After more than a year of inactivity due to health problems working again! However need assistance by my son. (photos by Yatsch aka Mathis)


After more than a year of inactivity due to health problems working again! However need assistance by my son. (photos by Yatsch aka Mathis)
Type on the press.
Printed page.
Unfortunately missing certain letters (Luxembourg case) I can’t print the page in one go and have to print the missing part in a second run. So I have to fill up with furniture till I reach the end of the text which is already printed, being careful to start at the correct line.
To reach the right line I decided to measure with spaces rather then with a ruler. A 20 point + a 2 point space make up for one line of text plus it’s 2 point lead.
Some more lines to print for this page.
The same negatif is used to produce a photopolymer (relief) plate, as well as a cyanotype. The photopolymer plate is printed in black ink over the cyanotype.
Lithography is in my eyes some kind of chemical, not to say alchemical printing technique. Based on the repulsion of oil and water (look at your vinaigrette 🙂 it is a planographic printmaking technique, opposed to relief and intaglio printmaking. Most common approaches use a stone, an aluminium or zinc metal plate. Modern techniques have as matrix some polymer plate (e.g. pronto plate).
Looking for a simple and low cost procedure to transfer an image to wood or metal plate for further processing I met the paper lithography (aka gum arabic transfer).
As I mentioned in my post “Inspired by Peter Freeth” I tried already once but lost the game because of a lot of crumbling of the wet paper.
Not giving up I gave paper lithography a further try. Modifying somehow my approach.
First I started with a photograph being part of my shadow series which I reproduced on a laser printer.
The decisive step this time was that I fixed this printout with gum arabic on a dibond plate, (processing as one should in paper lithography,) but instead of removing it from the base to fix it onto the press bed I passed it with the dibond plate under the press. This avoided handling the moist paper matrix which is quite delicate.
On paper the result was more than convincing. No crumbling this time!
More on paper lithography may be found in following references:
or in these videos:
From case to composing stick.
What is the type face?
And now to the pressbed.
Add ink!
Drying.
More to come!
The result first!
The original photo:
Inspired by an article on Peter Freeth in Anthony Dyson, Printmaker’ Secrets, A&C Black Publishers, London, 2009 (an excerpt from the book over here) I got the idea to start not with a monotype as does Peter Freeth, but to do a litho first, transfer this to the intaglio plate and from there on follow Peter Freeth.
First step transform the colour photograph to a monochrome picture. This picture was laser printed directly on a polyester litho plate. As the edition would be only one print, I tried first to do a paper lithograph, but without any success (crumbling, crumbling and more crumbling), so I changed to polyester plate. But instead of printing it on paper I printed on the zinc plate chosen for the intaglio. The ink still wet the plate was powdered with rosin in a first step, superfluous rosin removed by gentle tapping the back of the plate and than recovered by an “even” (as far as it is possible for a hand shaken aquatint) layer of rosin in order to step from a negative print with open bytes to a positive without open byte. Followed by an etching in nitric acid (10%) for 5 minutes. The ink used for printing was 1/2 Charbonnel black 55981 1/2 Chabonnel black RSR and the paper Lanaquarelle Watercolor HP 300g/m2.
A first try with many flaws . To be continued. Lot of experimentation possible.
Summery of the steps:
Nude.
Drypoint on aluminium. Spot etching with a mixture of ferric chloride and sodium chloride.
Scratches and imperfections visible as I only degreased the plate and wanted to keep the existent marks of the plate. Added some more scratches.
Normal inking with sanguine and partial inking “à la poupée” with sepia ink.
Etching and aquatint on zinc. Hand addition of bluish grey Indian ink.
(Done in part at last summer workshop with André.)
Haiku.
Drypoint (hand), photopolymer (dragonfly), letterpress