Showing posts with label linoleum block. Show all posts
Showing posts with label linoleum block. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

2012/365 - Day 11

MI ATC Exchange meeting tonight

The theme this month is "Weather".



Here is the completed linocut block.




















This is the full size print (without the dots I added for the eyes).

















I pulled sixteen prints to select the best five (or six) for trading with the group tonight.











And here they are...I added the dots for his eyes.

This is a detail of the (somewhat) larger print. It has been cut down to meet the ATC size requirement.








I loaded my trading cards into plastic sleeves and slipped them into the wonderful traveling case that Ruth got for me.


I will add a photo of the cards I get in trade later tonight.








Here are the wonderful ATCs I got in trade!

Monday, December 19, 2011

365 Day 353

cat-creature progress continues...and I learn a few things


In yesterday's post I decided I wasn't going to do the plaster cloth layer. That was just before 7 p.m. Naturally, as the night wore on I got antsy to do it.

(That was the first thing I learned -- if I prepare a surface I really need to plaster cloth it before I go to bed no matter how much I say I'm not going to.)


So I did.

Remembering the bottom of the goat-creature's base (and how it was becoming uneven) I propped up the base of the cat-creature so I could get my fingers/plaster cloth underneath it.





More of the things I learned...


Trying to lay plaster cloth on top of chicken wire doesn't work so well. At least not in this configuration. There is too much of a gap happening and I am beginning to run low on plaster cloth.









I thought masking tape might help that area.











Kinda, but not really. Plus I needed to apply much, much more tape and my hands were wet with plaster cloth. And the water was hot/warm and plastery already...too big of a deal to toss it out (because I can't just dump it down the sink) while I applied masking tape (that I didn't want to use).












What was handy...???

Uh...okay...I will try the Scott's Xtreme Rags again.

I canNOT believe how well this works. I didn't stop to take a lot of photos, but I used a lot of "rags" on the surface of the chicken wire. And the tape on the inside (facing out of the chicken wire) helped to secure the paper rag long enough for me to slap a plaster cloth triangle or two onto it (one handed) until I could let go of it. Amazing.












What the inside looks like right now. I had a few triangles left so I put them to use on one of the horizontal tomato cage rods to secure the tiers. (I doubt it is actually doing much.)













How the cat-creature looked from the doorway into the studio last night.
















I realize that this guy is up on a table and that being a solid color is making a huge difference in my perception at the moment, but man -- this guy is looking TALLer than before!



I also learned that although I liked him a lot before, he is really making me smile now...Chime Cat smiley.









One more thing I learned...today.

My hand(s) are not ready for linocarving yet.

This block is salvageable, but not right now. Ow.

Monday, August 29, 2011

365 Day 241

I'm falling in love with this project

YAY! This is the sort of thing I was hoping for -- that I could let go of the idea of "landscape with a capital L" and just make a "places" inside of a deep shadow box...and submit them to the show and not be concerned at all if/when they don't get juried in because I love them so much that I will be hanging them on my walls in my house anyway. And I am only partway there!


Okay. Remember this is how the uncarved linoleum block looked the last time I messed with it. And remember I said it was no big deal because I could still carve on it?







I have been playing with the idea of either a pretty piece of handmade paper (or layers of colors of paper) or a watercolor-washed sheet of watercolor paper as the background for the shadow box scene.


Today I figured out that -- duh -- wouldn't it be good if I tried to carve one?



I traced a circle onto the block.








I started carving it out with different sizes of blades. That was going to be a LOT of carved out area, so I wanted to vary the carving marks.











I have never carved in this way before. I didn't make an outline circle, I just started each gouge at the line and carved away from it, trying to keep the edge even.

My original idea (and I'm not positive I won't still do this) was to carve vertically for the sky and then carve the sun/moon horizontally or diagonally with really thin lines.




While I was carving I thought I would try to leave some surfaces that might look like tree trunks. I did it without lines. I was thinking I might cut really thin lines or patterns into the trees...that is still undecided, too.










Here is the first test print on just plain newsprint. I used my Speedball Red Baron baren instead of a plastic spoon for burnishing because the bottom of the carving is so flat and the top is so open.

Not bad for a first try.










Second test print. There are a lot of ideas floating around in my head about how to proceed with the carving of this block, but I kind of like it like this and I need to look at it for a bit longer.

I was planning on making each of the mostly vertical sections of the hill have individual diagonal lines...maybe make some rock-like gouges every once in a while. We'll see...



In the meantime I got the idea to stamp out a bunch of the images and play with how they could look together.

I needed a lot of trees. These are the bigger ones.


I love repetition!




Yep, yep, yep. I am really loving these individual stamps. I have about a billion ideas of how to use them right about now...and ideas for more images for the set.


These are the smaller trees.


repetition, repetition, rep-e-TITION! sung to the tune of "Levitation" by Hawkwind.






The stamped and cut out landscape elements along with the test print background.









This is cracking me up -- I love it!

This would be dimensional in the deep shadow box. Pretend like you can see behind things.

I just laid these out to see how it might look.

The stripey hills with the sitting rabbit.







The plain hills with the squirrel.










The running rabbit and both hills.

In this scene that large cloud almost looks like the top of a tree over those three trunks. That gave me another idea for more carvings!






Wow -- like I said, I am really falling in love with this whole project! The possibilities are pretty much endless. It's funny. I started out making art by rubber stamping back in the late eighties. I even had my own mail order rubber stamp business. I still have the vulcanizer. Hmmmm...

But for now, maybe I can make loads of variations of these little shadow boxes and put them in my Etsy store...if I get that ambitious!

Thursday, August 18, 2011

365 Day 230

okay, not this...but back to the drawing board (perhaps)

Today I have been working on putting together a hand drawn landscape with the thought of making it as a linocut carving.

This is the block from last week that I wasn't all that happy with.













This is a landscape that I drew.











I decided to transfer the drawing onto the linocut block because I don't want to waste the block.











Admittedly, it is a mess and a bit hard to see, but this is what i
t looked like after the transfer.














Here I used a Sharpie to darken the lines.














I started to mark out what I would want to be solid and what would be carved out...but I'm just not in love with it. I am not feeling this -- at least not in this form or maybe just not as a linocut carving.

Or maybe it is that I don't like this size for this drawing? This block is 6" x 9". Maybe I'd like a trio of smaller format carvings?

I'm still not sure. I fried a few brain cells with the fumes from that Sharpie and I am done with this for tonight. I am going to keep thinking about it though.

Oh...and the block isn't completely wrecked...I can still use it for something else.

I am still not totally convinced that I am done with the possibility of submitting a landscape for that show. Not yet.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

365 Day 219

wow -- I haven't done this in a while

I haven't made Artist Trading Cards in a long time. I just joined a local ATC group. We meet on the 2nd Wednesday of the month and the theme for the upcoming trade is "Egg".

We make a minimum of 5 cards to trade, but some members make more.

My first thought was to fall back on my usual collage methods...but bolstered by my recent activities at Art & Ideas Gallery with Shaqe Kalaj at the relief printmaking class I decided to try and freehand draw an egg and a design right onto the linoleum block.

I figured I might be able to get some uniformity and consistency with a linocut print and it would be a good opportunity to practice printmaking. I also wanted to make an uncluttered drawing. I am pretty happy with the results so far.




the block (after I inked/printed/tweaked the carving a few times)
















ink and brayer















the inked up linoleum block















the paper laying over the inked up block, after burnishing













I ended up making 18 egg prints of the final version of the carving -- I set them aside to dry for now -- I am not sure how many will make the cut and become actual ATCs






I used a linoleum block that was bigger than the size of an ATC so that I would have room to adjust it to fit the cards I use. I'm not sure yet how I will finish off the cards, but this is a great start!
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