Print Workshop


Book Description

This is a book for low budgets and high ambition. Read it and you will learn how to put images of things onto other things. You will start by rolling up your sleeves. Your shirt will be stained anyways. At some point, you will harness the power of the sun. Go ahead, look inside. You will see that you do not need a fancy studio to print a T-shirt or a picnic blanket. There is no specialized machine required to print anything you want in any room you want. A mural, a dartboard, a deck of cards, these are all possible. In a week or a month, you will wake up to find you know words like acetate and substrate. You will be comfortable talking about ink and shopping at military supply stores. Perhaps most important of all, you will be printing images of things onto other things.




Hand-Printing Studio


Book Description

"15 colorful hand-printing projects for your home, with 12 ready-to-use patterns in Betsy Olmsted's thoughtful sophisticated style"--Provided by publisher.




Hand-Printing Studio


Book Description

This DIY guide to hand-printing lets you put your designs on almost anything—from fabric, glass, and wood to human beings and more! Print artist and textile designer Betsy Olmsted shares her love of art through her namesake brand. Now she shares her tips and techniques with 15 colorful projects you can try at home—from a galvanized planter and curtains to a coffee table. With this step-by-step visual guide, you will earn to add your own design to nearly any surface with block printing, silk screen, and disperse dye transfer. Betsy gets you started with 12 charming patterns, plus inspiration for creating your own designs!




Hand Printing from Nature


Book Description

Ideer til tekstiltryk med mønstre inspireret af naturen




Low-Tech Print


Book Description

Featuring a global showcase of 100 of the craft’s most exciting and influential practitioners, Low-Tech Print is an exploration of hand-made printmaking techniques and how they are used in contemporary design and illustration. It examines the huge recent resurgence in the popularity of printmaking, with chapters on screenprinting, letterpress, relief printing and other printing methods. The book shows how practitioners develop a love affair with these hand-made techniques and use them to create beautiful contemporary designs, explaining the process behind each technique and its historical context. ‘In focus’ sections profile practitioners such as the ‘Lambe Lambe’ hand-made letterpress printers of São Paulo’s Grafica Fidalga studio and cult printing techniques such as Gocco (Japan) and Chicha (Peru). Low-Tech Print is a must-have for all design, illustration, craft and printmaking enthusiasts.




Breakdown Printing


Book Description

This book explores a method of silkscreen printing which involves applying thick dye paints or print paste directly on to the back of the screen, allowing it to dry, and then printing off with more dye paint or print paste. In this way the print medium is gradually dissolving the dried on dye on the screen, breaking it down to print an evolving array of colours, marks and textures, and producing interesting distressed, organic and disintegrating effects.




Ladies of Letterpress


Book Description

The revival of traditional printing methods has been afoot for the last decade, and the tactile charm of letterpress has ensured that its popularity is on the rise. Ladies of Letterpress is an organization that champions the craft, and in particular seeks to showcase and promote the work of women printers. A gallery of art by its members, the work in Ladies of Letterpress ranges from greetings cards to broadsides and posters, and is offered in a cornucopia of type and illustration styles. What comes through clearly, though, is the quality of the work: every one of these pieces is worthy of display on your wall, and with 80 detachable pages, you can create an instant and beautiful gallery of your own.




The Textile Artist's Studio Handbook


Book Description

Explore the world of textile arts, one thread at a time! The Textile Artist’s Studio Handbook is the only book you need for expanding your repertoire of textile crafting and design techniques. This is the go-to guide for the foundations of design and fabrication, glossary of materials, and classic techniques that include weaving, dyeing, painting, and more! Plus, where else can you get behind-the-scenes access to setting up the best home textile studio for you? Inside, you’ll find exploration of basic materials (including fibers, dyes, paints, and other media); visual tutorials for spinning, felting, crochet, weaving, sewing, and quilting; primers for surface decoration techniques such as dyeing, painting, stitching, and screen printing; and patterns and project instructions.




Pressing the Limits


Book Description

The theme of Pressing the Limits is experimental monotype "imprinting" rather than "printmaking." "Imprinting" is more expansive, and opens the door to photographic work. "Imprinting" is also more intriguing, and conceptually seminal to the esoteric processes which are shared by all forms of printmaking. The often used term "printmaking" can tend to create the assumption of limitations, which we are battling against. Artists: Michael Costello: B.F.A. Printmaking, Art Institute of San Francisco. Owner-operator of Hand Graphics printmaking studio, a professional collaborative printmaking studio in Santa Fe, New Mexico, since 1987. Hand Graphics is considered a major center for artists creating monotypes. Mitchell Shields Marti: B.F.A. Printmaking, Rhode Island School of Design. Artist Residencies: Vermont Studio Center, 2003; Ucross Foundation, 2004. Owner-operator of Interbang Press printmaking studio, a professional collaborative printmaking studio in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Jennifer Lynch: M.F.A. Printmaking, Hunter College in New York City; B.F.A. Kansas City Art Institute. Master printer for Bob Blackburn's Printmaking Workshop and The Printmaking Center at the College of Santa Fe. Presently teaches printing techniques at the University of New Mexico, Taos Campus. Owner-operator of LynchPin Press printmaking studio, a professional collaborative printmaking studio in Taos, New Mexico. Willis F. Lee: Photographer with a particular "fascination with the connection between the intimate and the colossal." Lee's works are in the permanent collections of the Amon Carter Museum, Ft. Worth; Museum of Printing History, Houston; Museum of Fine Art, Houston; Harwood Museum, Taos; Museum of Natural History, Dallas; Museum of the Big Bend, Alpine, TX; Lajitas Museum, Lajitas, TX.




House of Print


Book Description

From exciting and up-and-coming artisan printmaker Molly Mahon, this is a modern, stylish, and practical exploration of the traditional craft of block printing. From the initial design process through to the carving of the block, mixing of the color, and the actual printing process, self-taught textile designer Molly Mahon has always found printing to be meditative. This book enables readers to explore this ancient craft through Molly's contemporary designs and the influences that inspire her use of pattern and color, before teaching the practical skills and potential ways to transform prints into beautiful homeware. The book begins with an introduction to Molly and how she found and nurtured her love of block printing. Molly is constantly inspired by her surroundings in all that she sees and feels, and in the second section the reader is taken on some of her favorite journeys, with an inspirational sourcebook filled with beautiful images. The last section focuses on how to block print, including information on key tools, step-by-step techniques for printing on paper and fabric, and pattern design advice. There are also instructions on how to make five simple homeware projects and exclusive block templates drawn by Molly to copy and re-create at home.