In between sessions I printed up some more mountains to use as bases for the techniques in the final class:
|
Tidying up the block |
|
Surprise discovery on last week's print - embossing in the sky area |
|
Ready to roll |
Some hours later...........
|
Four prints with slightly less dark mountains |
And now, the class. These are some of the more advanced techniques (a glossary is
here) -
|
(it uses very little ink!) |
|
(best done with each colour separately) |
|
(this is what happens without nori) |
|
(this needs drier paper) |
This time we focussed on two types of bokashi: atenashi ("without a goal") and hakkake ("emphasised edge") and stencils - kappazuri ("printing without a coat").
For hakkake, the (thicker) nori is mixed with the ink (actually, watercolour) and carefully painted onto the required area -
The same sort of painting directly onto the block is used for atenashi - it too requires a minimal use of ink -
Carol had used a mask to protect the central area of her print when she applied stencils -
To make the stencils, the block is rubbed with graphite
a shape is cut out, slightly wider than the area to be covered
dots of nori are applied
ink is dotted on and spread with the brush
|
circular strokes to start |
|
finish with vertical strokes |
Result! (the green bokashi had been applied earlier) -
My efforts suffer from haste and enthusiasm, as well as inexperience.
|
You can see the "clouds" cut in the sky area |
|
After the first inking and printing |
|
After the second ... |
|
... and the third |
I'm not unhappy with the sky, but the mountain needs "something"...
Let's try another - using the block with the plain sky, and taking ink away to make a moon -
|
hmm, it didn't work too well... |
|
trying a little atenashi |
|
trying to get rid of the moon-smudge with another layer of colour ("bodging") |
Stencil -- one stencil printed, another ready to go (the colour on the sky has dried by now) -
The entire block was getting dry, so the printing of the mountain on my final sheet of paper didn't work well at all - something to improve at home -
All nine prints from the three weeks of classes - some are finished, some are in progress -
Great results from everyone - the same motif (mountain and moon) but such different outcomes -
It is interesting to learn about how many steps and techniques it takes to make a woodblock print. I am not sure I would have the patience for it. Have a wonderful holiday season!
ReplyDelete