Get Even More Visitors To Your Blog, Upgrade To A Business Listing >>

Monoprint with Gel Plate and Ballpoint Drawing Transfer

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

Monoprint with Gel Plate and Ballpoint Drawing Transfer

My ballpoint Gel Plate monoprint drawing transfer experimentation continues. (That's a mouthful of words, eh?) For inspiration, I borrowed a cute image of bestie dog buddies from one of our family members (Thank you, Avah!).

Using family photos as drawing references and inspiration is my habitual Reach-For when starting a new project. Do you do that too?

I photographed some of my steps on this project, and posted them below, with links to help get you started, in case you'd like to give this printmaking process a go.

Laying my ballpoint pen drawing of two dogs face-down on wet purple acrylic paint rolled out in a very thin veil on a gel plate

Peeling the drawing off the gel plate; my first attempt had some kid-grade wax crayons (in blue) in the drawing, based on Mark Yeate's experiments with that approach, but I wasn't satisfied with the transfer, so I started again (see note about that below), minus the crayon.

Note: I used the same drawing as in the previous attempt, but I trimmed the paper down and re-embossed all the drawing lines with another ballpoint (in a different color so I could see what I was doing). You can see on the gel plate that I got a better transfer of the drawing on my second try.

After the purple drawing transfer of the dogs had dried on the gel plate (I'm using basic acrylics - NOT open acrylics - so it only took 5-6 minutes), I rolled a thin layer of yellow ochre over the purple linework on the gel plate, and immediately laid a sheet of dry printmaking paper on the ochre paint. I smoothed it down with my hand to remove any air bubbles and set a stack of books on top to keep the paper in close, squished contact with the wet acrylic paint. After 15 minutes, I removed the stack of books and pulled the monoprint from the plate.

If at First You Don't Succeed, Try and Try Again

I've had a handful of Do-Overs in every post I've written about this fun monoprint process from gel plates. If your first attempts don't go swimmingly, make more of them. That's how we learned as kids, and that's how we (still) learn new things as adults.

Grownups get the willies over the notion of failure. We're supposed to be awesome-sauce at All Things while adulting, but that's never going to be true with arts and crafts. There are tips, hints, and lessons in every little blip, so take note of what failed, and start again.

Ready for mixed-media fun - my doggy monoprint from a Gel Plate and Ballpoint Drawing Transfer.

Slow and Steady Wins the Race

Two excellent aspects of this process are speed and re-use of the drawing. The acrylic dries fast, so your printing moves quickly. And if your first pull of the drawing doesn't transfer, re-draw the same lines again on your original drawing, with a different colored ballpoint so you can emboss over the first drawing and "recycle" it for a second or third try.

Another great option for you is breaking the process into bite-sized snippets. No time? Okay then - make your ballpoint pen drawings in fits and starts till you have a pile of them. Work in the evenings after dinner. When you're ready to print, you'll go quick as a bunny through the transfers using basic acrylic paint, which dries fast.

Colored pencils will adhere beautifully to dry acrylic paint, depending on the brand you have. Right after pulling this print, we were traveling, so I packed a small sheet of gator board as a support (it's extremely lightweight), and a cloth roll (this one) of 30 colored pencils - including some of my Prismacolor and Caran d'Ache Luminance pencils. I sat on the bed where we were staying with an audiobook (this one) and used a bed pillow as a lap desk to add color to the dog portrait monoprint. F-U-N.



Double Zed Trouble - 6 x 6 Gel Plate and Ballpoint Monoprint with Colored Pencils - Available in my Etsy Shop

  • If you're looking for ideas, here is a Pinterest board with a few thousand gel plate printmaking ideas.

  • If you're new around here, there are three previous posts on this process with plenty of details to get you started, Here's the first gel monoprint post, and the second gel plate and ballpoint post, and the third gelli plate monoprint post.

  • If you're looking for books on making gel plate botanical prints, this one gets good reviews on Amazon. And this one is more general and beginner friendly.

Gel plate printmaking is simple (no carving, no press, no ink), accessible and fast fun. I've been experimenting with layered botanical monoprints, and you can crank out a whole pile of them in one afternoon. Have you tried making these yet?

Summertime

Amidst the gel plate monoprinting experiments with ballpoint pens, I'm making new things in the kitchen (homemade ricotta, anyone?), exploring new places in travel, listening to Penny Reid audiobooks narrated by Joy Nash, swimming in both brisk lake and ocean water, walking, practicing yoga, and germinating a plethora of seeds for Fall planting in my garden.

Basically, I'm trying to live fully. Attempting to wake my senses, and fluff my curiosity and wonder. After the past few years of Pandemic and loss, living in a state of mind that is intentionally robust, awake, active and alert seems the thing to do.

What about you?

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

Belinda

P.S. This homemade ricotta and grilled veggie recipe is the bee's knees! Not art, I know - but full of awesome - and very sharable.

Visit my Esty Shop for original art (framed and unframed)

The post Monoprint with Gel Plate and Ballpoint Drawing Transfer 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

Share the post

Monoprint with Gel Plate and Ballpoint Drawing Transfer

×

Subscribe to Belinda Del Pesco Fine Art

Get updates delivered right to your inbox!

Thank you for your subscription

×