Hello! Here's a quick print I made yesterday and today; I figured since I had done a Prince of Dogs print awhile ago, it was time the snakes got some royalty of their own. This is a 2-color letterpress print:
Saturday, November 20, 2010
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Letterpress French Fold Pamphlet and a question!
Hello guys! Here's what I've been working on this week: a French fold pamphlet telling a little story through illustrations. This is a reductive linoleum block-carved print that I made with a Vandercook press (which I looove!) Here's the cover:
The middle:
With closeups:
Aaaaand the back cover:
Ta da! If you're interested in the videos I've been making, I also started a fancy schmancy cooking show called Recipes to Impressipes. My first dish is homemade ice water.
BUT! I have a question for anyone who might be reading this. I've been thinking about moving this blog to tumblr recently, as it seems more image-based (which is the way I like to blog) and posts seem easier to share and spread. I also think I'd get a little more image area out of it so I wouldn't have to squash my bigger images so much to fit into this template.
The downside of this, of course, is that I'd be starting from scratch (although I'd probably copy over all my old posts) and people who read this blog would have to go/subscribe somewhere new. So my question to you is: what's your opinion? I want to do whatever is easiest for the people who read this, so please let me know!
The middle:
With closeups:
Aaaaand the back cover:
Ta da! If you're interested in the videos I've been making, I also started a fancy schmancy cooking show called Recipes to Impressipes. My first dish is homemade ice water.
BUT! I have a question for anyone who might be reading this. I've been thinking about moving this blog to tumblr recently, as it seems more image-based (which is the way I like to blog) and posts seem easier to share and spread. I also think I'd get a little more image area out of it so I wouldn't have to squash my bigger images so much to fit into this template.
The downside of this, of course, is that I'd be starting from scratch (although I'd probably copy over all my old posts) and people who read this blog would have to go/subscribe somewhere new. So my question to you is: what's your opinion? I want to do whatever is easiest for the people who read this, so please let me know!
Labels:
cooking show,
french fold,
letterpress,
linoleum prints,
videos
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
New Litho Print, a Collaborative Book, and Videos! Hurrah!
Hello, everyone! Hope Halloween was lovely; it certainly was for me, as I got to go to a corn maze for the first time and enjoy a party from my always wonderful friend Chase. My roommate and I went as Hank and Dean Venture from the Venture Brothers because we are supernerds. But enough about that! Here's what I've been up to! This first print is a 4-color, 22x15 inch litho print, but I still want to add a couple more layers:
I also did this collaborative exquisite corpse book, in which I (and fourteen other people) made two body parts and bound them into a book, so you can flip the body parts around to get new combinations. Here are two combos with my two body parts in them:
And here's a closeup on the ones I did:
I've also made a couple videos recently: a parody of Doctor Who and a tour of Savannah with my little sister.
I also did this collaborative exquisite corpse book, in which I (and fourteen other people) made two body parts and bound them into a book, so you can flip the body parts around to get new combinations. Here are two combos with my two body parts in them:
And here's a closeup on the ones I did:
I've also made a couple videos recently: a parody of Doctor Who and a tour of Savannah with my little sister.
Labels:
animals,
books,
collaborations,
letterpress,
videos
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Hunter S. Thompson Mini Print!
So I really love the late Dr. Hunter S. Thompson, and decided to try my hand at polymer letterpress plates by doing this mini print of a Nixon-masked crow carrying him off into the great beyond. This print is about 5 by 7 inches and has just two colors; mmmm, a little printmaking appetizer.
Labels:
animals,
crows,
Hunter S. Thompson,
letterpress
Monday, October 4, 2010
Lithography Skull
I made this litho print the other day. I was experimenting a lot with stone lithography and my image started to disappear as I was printing, so I made prints with the image starting out like this:
and ending up like this:
Oh lithography, you flighty vixen. On the video front, I've been raging about cake and being an idiot in the car.
Labels:
lithography,
skulls,
stone lithography
Thursday, September 30, 2010
David Bowie Moonage Daydream Print
I am pretty obsessed with David Bowie. This is my first time printing a woodblock on a Vandercook press, and it was pretty awesome. Actually, the blue layer is just carved out of a placemat, the black layer is a woodblock, and the text is lead type. These are my four favorite Bowies: 60's mod Bowie, Ziggy Stardust/Aladdin Sane, the Thin White Duke, and Labyrinth Bowie. WOOOO!
Labels:
David Bowie,
Labyrinth,
letterpress,
music,
woodcut prints
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Stone Litho Print
Mini update, hurrah! This is my first stone lithography print, drawn with a grease crayon:
And if you've been wondering what I've been up to, you can watch my video blog to see my new apartment and roommates or watch me gossip about Andy Warhol.
Labels:
dogs,
figure drawings,
lithography,
stone lithography,
video blog
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Letterpress and Litho Prints!
Hello there! After an unfortunate camera-fixing-related hiatus, here are a few litho prints I've done recently. This one's done with a pronto plate:
And this one's a plate:
And here's a small little letterpress flier I printed with hand-set wood type. These projects were kind of made to learn about lithography and letterpress processes, so look out for more interesting and complex things later!
And this one's a plate:
And here's a small little letterpress flier I printed with hand-set wood type. These projects were kind of made to learn about lithography and letterpress processes, so look out for more interesting and complex things later!
Labels:
letterpress,
lithography
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
More Cast Jewelry! Rhino Ring, Obelisk Ring, and Bronze Medals!
Well, here it is: the promised post about the other things I've been casting here in Italy! The first is a rhino ring that I loosely based on the Albrecht Durer rhinoceros print:
This one's an obelisk (which are everywhere in Italy) with my initials in Egyptian hieroglyphs going around it:
And finally, if you remember a looong long time ago I made this print of me battling an octopus. I thought it was about time I got some accolades for that feat, so I made myself these bronze military medals:
Less than a week left in Italy!
This one's an obelisk (which are everywhere in Italy) with my initials in Egyptian hieroglyphs going around it:
And finally, if you remember a looong long time ago I made this print of me battling an octopus. I thought it was about time I got some accolades for that feat, so I made myself these bronze military medals:
Less than a week left in Italy!
Labels:
cast sculpture,
jewelry,
medals,
obelisks,
octopus,
rhinoceros,
rings
Saint Sebastian Double Ring
Here in Italy, I'm afraid I have become somewhat obsessed with the Catholic saints, and my favorite is Saint Sebastian, who's always depicted being shot by arrows (second favorite: Saint Peter of Verona, always depicted with a cleaver in his head. Ow!) I learned to make wax molds and cast recently, so I cast myself a Saint Sebastian double finger ring so I can kick ass Catholicism-style.
I'll post much more cast jewelry soon; I've been busy. For something much less dramatic than a giant ring of a dying saint, you can watch my critique of Kinder Egg toys I've found here in Italy.
I'll post much more cast jewelry soon; I've been busy. For something much less dramatic than a giant ring of a dying saint, you can watch my critique of Kinder Egg toys I've found here in Italy.
Labels:
cast sculpture,
Catholicism,
Italy,
jewelry,
rings,
Saint Sebastian,
saints
Thursday, July 22, 2010
EARGASM! Quick Print Update!
Here's a superquick print update...this is a woodblock print with a keyblock and a second block all jigsawed out so that I could ink the pieces individually and print all the colors in one go. EARGASM!
And here it is without the background, coming soon to a t-shirt near you!
Still having a blast in Italy...look out for more jewelry etc. soon!
And here it is without the background, coming soon to a t-shirt near you!
Still having a blast in Italy...look out for more jewelry etc. soon!
Labels:
woodcut prints
Monday, July 12, 2010
Cortona Streets and Priests: Intaglio Prints!
Here are my first ever intaglio prints! These guys are etched into plates, inked up, and run through the press to produce awesome little prints. I have a long way to go before Intaglio Masterdom, but here's a start! This first one is two separate plates of a sketch I did of one of the alleyways here in Cortona, Italy.
This one is a three-plate print inspired by my recent trip to the Vatican:
And here's another version of it, a "ghost print" made by printing off of the key plate a second time:
Still having a great time in Italy...only a month left!
This one is a three-plate print inspired by my recent trip to the Vatican:
And here's another version of it, a "ghost print" made by printing off of the key plate a second time:
Still having a great time in Italy...only a month left!
Friday, July 2, 2010
A Jewelry Mini-Post
Hello from Italy! Yes, I have been in Italy for nearly a month now, and will be here for over a month more. Here's something I just finished a few days ago, a Cerberus pendant made of copper and brass. The whole thing is maybe the size of a quarter and a dime pushed together:
Aaaand here's the back. I'm thinking I'll make it into a necklace, but as of now it's just a chunk o' metal:
If you're interested what I've been doing in Italy other than making things, you can follow my video blog starting with this video!
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
The Ugly Uncles: Cast Plaster Sculptures!
So here's what I've been doing for the last three weeks: casting a series of sculptures!
I had never done this before, but basically I made an original out of plasticine, covered it in rubber and plaster, cut it open strategically to form a mold, and then cast these guys in plaster with that mold. Here are some little maquettes I was doing in the planning stage:
I chose this guy:
And made him bigger! Such intense concentration...
Here he is almost done; just needs some smoothing out and his legs fixed a bit.
After he is cast, he becomes the four ugly uncles pictured above! Oh, and the four uncles have a fifth sibling. This fifth uncle was my test cast, and he didn't fit in well with the others. So I took him outside and left him in a gargoyley perch downtown for pedestrians to appreciate:
Whew! Oh, and as for what happens to the plasticine after the mold is made: it tends to come out pretty trashed. I combined my leftover plasticine with somebody else to make this abomination afterwards:
Think of that when you try to sleep tonight.
I had never done this before, but basically I made an original out of plasticine, covered it in rubber and plaster, cut it open strategically to form a mold, and then cast these guys in plaster with that mold. Here are some little maquettes I was doing in the planning stage:
I chose this guy:
And made him bigger! Such intense concentration...
Here he is almost done; just needs some smoothing out and his legs fixed a bit.
After he is cast, he becomes the four ugly uncles pictured above! Oh, and the four uncles have a fifth sibling. This fifth uncle was my test cast, and he didn't fit in well with the others. So I took him outside and left him in a gargoyley perch downtown for pedestrians to appreciate:
Whew! Oh, and as for what happens to the plasticine after the mold is made: it tends to come out pretty trashed. I combined my leftover plasticine with somebody else to make this abomination afterwards:
Think of that when you try to sleep tonight.
Labels:
cast sculpture,
plaster,
plasticine,
street art
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