View allAll Photos Tagged Screenprinting
Neversleeping is Ben Chlapek, a freelance illustrator/designer/printer living in Missouri.
He designs delightful gug posters. Rooftops here, was a design for a Handsome Furs gig.
House in snow is a super-cool, super minimal two color screenprint, 19" x 25" on french "starch rain" 80 lb. paper.
The white is pretty subtle, and the windows are colored orange with colored pencil.
The first two layers weren't "registered" with anything more than blue masking tape in a rectangle slightly larger than the paper's trim size (the pieces of paper varied a little since they were hand-cut). For the final layer though it was critical that it be registered to at least the blue layer, so I employed the transparency that I used to burn the screen to flip back and forth over the prints (adding extra time and hassle to the printing process, but worth it...I "winged" a couple with no registration and they were a disaster!).
Tim Gough and I are collaborating on a silkscreen - this is Tim cutting the first layer from amberlith. We made a drawing first to use as a guide so we weren't cutting blindly.
This guy Geoff offered to screenprint/stencil a few shirts for my with my moniker. They came out AWESOME, as you can see.
The old deck about to be changed out with the new.
www.carhartt-wip.com/skate/blog/2011/03/summon-the-snake-...
haven's cut woodblock print then made into 12.5"x19" screen print on French Paper Dur-O-Tone Butcher Orange
In this podcast, Bre brings in Matt, the screenprinting expert of etsy.com, to the Weekend Projects podcast.
Have you ever wanted to create your own t-shirt designs? Look no further! Don't forget to go and download the pdf to get all the details and supply lists.
The podcast goes up tomorrow, preview at make.blip.tv
In this podcast, Bre brings in Matt, the screenprinting expert of etsy.com, to the Weekend Projects podcast.
Have you ever wanted to create your own t-shirt designs? Look no further! Don't forget to go and download the pdf to get all the details and supply lists.
The podcast goes up tomorrow, preview at make.blip.tv
Shirt I printed up. Water based ink on a gildan shirt. Also have the doodle-zook logo on the back shoulder. Fun stuff.
halftone black and white on newsprint screenprint.
These photos are about how women’s queer and lesbian identities are deemed as predatory under patriarchy, and being one makes it easy to identify with monstrosity. I chose vampires as the perfect representation upon discovering Sheridan Le Fanu's vampire novel Carmilla, that was published two decades before Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Upon discovering the novel, I thought that it was so cool that the girl vampire was gay, and she quickly became my favorite character, which was worrisome because she’s supposed to be a villain. I kept Guillermo del Toro’s work in mind, thinking about how he often uses monsters and supernatural elements in his films as analogies for real life horrors. The alienation and antagonization of her character mirrors reality in the sense of what it’s like to be different from the norm, and how the world treats these qualities. These photos express how living in a culture where misogyny and heteronormativity is so entrenched in everything makes us think about ourselves. Gross, predatory, and deviant.
Estas fotos tratan de cómo mujeres gays y lesbianas son vistxs como depredadorxs bajo el patriarcado, y la manera que nuestras identidades son marginadas y nos acercan a identificarnos con monstruosidad. Tome el vampirísmo como representación de este concepto al descubrir la novela Carmilla escrita por Sheridan le Fanu, que de hecho salió dos décadas antes que Drácula de Bram Stoker. Pensaba que era genial que la chica vampira era gay, y rápidamente se convirtió en mi personaje favorito, cosa que fue preocupante porque se supone que ella es la villana. Tenía en mente las películas de Guillermo del Toro, porque el frecuentemente usa los monstruos o elementos sobrenaturales como analogías. La antagonización y la alienación de el personaje refleja la realidad en el sentido de cómo se siente no pertenecer a la norma, y la manera a la que el mundo trata a esas cualidades. Con estas fotos expreso como vivir en una cultura donde la heteronormatividad machista que está arraigada en todas partes y nos cria a todxs influye lo que pensamos sobre nosotrxs. Rarxs, y asquerosxs.