Gelli® Plate Printing on Nonwoven Fusible Interfacing

Printing on a different substrate is a great way to change things up. Watch this video and get inspired to create Gel prints on nonwoven fusible interfacing!

Nonwoven interfacing is a wonderful material for printing with Gelli® plates! It looks similar to dryer sheets, and its intended purpose is to add extra body to fabric. But it takes paint beautifully! And the heat-activated adhesive makes it so easy to incorporate printed pieces into your mixed media art.

The top piece in the next picture shows the adhesive (shiny) side. The piece underneath it is the ‘right’ side—the side we print on (non-shiny side). They’re placed on a black and white image to show the beautiful translucent quality of this interfacing. 

The samples here are all printed on Pellon® (808 Craft-Fuse®) — but any smooth nonwoven interfacing should work well. Nonwoven interfacing comes in a variety of weights. You can buy it by the yard then cut it into pieces ready for printing. 

What are the advantages of printing on nonwoven interfacing, you may be wondering? 

Well… the nonwoven fiber surface prints beautifully, it’s super-easy to cut with scissors or a rotary cutter, the material is soft and easy to sew, doesn’t fray, and adds strength when fused to paper — an especially good thing when adding stitching by hand or machine on paper. Also, it has a translucent quality making it wonderful for layering over previous prints, text or images! It’s an excellent collage material for paper or fabric projects…and great for adding printed elements to painted works on canvas or board!

Begin by cutting your interfacing into pieces for printing. It makes things easy if you do this ahead of time, so you’re ready for printing. I pre-cut the interfacing used in the video into 9″x12″ pieces — perfect for printing on the large 12″x14″ Gelli® plate!

The printing process is the same as it is for paper. The one difference is that the paint on the gel plate can bleed through the back of the interfacing as you print. So I recommend using a cover sheet to keep your hands and print clean. A piece of blank newsprint paper, copy paper or deli paper works great as a cover sheet.

You’ll also find that printing on interfacing calls for heavier application of paint on your Gelli® plate.

Here are the steps for printing:

  1.  Apply paint to the Gelli® plate and roll out with a brayer.
  2.  Make your marks in the wet paint. 
  3.  Place a piece of the fusible non-woven interfacing on the plate with the shiny side UP.
  4.  Place a cover sheet over the interfacing and rub with your hands to transfer the paint.
  5.  Remove the cover sheet, then pull your print!
  6.  If there’s enough paint remaining on the plate, pull a ghost print.

You can print on interfacing in layers, just as you do on paper. Use your favorite stencils, masks, combs and other texture tools. Or if you prefer, take a painterly approach.

Once you’ve created prints on fusible non-woven interfacing you have many options for using them. The prints are perfect for paper or fabric collage, so consider cutting them into pieces and fusing to other artworks. If you have a die-cutting machine…you might try cutting them into different shapes!

If you’re looking for a good substrate to fuse your prints to… how about those papers you use to roll off paint from your brayer. They’re perfect for collage! Cut up some interfacing prints and fuse some pieces right onto the painted papers for a quick and gratifying mixed media experience! Add stitching! Add doodling! Add embellishments! Fun!

Colored pencils, NeoColorII crayons, Inktense pencils and fabric pens are among the fun ways to work further on nonwoven interfacing prints!

To fuse the interfacing to paper or fabric, follow the manufacturer’s directions. Place parchment paper on your ironing surface to protect it, then place the substrate and fusible pieces on it. Cover the whole thing with parchment paper to protect your iron. Press to fuse. Easy!

If your interfacing isn’t fusible — no problem. After you make your prints you can easily iron a layer of fusible (such as Wunder-Under or Misty Fuse — or your favorite fusible webbing) to your interfacing prints and they’re ready to fuse to another substrate. Or, simply use gel medium or your favorite collage adhesive.

Printing on non-woven interfacing is a process that can send you into a creative frenzy! So many possibilities!

FYI— Materials used in the video include the following:

This Contest is officially CLOSED 

Congratulations to our winner via random number generator: DIANE!! Simply stated… we have AMAZING fans. I’m always shocked and humbled by the talent and creativity amongst our fans and contest entrants! Here is a description of Diane… A fiber artist specializing in art quilts. She loves to play with different fabrics and fibers, dyes and paints, and other surface design materials/techniques. Please – go check her blog to admire her lovely works of art!http://dianehamburgart.blogspot.com/

And we have an AWESOME GIVEAWAY!!!

Our giveaway includes a 12″x14″ Gelli Arts® Gel Printing Plate… and a special Gelli® apron!


One winner will be selected at random to receive this fabulous prize. To enter to win simply leave a comment here on the blog. Comments will be accepted until (Tuesday, July 29th at 12noon EST). Our lucky winner will be announced here on the blog and on our Facebook page no later than (Tuesday, July 29th at 5 pm EST). Good luck!

This Contest is officially CLOSED

328 thoughts on “Gelli® Plate Printing on Nonwoven Fusible Interfacing”

  1. Another awesome idea! I'm teaching an art journaling class at our homeschool coop this fall and I can't to try this out with them!

  2. This is another great surface to print on. I would love to get a plate to start creating magic with.

  3. Wow, I will have to hit up one of my sewing friends or go to Jo-Ann's to buy some of this nonwoven fusible stuff. I loooooove the effects, so beautiful. Looking forward to trying this on more than one size Gelli plate.

  4. Great ideas! Now I know what to do with all that fusible I bought years ago when I was sewing more often. Thanks for the chance to win!

  5. What an awesome idea. I will certainly be giving this a try very soon. I just love to play on my Gelli plate and today just may be a good day. Raining here today.

  6. Absolutely LOVE the way this looks! It gives the design a lovely texture and it's perfect to use for quilts, wall hangings, and table runners!

  7. I've never heard of this non fusible stuff but I'm going to buy some today & play!! Thx for another great idea

  8. Just bought the 6×6 plate yesterday. Had a lot of fun experiment in all afternoon. Would love to win the largest plate! This great! The possibilities are endless!

  9. What a cool idea, love how the interfacing looks with all the layers of texture.(Great video!) LOVE how you all keep coming up with such creative ideas to use the Gelli plate. Thanks for a chance to win!

  10. Linda DesGroseilliers

    I have some of that interfacing left over from a project – need to dig it out and use it on my Gelli Plate! Can never have too many Gelli Plates or aprons!

  11. Love, love, love, this technique ! Would never have thought to use the fusible interfacing. Must play with this,need that 12×14 gelliplate

  12. JeaneePaintsLive

    You are such an inspiration. I love the videos and the blog with all the wonderful things you can do with Gelli. I love my small Gelli plate and would be thrilled to win a larger one!

  13. I love all the different techniques using the Gelli plates. It is on my wish list to buy one soon!

  14. This is great, and it gives me another idea… Gelli printing on the stiff fabric substrate I use for bead embroidery… I'm off to play in the studio!!!

  15. I so love the gelli plate and all the fun things you can do with it. This is a really great post and I have tons of the usable. Time to play!

  16. Joanna Grant Art

    You wonderful people at Gelli Arts are always coming up with such cool new ways to use the gelli plate. Thanks for this great post and giveaway. Cheers! Joanna Grant

  17. Linda on the Prairie

    I'm a Gelli addict, but the only rehab I need is more hours in the day to play. Picking up 2 @ 3 x 5 and a 5 x 7 this weekend to round out my collection.

  18. love love love the Gelli plate! I cover my one of a kind hand made journals with my Gelli art and people love them! Thanks for the Gelli and the give away!!

  19. what a great technique!! I truly Love all your inspirational videos and fab ideas!! I only have a small gelli plate so I would just love to win this big one! thnx for a chance!!

  20. Super idea!!!! Heading to the store today for some Pellon 808 Craft Fuse!!! Can't wait to give it a try…sooooo much fun!
    TFS
    Jan Castle

  21. This is such an amazing medium. Can't wait to try. Your pieces are so incredibly beautiful. Thank you for the inspiration and how to's!

  22. Awesome video and inspiration. I have my plate but haven't inked it up yet. I really want to give this a try. You make it look so easy. Thanks for the chance to win and thanks for all the ideas.

  23. Thanks for the great examples and the chance to win an apron. I NEED the apron; my favorite t-shirt has paint on it!!! Which I guess could be a good thing?? 🙂

  24. This blog always amazes me in two ways: first, with how many wonderful and unique ideas you come up with to use with the Gelli plate, and second, how much my mind seems to creatively explode with each new idea! Would LOVE to win the Giant Gelli!

  25. I am new to Gelli printing and am learning all the time thanks to all your information…..Thank you so much for the chance to win.xxx

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Printing Projects

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading