[image description: photos of a letterpress printed broadside of a poem by a pediatric patient, as part of the yearly publication of poetry from the Writer’s in the Schools Program at Seattle Children’s Hospital. This poem is called Black Panther, the Night Hunter. It illustrates the black panther as if in low light, with a combination of fuzzy-edged, textured pressure printing and handset type for the panther's spots. the text and panther's eye are printed in metallic silver. full text under the cut. end description.]
WIP
done with this year's Words of Courage broadside! WoC is a yearly publication of poetry broadsides written by patients at Seattle Children’s Hospital, and designed, printed, and bound into portfolios by local letterpress & book artists. this year’s whole edition will be scanned and posted there in a couple weeks & previous years are always there to see!
this one was pretty nerve wracking for me because i did a lot of things i'm not really used to but at end i think it's good! and feedback has been positive so i'm working on believing it. i can say with certainty that i loved this poem the instant i saw it, and i did my best to make a panther that matched it. fearless, cool, tangible but not tame.
All the background is basically a series of tone plates (blank lino block) and a single multi-layer pressure plate pass (and a touch plate to deepen the dark background under the poem). The poem & the eye are handset type printed in silver, and the panther's spots are a whole bunch of handset pieces masked off to trap to the silhouette of the panther from the pressure print.
pressure printing is extremely simple as a process but i guess how i would say it is. my comfort zone is usually complex but reliable processes. not a huge fan of surprises in the output. control freak behavior. and the concession to control that i made was, basically, i planned it so all the tone plates and pressure printing went on first and if it wasn't layering the way i wanted, or wasn't getting the effect of low-light nighttime values that i wanted, i could ripcord out and pivot to a more known quantity without losing any good printing that i'd already done. and if the gray values just weren't adding up be to dark enough I could also just keep adding tone plate passes until i achieved sufficient contrast for the silver, as much of a pain as that would've been.
there was in fact about a week where i thought i would just have re-do the whole composition so that the fuzzy pressure print, the panther, etc., was all confined to a discrete box on one side of the sheet, and i would have to print black on clean white for the text. i just never wanted the poem to disappear in the mid value ranges—BUT a fellow printer friend and several other people really encouraged me to go with it, just push the darkness on the left as much as i could and do the touch plate and such. i'm glad i listened because flooding the whole sheet really is the way to make the panther seem unconfined, like it could approach you. in another context i also wouldn't have questioned the way the silver text can disappear at some angles, and pops out with shine at others; camouflage is completely appropriate. I just got anxious because the poet & their poem is obviously the most important part of this project in particular, but i regained confidence in it as an appropriate text treatment the closer it got to being finished.
i think i had the absolute least trust in the process when all the background was printed, and the poem, and the colophon, and i just thought, oh no, this isn't going to be anything :( but then i put that big shiny eye on and suddenly i knew it was going to be good :) still had the spots left to print but that's the one thing i've practiced a lot and i could envision it clearly. that was of course the real source of my anxiety during the whole thing. nothing technically out of the ordinary here, but i'm not practiced in envisioning so much variable texture, and i have little confidence in my taste with textural ranges. what if i simply don't know what Good looks like?? perhaps. must do it first to learn it, nerves included. Can't always be panthers.
















