layers of paint. The outline of black is visible on the black t-shirt, but not overwhelming. The outline was crucial for identifying the features of Hello Kitty. I was not able to make a stencil for the bow and had to freehand the outline, but I think the bow turned out well. 

Is there a sport's team or character that you can't get enough of? Combining these can lead to a truly one-of-a-kind piece of memorabilia for you or a loved one.