Showing posts with label lino. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lino. Show all posts

3 Apr 2014

in the Etsy shop - hand printed letter writing set.

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Oh my, the weeks really are escaping me.  I can't believe it has been over a week since I wrote in this little space.  Faelen has discovered new games such as I'm going to throw everything off the highchair and cry until you pick it up and his continuing favourite everytime you look at something that is not me I am going to emit a shrill scream until you look back.  Impressive but time consuming! 

In bitesize sessions between these games, I have managed to finally put together these letter writing sets and upload them to Etsy.   I am really thrilled with how they turned out.  For a brief moment (when Faelen woke with a start and I got yellow ink in my eye) I thought about abandoning the project, but through primrose coloured tears I finished.  I am so glad I did - I have already sent a several envelopes out into the big wide world.

Now I have to go and retrieve various drooled on animals from the floor!  Yummy.


20 Mar 2014

lino carved letter writing paper.

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Having got a bit excited about hand stamped letter writing paper a couple weeks ago, I couldn't get the idea out my head.  I have always loved sets of writing paper; my pocket money (and later my student loan) was often spent on packs of beautiful papers with matching envelopes and, if I was very lucky, coordinated stickers.  

I suffer from postal vanity - too often I run out of paper or envelopes and A4 printer paper with plain white business envelopes lack that magic.  
So whilst sat at the table in the dining room last week, with Faelen finally dozing upstairs in his cot (seriously, breakthrough!) I started doodling an idea for writing paper.  I wanted something with a cute motif and slightly wobbly lines, something a bit rough and ready but still special.  I wanted my perfect personalised writing paper.  And this idea was born.

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A couple of lovely evenings chatting with James, drinking tea and listening to the radio with a lino carver in hand and it turned out just how I imagined.  Is it smug to say, I am thrilled with it? The magic porridge pot of unending writing paper!  Now I am just waiting for nap time to draw out some matching envelopes.

14 Jan 2014

on moments of sanity (and lino printing).

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After writing about how time has eluded me since Faelen's arrival, James gave me the gift of an uninterrupted hour.  He took Faelen to the room next door where they bonded over jingly toys and a jungle play mat whilst I revelled in the silence and space of an hour to myself.  

I pulled out my inks, rollers and Japanese papers and laid paper down on the table.  Whilst these fishies have been carved in snatched moments over several weeks, the oily inks and the time required for printing had put them on the backburner.  Finally being able to burnish the print, watching the designs seep through the paper, I was filled with quiet contentment.  Then, what felt like mere seconds later, Faelen cried and my hours' serenity was broken and, leaving a pile of Mackerel and Plaice drying, I went to snuggle with my family on the sofa.

I love a good weekend.

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9 Nov 2013

printing in oils for a mackerel supper.

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James is on call this weekend so the weekend, much like the week, is quiet.  And we are still eagerly awaiting this baby to make his appearance.  

I have used the time to fall in love with oil based lino printing inks.  After the postman arrived conveniently at the crack of dawn, I spent the morning getting my fingers stained in blues and greys and watching my carved designs appear on paper in a way I had previously only hoped they would.  The difference between the blotchy gloop of water based inks and the tight crispness of the oils is unbelievable.  The hum of the radio whilst burnishing the thin Japanese paper against the lino and watching the image appear proved hypnotic and, for once, my day ran away with me.  It was blissful.

The lighting has been terrible all day due to endless rain clouds, so I only have a couple pictures of one print to share for now, but I hope to be able to photograph the rest tomorrow.  
I wish you all a cosy Saturday evening :)

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16 Aug 2013

Sketchbook peeks: bats and lino carving.

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This is my attempt at a speedy lino carving.  My last few lino carvings were more complicated and I just wanted to try something with crisp and clean lines.  Initially when I finished and printed this one I was really underwhelmed, so it sat in my sketchbook for a week being ignored.  Coming back to it today I don't mind it quite so much but I'm not sure I like the 'blockier' look.

Random fact about yours truly; when I had a tendency to take environmental plights to heart, especially that of the bat.  When I was ten I convinced my mother to take me to the local bat training group and I completed the two-weekends training to become a fully qualified bat worker.  As I was under 18 I technically only had the license as long as my mother was in attendance, so my new found skills were never actually put into practice, but I was pretty proud nonetheless!  I guess it was inevitable that at some point a bat feature in my lino carving attempts.

31 Jul 2013

Ramblings and Sketchbook peeks: more lino printing.

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Before I start on the actual aim of my post I just want to ramble a moment.
Yesterday was strange day.  

It was James' last day before starting his first, full-time job as a Doctor and he spent hours skittering around the house with nervous energy.  
There were thunder and lightening storms from dawn to dusk and the cowardly hounds spent much of their day also skittering with nervous energy or trying to convince us they could be lapdogs (they are not small critters).  
At midday I left the nervous nest and braved monsoon rains to go to an appointment at the job center and was basically told, that with my sizeable baby bump, the chance of them finding me work is close to zero.  The woman was lovely, she suggested some places that might offer me temp work if I was lucky and then, in a lowered voice, whispered 'enjoy it, you might never have free time again once the baby arrives'.  

So I came home and spent an hour feeling a little lost.  Many years of juggling part time jobs, volunteering and studying has given me a need to schedule every hour of many day, to always have an aim and to always have a clear idea of what the next step is going to be.  Not always aims and steps I have liked, don't get me wrong, finish the dissertation or get through finals or get the store cupboard at work organised in time for the inspection have not exactly nourished my soul!  But they were present nonetheless.

After this hour, I stood up, boiled the kettle, put the chicken back in her roost, set the bath running and decided:
oh my gosh, this is going to be awesome

Until baby comes in November I am both goal-less and aimless.  And the next step involves meeting baby boy.  I don't think there could be a better next step.

I said it was a strange day.

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Anyway, here is my latest lino print.  The pears were from a drawing I made some time ago in an old sketchbook; I adapted them from a piece of artwork I saw on the internet of which I am completely unable to recall.  So if they look familiar, please please let me know the name of the artist as I am desperate to rediscover his/her work!

This weeks 'lesson learnt' was regarding the quality of the ink.  
Whilst I find the carving side of this process satisfying and therapeutic, until yesterday I found the printing side somewhat less enjoyable.  I tend to focus to highly on the imperfections of the print and get frustrated when the inks aren't exactly even.  Yesterday I tried printing in a different colour (the green print) and the quality of the print immediately improved, I think you can see the difference in the top picture.
The lesson learnt: don't buy the cheapest ink, it ain't worth it!
(If you are UK based, the high quality inks are made by Seawhite of Brighton)


26 Jul 2013

Sketchbook peeks: lino carving and The Pearce Sisters.

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Since moving back to Somerset life has been pleasantly busy; returning to the homeland has meant catching up with the friends and family I have shamefully neglected over the last, manic year in Cardiff.  It has also meant however that I have had little time for my usually unending pile of projects.  Today I am hoping I will be able to make some time to sit in the garden with my sketchbook as apparently our heatwave is due to end and be replaced with storms in the near future.

I thought I would share this (admittedly horrific quality photograph as the original resides in storage) of a quick lino print I made in Cardiff.  As I hadn't played with lino since my last attempt back in December and it was a rainy afternoon, it felt about time to flex the lino-carving-muscles once more.  This is a doodle taken from my favourite short film; The Pearce Sisters (please, please watch below, it is wonderfully dark).  I am still getting my head round the coarseness of using lino; usually my drawings tend towards the small and fiddly, so lino carving feels fairly counter intuitive.  I am not usually one for 'embracing imperfections', but something about picking out long slithers of lino is so disgustingly satisfying, it keeps me trying!  I do believe this is going to be a long learning curve....so again, any hints or tips anyone can impart are most welcome!