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Collagraph Print from Mat Board with Akua Inks

This is a post from Belinda Del Pesco's Art Blog Belinda Del Pesco.

Collagraph Print from Mat Board with Akua Inks

Here is a small Collagraph Print from Mat Board with Akua Inks. I printed this on Sunday as part of a demonstration for my Mastrius group. (Our next session is Sunday, April 9th at 10:00am Pacific Time, and we're going over gelli plate drawing transfers.)

Rather than building the image up, by adding things to the plate, I'm removing material from the mat board, to create recessed "wells" that will hold printmaking ink. Have you tried this method?

Sealing the mat board collagraph plate after cutting and peeling shapes from the surface of verso.

Printmaking Ink on a sheet of plexiglass





Small felt daubers to apply ink to the collagraph let. You can see how to make felt daubers here.

Akua Inks

My first printmaking experiments were done with traditional, oil-based printmaking inks that required solvents or cooking oil and dish soap to clean up. When I learned about soy bean oil based, water-wash-up Akua inks, they were still a mom-and-pop ink shop, created and sold by Susan Rostow.

Speedball now owns Akua, and I still use their inks in my studio. My favorite things about them are the rich pigment load in each color, the excellent customer service, and the fact that I can leave them out on a sheet of plexiglass (see above photo) for weeks at a time and they won't skin-over. These inks need absorption to dry, so they stay workable on a sheet of glass or acrylic for a long time.

I use a lot of Akua transparent base with my prints, to create transparency in hue and color, as well as Akua's MagMix to thicken the inks, and Carborundum paste for more control over adherence on various plate characteristics.



Pulling a collagraph print with two colors (Akua inks) applied to the plate.



After a trip through the press, pulling a collagraph print



Three collagraph prints, in slightly different colors, drying in the studio, with the plate, cleaned and ready for another color. Edition of Four

Collagraph Print Post Roundup

Here are some of the most popular and visited posts on this blog related to making Collagraph prints.

  • Here is How to Make a collagraph print from a sheet of mat board, and it includes a demo video.

  • Collagraph plates and prints can be made in a variety of ways, so this post covers some of your options.

  • This collagraph print tutorial shows how to build a plate with kid-grade construction paper.

  • If you've ever wondered about inking a collagraph plate with multiple colors, this post is a great place to start.

  • Carborundum is loose sand paper grit, and it's useful in collagraph plate building like this.

  • I created a playlist of collagraph plate and print tutorials on my YouTube channel.

  •  If you want a printable list of supplies to make a collagraph plate - with links, you can find a collagraph Supply List here.

Pulling a tiny intaglio style collagraph print of a mother and child, built on a piece of scrap mat board, and printed on my Takach etching press.

Printmaking as Meditation

I've been asked (many times) what attracts me to printmaking. The folks who are curious are usually appalled by their perception of steps, sequence, supplies and work to create an edition of prints.

First you have to build the plate, and then you have to ink the plate, and sometimes wipe the ink partially away, and then you have to press it to paper and rub the back, or run it through a press, and egads, that sounds like So Much Work.

Making art is a meditation. Creating can be a form of journal-keeping. Working with your hands is a one way to feel accomplished. At the very least, art making on a regular basis is a documentation of your improving skill set.

Printmaking is a celebration of a conviction to be with yourself, focused on that zone of sequential rhythm while you make something.

Thanks for stopping by, and I'll see you in the next post -

Belinda

P.S. You can subscribe to receive each new post as soon as it’s published by signing up here.

P.P.S. Sktchy is hosting another challenge to paint or draw 30 Faces in 30 Days. If you get more motivated by joining a group project, consider this one.

Splash Spectacles - 5x7 Hand Pulled Collagraph print - available in my Etsy Shop here

Art Quote

Take chances, make mistakes. That’s how you grow. Pain nourishes your courage. You have to fail in order to practice being brave.

Mary Tyler Moore

The post Collagraph Print from Mat Board with Akua Inks appeared first on Belinda Del Pesco's Art Blog Belinda Del Pesco.



This post first appeared on Belinda Del Pesco Fine Art, please read the originial post: here

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Collagraph Print from Mat Board with Akua Inks

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