View allAll Photos Tagged linoprinting
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
Llinos got in touch with me on Facebook with the logo (top left) and commissioned a custom stamp.
After I carved it, I used three different ink pads to color it to achieve a similar palette:
Brilliance "Graphite Black", VersaMagic "Eggplant" and Memento "Rose Bud". I inked the whole stamp with Rose Bud first, then colored bits of the stamp with tips of the other two ink pads.
Sides: 11 x 7.5 cm (4.3 x 2.9 inch)
Height: 5 cm (1.9 inch)
made of 170g/m2 pastel green paper and white paper
lino printed gift box
Sides: 11 x 8.5 cm (4.3 x 3.3 inch)
Height: 5 cm (1.9 inch)
made of 200g/m2 white and yellow card stock papers
lino cut print on approx 120 g/m2 unbleached slightly brown paper
70 x 100 cm
27 x 40 inch
made in 2014
The Gift, King Island, Tasmania, 2016 (Linoprint on Hosho paper)
14 Oct 2016 - 25 Feb 2017
Stories in Ink: John Scot’s diary 1836-1847, King Island, Tasmania is a personal response to the manuscript diary of retired sealer, John Scot, discovered online via the Tasmanian Archive and Heritage Office.
‘In January 2016 I visited King Island and the site of John Scot’s hut at Yellow Rock, accompanied by local historian, Christian Robertson. As I stood on the hill overlooking New Year and Christmas Islands, I began to appreciate the physical and emotional strength required to survive on a remote island in the middle of Bass Strait in the 1830s, where, to this day, the ‘Roaring Forties’ conjures stories of gale force winds, shipwrecks and loss of life.
This exhibition is the culmination of two years spent researching my recently discovered Scottish and Tasmanian Aboriginal ancestors. My investigation has also opened up connections with living relatives of John Scot and his partner Mary, an Aboriginal woman from Tasmania.
Emerging from my ongoing exploration of human presence within the landscape, this series of linocut prints and oil and charcoal sketches provides a visual narrative of the ebb and flow of life on King Island, cultural co-existence, hardship, physical isolation, resilience, loneliness, faith and daily routine.’
Judith Klavins
Copyright retained by the Allport Library + Museum of Fine Arts.
Handmade linocut in pink ink on canvas. For sale through my notonthehighstreet shop- see profile for details
An Amnesty International poster, a placard from Welcome to Australia, and a linoprint made by an Afghani refugee in 2003.
I have a new box of hand-saw wood pieces and designed these new stamps for two couple's weddings.
The Japanese rubber cuts like butter and is perfect for stamps with small details.
Such an honor to be a part of someone's special day and make it just a bit more awesome.
420X420mm | Laser engraving and lino print on wood.
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.
This artwork was made by designing the artwork digitally, then cutting the white part of the artwork out on a lino print and printing that with PVA onto the wood and laser engraving the lines over the white lino print.
handmade linocut on canvas, in multi-coloured glitter ink. For sale through my Folksy shop- see profile for details
Final label for my Lambrusco wine
In Latin:
Labrusca Vitis 2017
Et vinum laetificet cor hominis
Biblia Sacra, Psalmus 104-15
Lambrusco 2017
And wine to gladden the heart of man
Sacred Bible Psalm 104-15
Unfortunately after the press I learned that year 2017 is wrong, the year of grape harvest (2016) was the correct one. However, the labels will be good for next year.