Difference between revisions of "User:Floor/week5"

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Lithography is a printing technique I've been wanting to try for some time now. And this week I finally got around to doing it!
 
Lithography is a printing technique I've been wanting to try for some time now. And this week I finally got around to doing it!
  
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The process starts with a special type of stone, one that has pores. To get the surface of the rock ready (aka: perfectly smooth) you wet the surface, swipe away excess water, put some bluish powder on there (which is apparently the second hardest material on earth). Then sandwich a smaller stone plate on top of it, and start moving it in an 8-figure. Do this until it gets sticky and heavy to move, refresh the powder, and go again. There are three stages, each time you step down to a finer version of the powder/sand. You can image how tiring but also meditative this process can be. It sure is a work-out.
  
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[[File:Litho_steen_slijpen.jpg | 800px]]
  
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Interesting and beautiful patterns  form when you take off the top stone plate:
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[[file:woooo.jpg | 400px]]
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When the surface was perfectly clean, smooth and dry, we got on to drawing. What's quite special about this printing technique is that the drawing is very direct, as if drawing on paper. There's a range of different materials you can choose from, mainly different types of greasy chalk but also a liquid that you can use as paint (the brownish rings in my drawing). In my design I tried to use as many different materials as I could. This of course made the image a little messy and chaotic but I wanted be able to compare them in the end.
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[[file:drawing-on-litho.jpg | 530px]] [[file:litho-toolbox.jpg | 300px]]
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Kim mixed some 'arabisch gom' mixed with a chemical that has to sit on the stone for at least one night. This will help the grease to really be pulled into the pores of the stone.
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To be continued next week...
  
 
==Flatbed printer==
 
==Flatbed printer==
  
 
As opposed to all the analog printing techniques I have been trying out: a totally digitalized one.
 
As opposed to all the analog printing techniques I have been trying out: a totally digitalized one.
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I printed an illustration on a notebook. The flatbed printer makes it really easy to print practically anything on any (flat) material.
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[[file:flatbed-f1.jpg | 300px]] [[file:flatbed-f2.jpg | 320px]]
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==Analog photo printing==
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And another evening spent in the darkroom.
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[[File:Dc-foto1.jpg | 500px]]
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==link to next week==
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[[User:Floor/week6 | WEEK 6]]

Latest revision as of 09:54, 20 April 2016

Lithography part 1

Lithography is a printing technique I've been wanting to try for some time now. And this week I finally got around to doing it!

The process starts with a special type of stone, one that has pores. To get the surface of the rock ready (aka: perfectly smooth) you wet the surface, swipe away excess water, put some bluish powder on there (which is apparently the second hardest material on earth). Then sandwich a smaller stone plate on top of it, and start moving it in an 8-figure. Do this until it gets sticky and heavy to move, refresh the powder, and go again. There are three stages, each time you step down to a finer version of the powder/sand. You can image how tiring but also meditative this process can be. It sure is a work-out.

Litho steen slijpen.jpg


Interesting and beautiful patterns form when you take off the top stone plate:

Woooo.jpg


When the surface was perfectly clean, smooth and dry, we got on to drawing. What's quite special about this printing technique is that the drawing is very direct, as if drawing on paper. There's a range of different materials you can choose from, mainly different types of greasy chalk but also a liquid that you can use as paint (the brownish rings in my drawing). In my design I tried to use as many different materials as I could. This of course made the image a little messy and chaotic but I wanted be able to compare them in the end.

Drawing-on-litho.jpg Litho-toolbox.jpg

Kim mixed some 'arabisch gom' mixed with a chemical that has to sit on the stone for at least one night. This will help the grease to really be pulled into the pores of the stone.

To be continued next week...

Flatbed printer

As opposed to all the analog printing techniques I have been trying out: a totally digitalized one.

I printed an illustration on a notebook. The flatbed printer makes it really easy to print practically anything on any (flat) material.

Flatbed-f1.jpg Flatbed-f2.jpg

Analog photo printing

And another evening spent in the darkroom.

Dc-foto1.jpg


link to next week

WEEK 6