Block Printing: Techniques for Linoleum and Wood
By Sandy Allison and Robert Craig
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Book preview
Block Printing - Sandy Allison
BLOCK PRINTING
Basic Techniques for Linoleum and Wood
Sandy Allison, editor
instruction and art by Robert Craig
photographs by Alan Wycheck
STACKPOLE
BOOKS
Contents
Beginnings
1. Transferring an Image
2. Carving a Linoleum Block
3. Printing an Image by Hand
4. Making a Reduction Print
5. Working with Wood
Gallery of Annotated Prints
Resources
Beginnings
Block printing is a centuries-old art form first practiced in Japan, China, India, Korea, and elsewhere. It can be used to create fine art prints, illustrations, greeting cards, gift wrapping, posters, advertisements, and numerous other graphic works on paper. It can be done on fabric as well. While many block prints have a distinctive look and spirit, they can vary widely, from simple and bold to delicate and filigreed.
Traditionally, blocks for printing have been carved from wood, but they can also be created from linoleum, which is relatively inexpensive and readily available. (Both materials are suitable for making fine art prints: Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse worked extensively with linoleum, as did the German Expressionists and artists at the Grosvenor School of Modern Art in London.) Tools and carving techniques for wood and linoleum are similar but differ in important ways; hand-printing techniques are basically the same.
This book covers the basics of working with both linoleum and wood. It starts with selecting sketches that would work well as block prints and demonstrates an easy way to transfer sketches to the surface of a block. It covers carving tools and the proper ways to carve linoleum then moves on to inking techniques. Printing by hand and pulling a print are covered in detail, as are editioning and registration and clean-up techniques.
Selecting wood and the tools and techniques for carving it are also described, as is a way to make multicolored reduction prints. The book also describes the different types of paper suitable for printmaking. It ends with a gallery of finished prints that include notations by the artist, printmaker Robert Craig.
Getting started block printing is easy, and the materials and tools are readily available. As with any craft, it’s best to start small at first then tackle larger and more complex projects. This book will cover everything you need to know to make original and practical works of art.
1Transferring
an Image
Linoleum for printing is available at most art stores and craft centers or online and usually comes mounted on a ³ / 4 -inch-thick block of plywood, ready to carve. The linoleum itself—a mixture of cork and linseed oil—has no grain, so it’s easy to cut in any direction. It can hold fairly fine detail. Linoleum blocks are often gray (so-called battleship gray
) or tan. The white material shown here is printing foam—very easy to cut with a pencil or skewer and inexpensive, it is good for practice or younger artists.
Linoleum blocks come in a variety of standard square or rectangular sizes: 4 by 5 inches, 5 by 7, 8 by 10, and 9 by 12 are most common. If you want to make a print that’s not a standard size, it’s a simple matter to cut down a standard linoleum block using a handsaw or table saw.
Battleship gray linoleum also comes unmounted in square or rectangular pieces or rolls. The advantage to buying this form is that it’s slightly cheaper and more easily cut down. Unmounted linoleum is almost always mounted before carving, however, by gluing it to a plywood block using a heavy-duty adhesive.
Linoleum
Flooring
The material on the surface of linoleum blocks is similar to the true linoleum still used as a flooring material. But much of what is today thought of as flooring linoleum is actually vinyl and nothing like printing linoleum. Early linocut artists used true linoleum flooring material to make prints, and it’s possible for you to do the same. Be aware, however, that older linoleum made before the 1970s often contains asbestos and should not be carved.