//A few months ago, a friend came over for a craft night, and we made freezer paper stencil shirts for our little ones birthdays {they are only a day apart!}. A week later, I cut out some stencils, and let my niece and my son paint their own freezer paper stencil shirts. All of the shirt came out amazing! I am so impressed with this technique. It's so easy, and so fun.
//Flash forward to last week. I knew I wanted to do a tutorial for my blog. I spent a few hours surfing Pinterest for the perfect tutorial project to make. I was a bit frustrated when I couldn't find the right one. A little later I was doing laundry, and I pulled out two tank tops I had found in the basement when we were sorting through things the other day. I thought to myself "these look like they need something. Maybe I could freezer paper stencil something on them". DING! I knew what I was doing for my tutorial!
So here it is- DIY Freezer Paper Stencils
Announcement! This right here, is my very first tutorial :)
Here is what you will need:
-A tshirt, tank top, or any other fabric
-A silhouette of the image you want to stencil
-X-acto knife and cutting mat
-Iron
-Fabric paint
-Sponges/paintbrushes
-Freezer paper
-Cardboard or cookie sheet
-A Sharpie
First, wash and dry your fabric without fabric softeners. This will pre-shrink your fabric.
Next, print your image onto regular printer paper. I use my friend, Google, to search for silhouettes or images with a simple bold outline of the design I want to use. Then I save the image to my computer and insert it into a word document and design it that way. I'm sure you could use Photoshop, or other photo editing software, but word is easiest for me.
For the next step, I use a Sharpie to trace the outline of the image onto the freezer paper. Rip off a piece large enough for your image and a few inches all around it. Then put the printed image on your work space, and lay the freezer paper on top of that with the shiny side down.
Be sure to save any little pieces (like the negative space) of the stencil so you can use them later.
Then lay your cardboard or cookie sheet in between the layers of the shirt. I usually use the back of my cookie sheets for this part, because I never have much cardboard laying around, and because I've found that I can get a smoother, harder surface with my cookie sheet. It will get paint on it, but it washes off pretty easily.
Be sure to pull the fabric taut, but not too tight to where it's stretching the fabric. I tuck the extra fabric under the cookie sheet, and it stays in place if I don't move it around.
Then center the stencil where you want it to go, and iron it in place, using medium or even high heat paying careful attention to the edges. I check it with my finger nails when I think it's on there good enough. This part is very important so you have nice clean edges. Don't forget to place any of those little pieces you saved on!
Now you can start painting. Use your paintbrush or sponge to apply the paint. I like to use the sponges so I don't get brush marks, and because I like how the sponge applies the paint. Don't be afraid to use a lot of paint, but make sure it's evenly applied. Sometimes it take a couple coats to get complete coverage.
After you finish painting, you can slowly peel off the stencil {this is the fun part!} I use my X-acto knife to carefully pull off any of those small pieces.
I outlined my image in a silver metallic paint because I thought it needed something else.
Let dry, add any other details or more paint layering, and you are done!
You're done! Wear your shirt proudly! I paired my shirt with my favorite plaid shorts, some cute dangly earrings, and my new Hoot & Bumble wristlet for some Sunday morning errand running!
This is such a fun project to do. You can even let the kids paint the shirt after you get the stencils ironed on!
I'd love to see your freezer paper stencil creations. Post them to the Hoot & Bumble facebook wall, or tweet them to @hootandbumble.