Baren Digest Friday, 4 October 2002 Volume 21 : Number 1983 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Printmaker Date: Fri, 04 Oct 2002 09:08:21 +1000 Subject: [Baren 19421] Home visit Hi all While we are talking about hanga, I have something to share. Yesterday I had a visit from hanga printmaker and Print Australia member, David Stones. What a great day! Meeting members like this is one of the greatest rewards of being in a group such as this. David (who lives in Japan) brought his wife Akiko and his sister Eileen too, not to mention a removal truck of furniture - but that's another story, as is the case of the collapsing chocolate cake! We drank cups of tea and looked at prints and nattered and looked at prints and nattered and looked at prints and nattered. Did I mention we looked at prints? And nattered? It was informative and instructive for both of us. David told me about how he carves up to 25 blocks per print. *pause* Think about that. 25 blocks per print. Must be a hanga thingy - infinite patience required. David's work can be seen on his website http://www.i-chubu.ne.jp/~stones/index_e.html I showed him the Dreams folio and case and selected prints. We looked at both the baren exchange folios I have. Although he is one of the founding baren members, David had never seen any of the folios in the flesh, so these were of special interest. I learned a lot listening to his critique of the work. We were agreed that looking at the scans online is no substitute for holding a print in your hands. He was interested to see the actual work of many people he has corresponded with over the last few years. David was impressed by the ball bearing baren I use, and its price. Its one of Roslyn Kean's. You can order one direct by mailing her at rozkean#bigpond.com. You could buy a small press with what he paid for his customised traditional baren, not to mention the re-covering scenario! We compared wood and silk-cut lino and lino's flexibility. http://www.silkcut.com.au/frame.html and we talked about paper, sizing and papermaking. David, the paper you were looking at came mail order from Melbourne Etching supplies. Its not on their online catalogue, I just looked, but if you write them, they will mail you a catalogue and samples. http://www.mes.net.au/ All in all, a most inspirational day, the worst part was they left me alone with the remains of that chocolate cake..... Josephine ------------------------------ From: Mike Lyon Date: Thu, 03 Oct 2002 18:15:35 -0500 Subject: [Baren 19422] Re: Home visit Gee, Josephine... How nice. What a great day! Thanks so much for sharing that with all of us... Mike At 09:08 AM 10/4/2002 +1000, Josephine wrote: >While we are talking about hanga, I have something to share. >Yesterday I had a visit from hanga printmaker and Print >Australia member, David Stones. What a great day! Meeting >members like this is one of the greatest rewards of being in >a group such as this. Mike Lyon mailto:mikelyon#mlyon.com http://www.mlyon.com ------------------------------ From: Julio.Rodriguez#walgreens.com Date: Thu, 3 Oct 2002 18:19:38 -0500 Subject: [Baren 19423] Re: Home visit & Kitakata, Munakata 10/03/2002 06:23:42 PM Josephine, that's a great story about meeting David and his family. His work is amazing and I have had the pleasure to share many emails with him. I have a handful of baren woodblock prints up on my living room walls and two are David's and one is yours. Now everytime I sit there I can look at the prints and think about you guys meeting and having a good time. Jean...I have never used kitakata, I think is good, probably better than Rives for hanga....I have used mulberry and different grades of hosho and the japanese papers are so much better. Rives is just available locally in large quantity and very economical. I can see shifting to hosho as my printmaking gets better....not quite there yet. Ray...thanks for the inspiring story of your visit...it makes me want to get on a plane and head over to Philly....now where is that website for the airlines.... thanks...Julio ------------------------------ From: "Maria Arango" Date: Thu, 3 Oct 2002 16:48:40 -0700 Subject: [Baren 19424] RE: Home visit Josephine wrote: > While we are talking about hanga, I have something to share. > Yesterday I had a visit from hanga printmaker and Print > Australia member, David Stones. What a great day! Meeting > members like this is one of the greatest rewards of being in > a group such as this. Here here!!! Definitely meeting members in the flesh has been the highlight of these internet groups. I can honestly say I have made many good friends in Los Angeles and received a couple of visits from folks who just "had" to see Vegas. Somehow when you get to share time and soup (and chocolate cake) with other printmakers you feel like you are not alone in this world after all. Thanks for sharing that Josephine, we always want to hear about those experiences. And isn't it curious how small the world really is? Maria <><><><><><><><><><><><><><> Maria Arango Las Vegas, Nevada, USA http://www.1000woodcuts.com maria#mariarango.com <><><><><><><><><><><><><><> ------------------------------ From: "lmhtwb" Date: Thu, 3 Oct 2002 18:28:00 -0700 Subject: [Baren 19425] Multiple Colors on One Block Hanga Question of the Day: If I plan to use different colors in different areas of one plate, is there any general 'rule' as to how far apart they should be? (Oh that's a clear question!) For example, say I want a light yellow green on a root tip and a yellow-orange lip on the flower. Since both areas are small, I'm not wasting two chunks of wood just for these tiny areas, so I plan on using one block. The areas will be about 5-6 inches apart. Is that far enough? What if the areas where only 2 inches apart? Or 1 inch? How close can you have two colors on one block and keep them seperate? Is it basically a function of ink brush size? Linda ------------------------------ From: Mike Lyon Date: Thu, 03 Oct 2002 20:47:08 -0500 Subject: [Baren 19426] Re: Multiple Colors on One Block At 06:28 PM 10/3/2002 -0700, you wrote: >How close can you have >two colors on one block and keep them seperate? Is it basically a function >of ink brush size? Yes, I think that's about the size of it... There are NO hard and fast rules here. If you want to print quickly, you better allow something more than an inch (but no need for more than two inches, I don't think) otherwise you can use small brushes and be very careful where you put them... I wouldn't like that very much, I don't think... But traditionally you only print one area/color at a time -- you wouldn't print the orange part and the green part in the same pass -- you'd do them in two passes of the paper over the block... - -- Goin' to DeKalb for the weekend... be back on-line sometime Sunday night, I think, so bye-bye for now... Mike Mike Lyon mailto:mikelyon#mlyon.com http://www.mlyon.com ------------------------------ From: Aqua4tis#aol.com Date: Fri, 4 Oct 2002 01:18:56 EDT Subject: [Baren 19427] Re: Home visit josie does roz kean have a web site? how much are her barens? i love that word "nattered" it means "chat" correct? georga ------------------------------ End of Baren Digest V21 #1983 *****************************