I mentioned on Sunday what a great weekend I had had, getting stuck into my type and printing letterpress. It was such a good feeling - I was learning so much, teaching myself, checking with Barry and I got utterly and completely absorbed by it all; as well as delighted with how things worked out.
I don't think any printmaker ever really gets over that moment of 'the reveal' - when you lift the paper from the press and see what magic has transpired. I had so many happy moments.
That's not to say I have created masterpieces and great works of art; but I have had the satisfaction of achieving what I set out to do, and with some success.
My aim was to have each of the poems hanging on a long slender piece of paper. Drifting a bit like clouds are want to do.
I deliberately printed each poem in a slightly different shade of grey. I had thought I would only print the long sheets - a couple of long white ones and a mottled blue-grey one; but in the end I just kept printing on smaller sheets of whatever light drifty paper I could find in the studio - poor Barry; he was helping me with the long sheets and I kept saying "just one more!" over and over and over again...
Here is one of the poems, layer upon layer, hanging on a metal pole in the studio.
Putting my cardboard on top of my long white paper to make sure there is enough pressure to transfer ink from type to paper.
Ahh the reveal...
This is some of the lovely mottled blue paper, with the last poem.
I love how Barry caught the movement here as I whipped the long sheet up and out!
More movement here as well.
And oh my goodness, the studio is complete and utter chaos. I have all the pieces for Noosa in there along with all the boxes to store them in; there is not a spare surface to be had - so it was on top of the boxes, and over the chairs and... basically all over the shop as I draped the pages to dry.
And then after they and all dried I played about and hung the long ones I had printed. So very very satisfying...
Plain white ones.
Greyish ones
Bluish ones
And some details...
Lots of fun and lots to go on with!
I don't think any printmaker ever really gets over that moment of 'the reveal' - when you lift the paper from the press and see what magic has transpired. I had so many happy moments.
That's not to say I have created masterpieces and great works of art; but I have had the satisfaction of achieving what I set out to do, and with some success.
My aim was to have each of the poems hanging on a long slender piece of paper. Drifting a bit like clouds are want to do.
I deliberately printed each poem in a slightly different shade of grey. I had thought I would only print the long sheets - a couple of long white ones and a mottled blue-grey one; but in the end I just kept printing on smaller sheets of whatever light drifty paper I could find in the studio - poor Barry; he was helping me with the long sheets and I kept saying "just one more!" over and over and over again...
Here is one of the poems, layer upon layer, hanging on a metal pole in the studio.
Putting my cardboard on top of my long white paper to make sure there is enough pressure to transfer ink from type to paper.
Ahh the reveal...
This is some of the lovely mottled blue paper, with the last poem.
I love how Barry caught the movement here as I whipped the long sheet up and out!
More movement here as well.
And oh my goodness, the studio is complete and utter chaos. I have all the pieces for Noosa in there along with all the boxes to store them in; there is not a spare surface to be had - so it was on top of the boxes, and over the chairs and... basically all over the shop as I draped the pages to dry.
And then after they and all dried I played about and hung the long ones I had printed. So very very satisfying...
Plain white ones.
Greyish ones
Bluish ones
And some details...
Lots of fun and lots to go on with!