CLICK HERE TO VISIT MY ETSY SHOP!

VISIT MY ETSY.COM SITE.
Preview
JUST CLICK ON MY PRESS!

Friday, December 18, 2020

Check In


 You have arrived at your destination. "Motel DeSoto II" 9"X7" 12-color reduction woodcut, using Renaissance Graphics oil inks and Shina plywood on machine made sulfite paper.


This building has been demolished to make way for another vacant lot in Olean, NY. We we're lucky enough to see her shortly before a Buffalo development company bought her.  When I printed "Motel DeSoto" in 2013, I'd expressed hope that she'd be saved. No luck. She has a sister in Bradford PA of similar design, though the sign has been modernized.

 


This is actually the third time I've tried to do this scene. I originally started with blocks of bold color, and stopped after two colors because it wasn't my vision. The second try was more my vision, but not quite there. This latest pass, while much closer, still misses for me. So, we'll see where I am with it in 7 years!

There's much I like in MDII, and I've learned a great deal, which I'm excited to put into the next print.👃

Wednesday, December 16, 2020

Another Brick in the Wall

One more color and I'm done. Will recap soon.
 

The Green, Green Grass of Hotel

just catching up. Green, for the veg.
 

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Almost Home

I'm almost done. This layer was supposed to be green, but green is a very transparent color. But I needed a dark gray, so I'm pleased. I need to lighten things up a bit and get some green in there. But the sign is popping nicely. I've been trying to get human elements into my prints. I'm surprised this experiment turned out as well as it did, given how tiny the spot is. As you can see, Beavis is getting a room!😂



 

Sunday, November 29, 2020

The Sky Is Falling..Into Place

Nothing adds life to a woodcut sky more than a good rainbow roll. Even though not much of the sky will show, that gentle gradation will, I hope, sell the end of a long day for a weary traveler stopping for the night. When I get all of the darker brick colors in, I think the sky will pop. One
 

Saturday, November 28, 2020

Gray Area


 Usually, printing is done lightest to darkest. I have found that it is beneficial to"reset" a bring after a bold color goes down. This gray was originally going to be color #2, but I knew it would affect the bright red. I also knew that the colors to come would.need a buffer after the dark  red. So here is a dark gray that serves as a buffer, but also will be part of the stone work.

Light It Up


I was pretty pleasantly surprised by the neon effect. I've long wanted to recreate neon in a print, but never had the patience to really study neon. There's a real secret to it. Most of the secret is color, but no small part of it is patience in cutting. This print has required more Xacto cutting than about any print I've done before.

When the dark red went down, I think I did a little dance. That glow really poked my eyes, even though it's just an optical illusion.



Thursday, November 19, 2020

Checking In

It's been quite a year. I think it's time to reach back a few years and take a stab at a print I did in 2013. Will it be regret....or redemption? 🤔

 

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Woodsmoke & Rustling Leaves

As a lifelong resident of Western New York, I'm increasingly fascinated with house seasons prepare us for the season to come. A month ago I was still grabbing fistfuls of tomatoes at the market and swearing that I would continue barbecuing until Christmas. But then, one day when the light is low and the leaves and mum's shock you with their brightness, and the furnace kicks in, the mind wanders to a nice pot of chicken and dumplings, or maybe a baked apple, or some cinnamon roasted nuts. I wanted this print to capture that precise moment, the threshold between abundance and hibernation.

The print was suggested by my wife, Amy, who wanted some seasonal art for the walls. I'm not handy at much around the house, so I was happy to oblige.

There's some symbolism in the print. The scene exists only in my mind, inspired by any bungalows I've seen through the years. The brick is a slight not to MCM of which I'm a big fan. The slate steps are for my dad, a tileman, as well as my childhood home with it's big stone sidewalks. The door and the shakes are a memory of our old house in South Buffalo, lost to us during the recession. A beautiful but troubled house, it haunts my dreams (but is in good hands now).

It is, above all, an invitation to all of the goodness of that fall season. Grab. Cup of cider and. Donut, and rest yourself on the steps awhile. Not too long, though.

Winter is approaching.
 

Thursday, October 29, 2020

Coming Into Focus

 

It should be clear, at this point, where this print is headed. Three more colors by my design, and I'm pretty happy with the whole thing.

I never actually fleshed out what I'm putting in the lower left. "General vegetation" was the plan, so I was preparing to go with just some cartoony imagining of "a bush."

But then last weekend we stopped at an estate sale, a bizarre and rambling midmod with an entranceway flanked by yew. We had an enormous yew at my childhood home. I truly love yew. So now, all I want is yew. We'll be looking for yew in a couple of days. The red here will work well for the yew berries...which yew...er, you... won't be able to see because they're too small. But they'll be there!

Saturday, October 24, 2020

Fall Into Place




I feel like I'm returning to my roots a bit here with this one. When I first started printmaking, I admired the work of other printmakers who captured the beauty in everyday scenes. I tried - oh how I tried - to emulate them. 

I remember one print I tried to do, a simple one with a bountiful lilac bush outside a weathered clapboard house. Hooboy, it was a stinker. I knew nothing about color, or how to study one's subject. Hell, I don't even think I worked from a drawing.

This one has been different. Not only have I solved the bulk of my technical issues, but I have learned to really think through the color sequence.



I'm still not sure why I insist on starting with the darker colors. Maybe the challenge excites me.

There's several colors left, so stay tuned for how it falls together.
 


Saturday, August 22, 2020

Elsie Alive

 

Finished at last! This print was going to be complicated, but I just wasn't prepared for HOW complicated. "Elsie" ended up being somewhere between 9 and 15 colors, and I was never sure if it was going to work nout. Several times I thought it might be scrapped. In the end, I only got about 4 decent prints (started with ten).

The main problem I had was that, at the start, I experimented with under-inking the block. This gave the print a very light, gauzy appearance, which I loved. The problem is, as the ink sits on the paper, it's like a butte, little flattened islands of color. When you print the next layer, you only print on the tops of those buttes, and the print area gets successively smaller with each layer of ink. By the end, those little islands have become mountains, with narrow, sloping tops. It becomes harder and harder for each color to print. 

But in the end, I have depth, shadow and color. I don't think that I conveyed enough that the blue bottle on the right is actually the shadow of the bottle (left).

The figurine is a UCTCI Japan figurine from the 1960s. My wife found her at an estate sale in a big old warehouse on Main Street in Buffalo. Since finding her some 15 years ago, Elsie (named for her Grandmother) has been joined by many sisters.

Saturday, May 30, 2020

Rumination

 Here we are at color #9, and something unexpected happened: the background color is, unfortunately, blending in too much with the figurine's hood. It's not quite as blended in this photo, and I haven't yet looked at the print under natural light.

I have two options: either redesign the print so the background color is lighter, and hope that the contrast is enough, or design it as darker. The problem is that whatever I choose as a design for the background needs to work with a light OR dark color. The reason is that, if I choose to make the background light, and I find light makes the hood too washed out, I can switch to dark, and vice versa.

The case for dark is seen here. You can see the contrast. The down side is, depending on what color I choose, the pot she's holding risks disappearing.

Conversely, because the hood is so light, the hood may not pop. Stay tuned!






Sunday, May 24, 2020

MISTER Ulean?! That's SIR Ulean to YOU, bub!

Firs color down was a very dark Cerulean blue. I plan out my colors different than most printmakers in that I like to work dark to light. It helps me to steer colors the way I want them. I also plan the colors so one layer is enhanced by the previous layer. For example, the next color will be a lighter version of this, and the one after that will be a green. I would never put a yellow or red next, because it would change the color.

Fresh Start

It's been almost a year since I've posted, and bit longer since I've had a print to show. I've been working very hard on cartooning, which I hope will bring something to my printmaking at some point.
It's been very relaxing to study cartooning, and gives me an opportunity to study perspective, color and composition.

But, of course, it always comes back to printmaking...

The struggle to find the time is unchanged. I have remained essential, as I work in the medical manufacturing sector.


But I do have fun!