Printmaking: How to Print Anything on Everything
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About this ebook
More than 100 photographs accompany complete directions for the easy and accessible process of relief printing: creating a stencil, inking it up, applying the stencil to the item, and then repeating. An introduction to tools, materials, and equipment is followed by chapters on making your own toolbox, creating art with found and natural objects, printing with your own custom stamps and plates, screen printing and photographic techniques, and more. Each project features helpful tips for turning out a high-quality product and suggestions for adding personal touches.
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Printmaking - Christine Medley
Figure 1.1
Stars printed from a sliced star fruit
Printmaking, Printmakers, and DIY
The maker movement is here and going strong—crafters, artisans, designers, inventors, artists, workshoppers, and DIYers (do-it-yourselfers), with or without artistic backgrouds, all creating, designing, upcycling, and making fun, original, decorative, and inspiring things. Printmaking: How to Print Anything on Everything is for anyone who wants to make. So why printmaking? Printmaking in a nutshell is about creating multiples and pressing images on to a wide range of surfaces and materials. It can be simple and direct with a seemingly magical result. The reward in printmaking is peeling back a sheet of paper to see what image has emerged. It is satisfying, surprising, and full of happy accidents. Printing on paper, textiles, and a variety of objects allows for the maker to print multiples to keep, give, and sell. It is process-oriented and allows for experimentation and invention. Just like following a recipe, you can follow the basic print process, but add your own style to taste.
Printmaking can be an easy and approachable process applied to a variety of projects, which makes it appealing to makers of all ages and backgrounds. The processes and projects in this book, starting from easy approaches and ending with more advanced techniques, do not require any experience or expensive equipment. To keep the project expenses low, household items and inexpensive materials available at the local crafts stores are used as much as possible.
In this chapter, a basic tools and processes introduction explains the types of printmaking and builds a foundation of terms with an overview of what is needed to make a print.
Chapter 2 addresses Can I print with that?
This chapter will show you how to make different printmaking tools from household objects and low-cost materials for your creative toolbox.
You also will learn how to set up your space and plan a print, along with some basic design direction. As you work through the project instructions in chapters 3, 4, and 5, you will be prompted to refer back to your creative toolbox.
The twelve projects in this book have wide appeal for all ages and skill levels and encourage experimentation, invention, and discovery. Do them alone, with friends, or in a group. Have fun and become a printmaker!
Making multiple copies of an image from a plate has been around since the ancient Chinese developed a printing process using woodcut. Woodcut remains a traditional method, along with alternative types of relief surfaces such as linoleum. Relief is the most common, most varied, and easiest method of printing. Although relief will be the primary focus of the twelve projects, we will do some screen printing projects too. The following are basic explanations of each of the four types of printmaking.
Figure 1.2 This is a relief print, cut from a linoleum-mounted block with a rainbow roll.
RELIEF
Relief or block printing refers to woodcut, linoleum cut, letterpress printing (metal and wood type), monoprinting, and solar/polymer plates. Relief plates have the image on the surface with the background removed, so only the surface image will print. The plate is prepared for printing by rolling ink on to the surface with a brayer. Most relief plates can be printed with the use of your hands or a simple tool like the back of a spoon or a flat disk, called a baren.
(Figure 1.2)
INTAGLIO
Intaglio refers to the image being below the surface of the plate. Line work and tonal images are etched with acid or engraved into metal plates where the ink is pushed into the deep lines and wiped off the surface. Etching requires a press in order to pull the ink out of the grooves on to dampened paper to get high-quality prints. Types of intaglio include etching, engraving, drypoint, mezzotint, and aquatint, all of which incise the image below the plate surface. (Figure 1.5)
SCREEN
Screen printing is a stenciled image on a fine silk or polyester screen where the ink is pushed through with a squeegee. Screen printing is used to print T-shirts, textiles, posters, signs, mugs, and many other commercial products. Serigraphy is another term for screen printing and pertains to the fine art prints made with the process. Stencils for screen printing can be painted on; cut from paper, acetate, freezer paper, or adhesive shelf liner; or used in a photographic process. (Figure 1.3)
LITHOGRAPHY
Lithography is the printing process based on the principle that oil and water do not mix. Stone lithography is the traditional fine art version, which requires a prepared smooth limestone (Figure 1.4), an acid etch, and a printing press. Commercial offset printing is based on lithography and utilizes photo negatives to create metal plates used on large presses to print magazines, newspapers, and all kinds of printed materials.
For your projects, you will explore and experiment with a variety of relief printing methods and stencil methods for screen printing. The following are the types of plates used for the twelve projects. Many items can be found at home; others you can buy at a local arts and crafts store.
Figure 1.3 Screen printing frame with painted stencil
Figure 1.4 Litho stone
Figure 1.5 Copper plate mezzotint is an example of intaglio.
Figure 1.6
Gel plate monoprint created with a Speedball gel plate and Charbonnel Aqua Wash ink
Linoleum Blocks
Battleship gray linoleum is the traditional plate for a linocut
(short for linoleum cut). It comes mounted on a wood base or unmounted (Figure 1.7), allowing you to cut it into custom shapes. You can heat up linoleum blocks in the microwave (thirty seconds) or oven (250 degrees for five minutes) to soften the surface for easier cutting.
There are many alternate products that are easier to cut than battleship gray linoleum. Look for the following relief block alternatives online or at a hardware store.
• Easy or soft-cut relief blocks that come in colors like pink, white, and blue. The only downside to the soft plates are they may squish with hard printing pressure, which may slightly distort your image.
• There is an in-between block that offers a softer cut than linoleum but a harder surface than the soft cut. The harder block surface will yield crisp and precise lines.
• Sintra is a lightweight PVC foam board normally used for sign making and offers the ease of cutting into shapes and designs. ( Figure 1.8 )
Figure 1.7 Battleship gray linoleum, unmounted and mounted
Figure 1.8 Sintra and synthesis plates cut into shapes
• Synthesis plates are a blue-colored board that can perform as relief or intaglio because you can carve it with a cutter or draw into it with a ballpoint pen. ( Figure 1.8 )
• Marine board is another PVC product that works for block printing.
Stamps
You can carve stamps out of plastic erasers (Figure 1.9), soft safety cut linocut blocks (which come in pink, blue, or white), and even potatoes. A collection of purchased rubber stamps such as letters or words is a good investment because lettering is challenging to cut out, as you have to do it backward—the most common and time-wasting mistake in relief printing.
Found Objects
Clean out your junk drawer and go through the vegetable drawer in your refrigerator, and you will find plenty of fun objects to print with for your projects.
• Produce. Carve stamps out of baking potatoes or print the natural design of a sliced lemon. Any produce that has an interesting pattern when cut can be printed. Try onions, star fruit, green peppers, citrus, and leaves like romaine lettuce or spinach. Avoid using hot peppers, as you could burn your hands from their oil.
• Corks, spools, combs, natural sponges, produce netting, bubble wrap, old keys, jewelry, twine, lace, and anything else that has an interesting texture or shape.
• Cardboard tubes with glued-on craft foam shapes, string, or rubber bands make for great pattern rollers for large-print projects like wrapping paper. Tubes from toilet paper rolls, paper towels, and printer paper rolls work well. Heavy-duty mailing tubes also could be used as pressure rollers (think rolling pins) to make impressions from the plate to the paper.
Foam
Craft foam or Styrofoam plates make for easy and safe printing for the novice or young printer. You can even use Styrofoam insulation.
Figure 1.9 Stamps cut from a plastic eraser with repeating pattern prints
Figure 1.10 Solar plate and transparency
Figures 1.11 & 1.12 Screen with stencil designs printed separately on canvas pouches (Design by Maci Roos)
Gelatin Plates
Great for monoprinting, these soft-surface plates allow for painterly and exploratory printing. Gel plates have been around for many years and are easily made with unflavored gelatin, water, and glycerine. Commercial gel plates are a relatively new product and mimic the qualities of gelatin, but do not contain gelatin and provide a superior printing surface. (Figure 1.6)
Solar Plates
These photo-sensitive plates allow you to reproduce any image created on a transparency, such as type, logos, and photos printed from your computer, or images drawn or painted in black, or objects placed on top of the plate, which create a silhouette. The plate has a photo-sensitive polymer layer on a metal base and uses the sun or UV light to expose it. This nontoxic process uses water to develop the plate. The resulting image can be used as a relief or intaglio plate. (Figure 1.10)
Screen Printing Frame
Screens for printing are available from a variety of sources and come in a number of sizes with different fabric meshes, from fine for art printing to a more open weave for fabric printing. Speedball makes a small ready-to-use screen or a screen printing kit, which includes the frame, squeegee, and ink, that can be easily found at a crafts store. (Figure 1.11)
Figure 1.13 Lino cutter handle with five blades and a knife
Carving Designs
To cut out a design for a block print, you will need a linoleum cutter, which is available as a set of different blade