The perfect spooky gift for the special ghoul in your life! This limited series of linocut prints features a ghoulish, skeleton creature. Me

seen from Singapore

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Arab Emirates

seen from Malaysia
seen from Romania

seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from Philippines
seen from Taiwan

seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Japan

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
The perfect spooky gift for the special ghoul in your life! This limited series of linocut prints features a ghoulish, skeleton creature. Me
I made a reel showing a bit of my inking process for this Fruit Dove print!
Muirann spent the week with us at Belfast Print Workshop developing these excellent three-colour screen prints.
Printing one angry Maul. I love how all the texture turned out on this one
Proof print of letterpress project 1
Printmaking Studio & Artist:
アダチ版画研究所 Adachi Hanga & James Jean
“Parasola”
“A look behind the process for Parasola. A traditional hand cut woodblock print, it is printed by @adachi.hanga and will be available Dec 17 at 10am Japan time (Dec 16 at 5pm PST).“
https://www.adachi-hanga.com
https://www.instagram.com/adachi.hanga/
Milwaukee Handicraft Monday
Every Monday for the past several months we’ve been showcasing block-printed patterns on textiles and paper from the1930s WPA Milwaukee Handicraft Project (MHP) in our digital collection “Wisconsin Arts Projects of the WPA.” Besides the prints themselves, the collection also includes other materials documenting the MHP, including photographs of process and activities from our sibling department, UWM Archives.
Presented here are photographic images of the block-printing process, from cutting or engraving the wood block to the finished block ready for printing, and from hand-printing textiles and paper to trimming the final print. The last image is of three MHP supervisors who would have been responsible for directing the work of different departments. The individuals are not identified by name, but we believe that the woman standing at center may be Barbara Warren Weismann (1915-2005) who was the head of the blockprinting department. She would have been in her early twenties at the height of the MHP’s activities.
These images were digitized from the originals in the Elsa Emile Ulbricht Papers, 1905-1978, UWM Manuscript Collection 59.
View our other Milwaukee Handicraft Project posts.
The MHP was founded in 1935 by Harriet Clinton, head of the Women’s Division of Wisconsin’s WPA to help unskilled women laborers provide income for their families. Clinton hired Elsa Ulbricht, an art professor at the Milwaukee State Teacher’s College (one of UWM’s predecessor institutions), to direct the project. The MHP hired around 5,000 people in total throughout its highly successful seven-year existence.
Read More about the Project.The Wisconsin Arts Projects of the WPA digital collection was made possible with generous financial support from The Chipstone Foundation.
Another leaf stamp🍁