![]() ![]() Ultimately, I suppose you could draw designs over the entire piece of fabric. Next I drew a design on the final flap of fabric that would be folded over her body. Instead, she let me draw an abstract design within an oval shape: After flipping the corners back down, I used a pencil to make faint lines about where I folded the fabric then when I started drawing, I knew about where to draw the designs.Ĭarol wanted to draw a face, but I said that would be far too difficult. I flipped up the corner down by her feet first, folded over one side then the other side, and finally flipped the top corner down over her face. ![]() And if I were making one for myself - Carol’s five foot nine inches tall, but I’m six foot five - I’d probably want a 110 inch square of fabric.)Ĭarol lay on the cloth diagonally. (But if I were to do this again, I’d use a 90 inch square. We wrapped Carol up in the muslin to see how much cloth was needed, and discovered that 2 yards of 110 inch fabric worked. So we went down to Joanne Fabric and got 3 yards of 90 inch-wide unbleached cotton muslin, and a couple dozen different colored fabric markers. Tonight, Carol and I decided to play around with some materials and try a few things out. will offer a workshop on Saturday called “It’s a Wrap: Design Your Own Burial Shroud.” The point of the workshop is not to make the actual shroud you’re going to be buried in, but to start thinking about a design for something that you’d like to be wrapped up in after you die. ![]() A week-long event called “Reimagine End of Life” is taking place in San Francisco right now. ![]()
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