I asked Xavier Moreno of Tres Gatos Press in Guadalajara, Mexico to send me an image in email, which I could laser engrave into linoleum, using the laser cutter at Quelab in Albuquerque, New Mexico:
TWO VARIATIONS
The final prints on 8x8 inch paper,
The two different linocuts:
Background cut out (left)
Image lines cut out (right)
The fundamental idea is to continue to exchange and exhibit small prints over long distances -- as we did with Ambos Lados, a print exchange between the US and Mexico (currently on display at the El Paso Museum of History).
Last year we received prints from Mexico in the mail and successfully showed them as part of the BUCKET EXHIBITIONS pop-ups. While sending 8x8 inch prints did not cost that much, even through the International mail, they did take a long time to arrive.
However I am impatient. Email is immediate, and now with LightBurn software I can laser engrave a 6x6 inch linoleum square in about an hour or less at Quelab in Albuquerque -- and print that linocut even faster on our Tortilla Press. This way I can easily prepare an International print show inside of a a week -- and ten framed small Mexican prints would be a good pop-up show in the USA. Moreover those ten framed prints would fit in my Bucket which I could carry anywhere on a moment's notice.
THE PROCESS
Xavier Moreno sent me this image in email from GUADALAJARA:
Xavier Moreno sent me this image
from Guadalajara in email
I laser engraved this image into a 6x6 inch linoleum square using LightBurn software and the laser cutter at Quelab in ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico:
Laser engraved using LightBurn software --
Speed: 150
Max and Min power: 80
Video of the laser cutter at work
TWO VERSIONS
I laser graved two versions on two different pieces of linoleum -- a positive and a negative version:
1) In the first version I wanted black lines, so I laser engraved the negative space around the images. Note however that was difficult to ink, and the brayer dipped into the negative spaces:
Inking with Akua Carbon Black ink --
note that the brayer dipped into the empty spaces
I printed using the Tortilla Press and the Iron Frog Glass Baren:
NOTE: Xavier Moreno and Alejandra Mares actually taught us how to make prints with a Tortilla Press when we visited them in Guadalajara in 2019:
The positive version print came out a bit weak, with some random smudges in the negative spaces:
The first print
I laser engraved the lines,
which would then print white
The second version
made a better print
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.