I, on the other hand, worked with a rather art-nouveau-ish image from our Venice trip: peacocks from a wrought iron gate at the monastery of the Mecharist Armenians on the island of San Lazzaro, which caught my eye and imagination during our visit there.
I think my most effective image came from printing on hand-made silk paper, and best displayed on a darker background, like the glorious blue of the oil cloth that topped off the printing bed pictured above. It was very fiddly and time-consuming to work the screen, and all too easy to make mistakes - I had to go with the flow with those!
I enjoyed this technique, and will be doing more once I invest in some screen filler and screenprinting inks or medium. It was an exhausting workshop for me, and I had to go to bed for a longish nap when we got home, but it was worthwhile. Fortunately, the rest of the weekend was quiet so I was able to catch up some more on my rest.
I enjoyed this technique, and will be doing more once I invest in some screen filler and screenprinting inks or medium. It was an exhausting workshop for me, and I had to go to bed for a longish nap when we got home, but it was worthwhile. Fortunately, the rest of the weekend was quiet so I was able to catch up some more on my rest.
3 comments:
Thanks for sharing. I love screen printing, but getting everything together is rather expensive. I would enjoy another class as I don't do much of it at home. When I do i tend to make do with cheap stuff.
Lovely wrought iron gate, Sue. I like screen printing too but like Mags I find it is a hassle getting everything together.
Sue yes I love the wrought iron to.. one of my favourites.. and the killarney strawberry tree. We have one here at work and I thought ohh what lovely colour fruit this is and found out what it was .. the orange and yellow are stunning.... and I did not realize you could eat these!!! I shall have to one day have a tree of this for my garden .. when i get one (home and garden that is)
Sandy
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