View allAll Photos Tagged linoprinting
For more on this one, you could have a look at my blog: davewhatt.wordpress.com/2016/08/26/linocut-coming-along-n...
Yay completed! This is a new custom monogram stamp I made for Kiirsti's wedding, now on its way to Ontario, Canada.
You can find more about my work and me on my FB page: www.facebook.com/myrubberstamp
lino print on fabric with a little bit of embroidery, titled to make a tenuous link with an exhibition themed 'current'.
blogged at katefern.blogspot.com.au/2013/06/a-recipe-for-happiness-a...
For more on this one, you could have a look at my blog:
davewhatt.wordpress.com/2013/01/27/time-for-another-lino-...
This is an original 2-color Linocut print
Edition of only 10 pieces!
Size:
DIN A3
297 x 420mm,
11.7 x 16.5 inch
Linocut prints have been around for a long time but this is the first one I've ever produced. It's based on a photograph I took of the Caedmon memorial on the top of the headland overlooking Whitby Harbour at the Church of St Mary. The memorial is a tall Celtic cross looking monument which was unveiled in 1898.
There are some local notables carved onto it and the ones on the windward side have taken a particular battering by the elements. The part that depicted St John of Beverley caught my attention so I thought I'd fix him up and give him a little remix with a new head, coat of arms and mysterious SSS legend. I particularly like how it looks like a rubbing has been taken off the stonework in question rather than it being down to my amateur attempt to ink my linocut. I'm calling it a happy accident all the same.
He's been made using the magic of a linocut, ink and nice thick watercolour paper and he measures in at a compact 28x16cm. Drop us a line if you need him in your life...
Cheers
id-iom
Minneapolis-based photographer Aminda Villa commissioned this custom logo stamp. The serif font was fun to carve, and I used maroon- and coffee-colored ink pads to give the ring a realistic worn-in look.
You can find more about my work and me on my FB page.
Hand-painted Linoprint (Gouache and Acrylic)
On Antique Book Page
16" x 22"
2017
Curb Appeal, Art Star Gallery, March 2017
Free download under CC Attribution (CC BY 4.0). Please credit the artist and rawpixel.com.
Samuel Jessurun de Mesquita was a Jewish-Dutch painter, woodblock artist, and designer active in Amsterdam during the late 19th to early 20th century. He initially produced delicate watercolor drawings. However, he soon switched to decorative arts, as well as woodcuts and etchings. Mesquita’s works drew upon geometrical composition, simplicity concentrating on the main form, making them modern and unique. His recurrent themes included people portraits, exotic animals, plants, and flowers. His life tragically ended in 1944 when he, together with his family, was deported to Auschwitz. Two years later, a retrospective exhibition was set up in his honor at Amsterdam’s Stedelijk Museum. We have curated some of the best Mesquita public domain works for you to download under the Creative Commons 0 license.
Higher resolutions with no attribution required can be downloaded: https://www.rawpixel.com/board/1297557/samuel-jessurun-de-mesquita
Two Ex Libris stamps for two young sisters from Chile. Matilde loves fantasies, especially pirates and witches; Violeta likes birds and her favorite is the bald eagle.
Linocut prints have been around for a long time but this is the first one I've ever produced. It's based on a photograph I took of the Caedmon memorial on the top of the headland overlooking Whitby Harbour at the Church of St Mary. The memorial is a tall Celtic cross looking monument which was unveiled in 1898.
There are some local notables carved onto it and the ones on the windward side have taken a particular battering by the elements. The part that depicted St John of Beverley caught my attention so I thought I'd fix him up and give him a little remix with a new head, coat of arms and mysterious SSS legend. I particularly like how it looks like a rubbing has been taken off the stonework in question rather than it being down to my amateur attempt to ink my linocut. I'm calling it a happy accident all the same.
He's been made using the magic of a linocut, ink and nice thick watercolour paper and he measures in at a compact 28x16cm. Drop us a line if you need him in your life...
Cheers
id-iom
©2012 Julia Forsyth, Eagle Owl Virgin Ink Carved Linoblock Close-up, carved linoblock, 5" x 8"
www.facebook.com/JuliaForsythArt
twitter.com/#!/JuliaForsythArt
...and now, YouTube! www.youtube.com/user/JuliaForsythArt Get your hot-off-the-presses linocut tutorials!
Oil-based ink on Japanese paper, about A4 in size.
For more on this one, you could click here. davewhatt.wordpress.com/2024/01/07/the-one-with-the-cubes...
new. needs lots of pressure to print to print properly - like all my upper body weight on the palm of my hand. still the gritty prints suit the subject.
Linocut
Print on Hahnemühle paper cm 32,5 x 50
Black Calcograph ink
cm 25 x 35
2017
THE KINGDOM OF FUNGI
More than 30 years have passed since the Chernobyl disaster, since then the radioactive magma that was generated following the explosion of the fourth reactor was buried under a vault of steel and cement. Over the years the various and systematic inspections of the protective sarcophagus have revealed a black mushroom rich in melanin which, despite a very inhospitable and prohibitive environment, grew more and more flourishing on the walls of the protective structure. A team of researchers from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York has studied the phenomenon and found that strong ionizing radiations, more or less deadly for most living beings, are a major vital resource for fungi, in fact, researchers have shown that mycetes, thanks to a mechanism similar to that of chlorophylline photosynthesis, can absorb the radiations to develop and thrive.
I believe that in any post-nuclear scenario the mushrooms can not be missing and so as they have colonized the walls of the sarcophagus of the Chernobyl reactor are definitely destined to colonize the world. It seems unbelievable that this simple spongy and brainless organism, in the case of a nuclear catastrophe, is sure to survive the human species.
In Italy the boletus edulis also known as porcino is one of the most loved and sought after spontaneous mushrooms, and is considered the king of mushrooms and woods, it is a sin that it is greedy with ionizing radiation, especially cesium 137.
Oil-based ink on Japanese paper, about A4 in size.
For more on this one, you could click here, davewhatt.wordpress.com/2024/07/20/the-lino-print-slightl...
We made our own wrapping paper with rubber stamps this year!
Read about how we did this: tthisisjusttosay.blogspot.se/2014/12/hand-printed-wrappin...
Made some more of these #lucidrose #linoprint #blockprinting #acrylic #sticker #slap #cyclops #mutant #goddess #alien #whimsy
150X210mm | Pen & Ink | 200gsm Fancy Paper
Artwork for the Winter Wonderland Exhibition at Salon91 Contemporary Art Gallery.
13 July to 06 August 2011
91 Kloof Street, Gardens, Cape Town
A group exhibition of prints and drawings.
Post with loads of pictures showing the process of making the print can be found on my blog: "this is just to say".
The print, Urvädersgränd, is printed with a hand-carved linoleum block on acid-free Japanese paper. The design itself measures 50 x 60 cm (20" x 24").
Urvädersgränd is the name of the street where the tiger walks. It's in Södermalm, Stockholm.
The print is exhibited in Scandic Malmen on Götgatan, Stockholm between January 7 - 27.
Free download under CC Attribution (CC BY 4.0). Please credit the artist and rawpixel.com.
Samuel Jessurun de Mesquita was a Jewish-Dutch painter, woodblock artist, and designer active in Amsterdam during the late 19th to early 20th century. He initially produced delicate watercolor drawings. However, he soon switched to decorative arts, as well as woodcuts and etchings. Mesquita’s works drew upon geometrical composition, simplicity concentrating on the main form, making them modern and unique. His recurrent themes included people portraits, exotic animals, plants, and flowers. His life tragically ended in 1944 when he, together with his family, was deported to Auschwitz. Two years later, a retrospective exhibition was set up in his honor at Amsterdam’s Stedelijk Museum. We have curated some of the best Mesquita public domain works for you to download under the Creative Commons 0 license.
Higher resolutions with no attribution required can be downloaded: https://www.rawpixel.com/board/1297557/samuel-jessurun-de-mesquita
©2013 Julia Forsyth, Sunshine Texas Mockingbird, block printing ink on unbleached mulberry paper with hand embellishments, 5" x 7"
As a reward for all my days of focused hard work measuring and trimming all the prints in the Texas Mockingbird print series, I warmed this print up with yellow - as in Marshmallow Peeps yellow that makes you (or at least me) smile when you see it.
My son saw the black and white original print and mentioned that parts of it looked like the sun was shining on it. His observation inspired me to happy it up with color.
Sold - KW (vtmmy) in McKinney, TX 5-13
©2012 Julia Forsyth, Casita Welcome, block printing ink and Sharpie pens on upcycled New Mexico map, 10" x 8"
Well - it took waaay longer than I thought to not only carve this detailed linoleum block but to also come up with the perfect match of printed linocut image...with map image...with Sharpie colors used to enhance the map...and figuring out what NOT to color (just as important.)
I'm happy with the final version. Wish I had another map like this so I could keep one for myself since this one is going to the owners of the great Casita we stayed in as a thank-you (albeit it a ridiculously, shamefully late thank-you.)
I'm hoping they think it was worth the wait! ;)
www.facebook.com/juliaforsythart
It should come as no surprise that here at id-iom things can sometimes take a while to get from conception to completion...
Today's linocut is based, in part, on a photograph I took way back in 2014 of a small architectural detail I liked from the Royal Albert Hall. It has sat patiently on my computer ever since waiting for the day it could be summoned for use. And today is its lucky day, as it features as the repeated background element from which we have some panises bursting proudly forth.
She's on some nice heavyweight paper and comes in at about 20x20cm and has been made using the magic of imagination, linocut, ink and various pens and paints that were to hand in order to give it a splash of colour. And there it is.
Cheers
id-iom