eyes telling lies
detail from an etching print
by valentini mavrodoglou

#dc comics#dc#batman#bruce wayne#dick grayson#tim drake#dc fanart#batfamily#batfam


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eyes telling lies
detail from an etching print
by valentini mavrodoglou
Double plate with chine colle applied wth the second plate. The newspaper print is too pronounced.
Colour - siena - equal parts yellow& red with a very small (varying amounts depending on the layer) amounts of a red/black.
Initial prints pulled to check colour (combiation with FT) & detail of wallpaper plate
There was scope to get a darker black by using carborundum (not pre mixed into pva glue/paste) than simply cutting away board.
Two board plates offer chance to add different 'textures' of colour: cut away board + lighter colour with darker colour on wiped board. Also with plain pva glue or with tape.
There are various ways of inking textures, and in this post I am taking you through an experiment I did to ink the plates and make the textures look even more 3d.
Inking collagraphs
The great thing about collagraph plates is that you can ink them as intaglio and relief at the same time, and get a complex layered image with just one pass through the press. No fiddling around with lining lates up, it all happens in one go. This is what I usually do, as it seems simpler and quicker, with less room for mistakes in registration. However…..
[...]
I decided to ink the plate up again in relief and print it over the top of the intaglio in an effort to salvage it. I rolled over the collagraph plate with a dark colour, roughly aligned this on top of the intaglio print, and ran it through the press.
I noticed that the textured areas were jumping out, the texture appearing even more 3d than usual.
[...]
Printing the intaglio layer and the relief layer separately, deliberately mis-aligning them, creates a hiccup. The two images don’t line up and some of the lighter areas on the intaglio print show alongside the darker relief print.
This method of inking collagraphs enhances the effect of 3d textures
I am taking you through an experiment I did inking the collagraph plates to make the textures look even more 3d.
These images are of double-plated prints. One plate only collograph (textured wall paper) and relief inked and the other the etched plate with the British Rail logo, to which I am trying to add body. The etching was printed first and newspaper print was applied using chine colle.
The aim was then to very lightly ink the second plate and print the collagraph plate over the top add texture to the figural aspects of the etched plate. Unfortunately, as the lhs plate illustrates, the second plate was heavily over-inked on the first attempt.
The second attempt was an improvement but - as is apparent - the chine colle applied newspaper was barely visible. I believe the first plate needs to be carefully but unevenly inked and wiped to give the newspaper the opportunity to be visible in parts and the relief plate inked extremely lightly with a very hard roller to prevent the ink from doing anything except sitting right on the surface of the textured wall paper.
Explore our range of Collagraph Materials, including plates, varnishes, and textures, perfect for creating detailed and textured prints. Ide
Other useful collagraph materials etc are available from Handover as well as useful guidance on matters such as "buying gold leaf, genuine or imitation, loose of transfer, thickness, etc. I’m going to try and break it down and make it a little easier!"
Double plate print. The first plate is See It! BIG process #2 (see below) using a mix of red-black ink. The plate of See It! BIG process #1 in black ink was then printed over the top. Although not clear in this image, the resulting colour was appealing. Further work needs to be done on both plates in order to give the desired effect. I am interested in experimenting with other colour variations.
Double plate print. The first plate is the photo-etch view of St Pancras clock inked with a red-black mix. The second is a free-hand sketch based on the roses photograph (below) in black ink.
Unfortunately, my composition of the roses was careless and I placed them over the top of the tower. On one level (symbolic) this works for me but visually I would prefer to be able to see the clock faces. I could try to burnish elements of the rose to bring the clock more visible.
At this stage, I don't plan on trying to reverse the order of the plates as I want to keep the roses 'inside' the room looking out at the buildings. Placing the roses behind the photo-etch would make it easier to see the clock.
I am still considering what further work to do on the roses plate. My current thoughts are an aquatint to create varying tones on the petals, and also to impress rose leaves into a soft ground.
In the longer term, my plan is to do a completely new photo-etch of St Pancras using my original photograph inverted (see below) and a new free-hand sketch of the roses in which the petals are looser (rather than - as here - with the appearance of being tightly furled up).
The idea of incorporating text in the top lhs of the image also appeals. See my saved images in Pinterest and see above regarding ideas for frottage of rails in front of Central St Martins