3 Simple Ways to
Share What You Make

With Instructables you can share what you make with the world — and tap into an ever-growing community of creative experts.

PhotosPhotos

Share one or more photos of a project, recipe, or whatever you've made, quickly and easily.

Step by StepStep-By-Step

Share your step-by-step photos with text instructions of what you made so others can do it too!

VideoVideo

Share your how-to video. You'll need your embed code from a video site such as YouTube.

Stencil Shirts with Freezer Paper

Stencil Shirts with Freezer Paper
Freezer paper can be ironed onto t-shirts. This is good for stencils.
 
Remove these adsRemove these ads by Signing Up
 

Step 1Materials Needed:

Materials Needed:
Shirt
Paint(I use acrylic, whatever works on fabric should work for you)
Freezer Paper
Hobby Knife
Iron
Some sort of brushy thing
Something to stencil
« Previous StepDownload PDFView All StepsNext Step »
43 comments
1-40 of 43next »
Feb 10, 2010. 10:58 AMspark master says:
I like this instructable, but I are beez confuzed. you draw then scan then adjust, do you then slice a piece of freezer paper and print it on the paper side? then slice and dice it, reassemble it on the item and iron it on a shirt?  After a good drying you can peel off the paper (pulling off the plastic backed stencil) ?

This is a really nice instructable.

You can get same effect with masking tape on a piece of silicone paper (for small simple designs on a shirt pocket, or plastic contact paper if you have some that is due to be tossed out, it is too tooo expensive for this.

I stenciled numbers and simple stuff on on my kids Pinewood Derby cars with the blue masking tape method, came out nice.  The mask stencils allowed HIM , not me to do it and some came out a tad imperfect, but who cares! 

(Freezer paper has a plastic coating on one side to act as a vapor barrier and quick release, while frozen)

thanks
Feb 7, 2010. 4:04 PMTheCheese9921 says:
I made the blue spaceman stencil on the back of this using this method. Worked pretty good.
Sep 23, 2009. 1:03 PMmusicroxmylife says:
erm. which part must be cut ? the shades or the white one ?
Aug 3, 2009. 6:57 PMGrahamSimmons says:
Thanks for this, this is how I'll make my 'gwai and Do Make Say Think shirts I have planned!
Apr 4, 2009. 11:48 AMPotaterchip says:
great idea.
Apr 4, 2009. 11:46 AMPotaterchip says:
Wow! very impressive. I have been trying to find a good way to stencil on shirts and this is the very first i have read that uses only household items,
Mar 6, 2009. 3:56 PMcoldesire3 says:
I just wanted to say, the 65daysofstatic shirt is awesome. Nice instructable, as well.
Jan 19, 2009. 6:12 AMgrrrachel says:
You can actually print your design directly onto freezer paper if you have an inkjet printer. There are several precautionary measures to be taken into consideration - EG: make sure the paper is flat and not curled, back the sticky side with plain printer paper to prevent the wax from harming your paper feeding mechanism. Common sense stuff. Covering the front (dry side) of your printed freezer paper with clear contact paper before cutting it out also makes the stencil a little more rigid and ready to be used multiple times. It's a little harder to cut out that way, but you do end up with a piece that can be used over and over- thus saving time redoing the cutting process.
Apr 6, 2008. 1:30 PMDeadpunk says:
i've noticed a couple asked "have you ever done this with spray paint?" well i did just that yesterday and today and these are the results and I have to say i'm quite pleased with them. I made the raven shirt yesterday and the one of the back of the guys head exploding today.
Jun 19, 2008. 2:00 AMDandy in the Ghetto says:
Did you just use regular spraypaint? Mine tended to bleed when I tried it. Yours look awesome though...
Jun 19, 2008. 11:50 AMDeadpunk says:
ya they bleed a tiny bit and an i use regular spray paint but that raven shirt the style i did it the bleeding isn't an issue but if you look at the N in RAVEN the there's a brown shadow where the paint bleed around the sencil but as long as you put down like to light coats before a heavy coat or two the bleeding is very little
Jun 19, 2008. 2:09 AMDandy in the Ghetto says:
Awesome instructable. I made mine with acrylic paint with several layers... a Killola ripoff from someone else's instructable, and the hand from the first System of a down album.
Apr 6, 2008. 1:50 PMDeadpunk says:
just one more thing if you cut your freezer paper to the size of regular printer paper you can just print your image onto it and cut it out just make sure when you put the freezer paper in your printer you put it plastic side up so it prints on the paper side.
Oct 25, 2007. 3:43 PMRiddleOfSphinx says:
Nice idea, never knew freezer paper had plastic on one side :P. But, then again, I never use the stuff either ..lol. I'll try this out some time, thanks for the idea :D.
Oct 18, 2006. 3:46 PMkodalith says:
I wouldn't use art already being used by a band when making DIY shirts. That's just my opinion though.
Oct 11, 2007. 12:41 PMkodalith says:
That was in reference to the Isis shirt.
Oct 9, 2007. 5:03 PMravenprints says:
(removed by author or community request)
Oct 10, 2007. 7:09 PMravenprints says:
(removed by author or community request)
Sep 12, 2007. 11:10 AMBostonClothingGroup says:
I have been using a light spray adhesive. Yo dont need freezer paper.
Aug 25, 2007. 4:39 PMcowscankill says:
could you use waxpaper?
Aug 26, 2007. 2:16 PMcowscankill says:
i figured that out...the hard way
Jun 19, 2007. 9:27 PMmodestmoose says:
I do something similar to this with spray paint and cardboard. check out www.myspace.com/khazmkhazm to see what i'm talkin about.
Apr 29, 2007. 11:06 PMworriedman says:
ever used spray paint with this? looks cool. :-)
Dec 19, 2006. 11:54 AMCreamaster says:
Freezer Paper is plastic on one side and paper on the other. Not for baking - for freezing. But the plastic side melts nicely into the shirt when ironed - for making stencils. It then peels off very easily.
Dec 6, 2006. 10:40 AMRRRuff says:
Freezer paper can usually be picked up at your local supermarket. It's just brown paper that has wax on one side. Hunters use it to wrap their meat and freeze it.
Nov 28, 2006. 9:55 AMhethlee says:
wow I really like this idea.. i'm a little confused how it works -don't get me wrong great instructable... i'm just a person that learns by doing... SO i will have to try it out:) thanks for letting me know about it!
Nov 15, 2006. 6:27 PMdingaling says:
Sorry to sound like a complete dumbass but what is freezer paper and where can i buy some?
Nov 16, 2006. 5:00 PMdingaling says:
Cheerz
Sep 11, 2006. 12:21 PMdutton12 says:
you can also buy a textile meduim and mix it with your paint for better results and the pint will withstand more washes.
Sep 9, 2006. 7:58 PMTheCheese9921 says:
how many washes can this last???
Sep 9, 2006. 7:29 AMFrenchCrawler says:
Nice. Is freezer paper the same as wax paper? That's what we use in my house (wax paper) to do this.
Sep 9, 2006. 4:29 PMRaisedByRobots says:
what kind of paint did you use?
1-40 of 43next »

Pro

Get More Out of Instructables

Already have an Account?

close

All Steps Viewing
View all steps of an Instructable on the same page when you're a Pro Member.

Upgrade to Pro today!
2
Followers
1
Author:bignothing