I was half asleep one evening last October while watching a natural history TV programme, when onto the screen popped the most wonderful seahorse. What a great subject, I thought, for a linocut - I could finally try out the Caligo Safewash relief inks given to me the previous Christmas - the Phthalo Blue and Green inks were deep sea colours if ever I saw them! I found a suitable photo almost immediately, but life intervened, so it was only this January that I finally got round to making any prints.
source material, design & tracing, partially cut plate © Teresa Newham |
I'd decided to try a reduction linocut, where you trace the design onto the lino, cut away the parts you want to be white, print up the first colour, then cut away the parts you want to be the first colour, and so on. I wanted to work on a full sheet of paper, so I also needed to find a way of registering a print of that size.
the first colour, printed © Teresa Newham |
inking the seahorse with a small roller © Teresa Newham |
seahorse print - first series (blue on green) © Teresa Newham |
makeshift drying rack in an old plastic crate © Teresa Newham |
The blue ink, however, turned out to be less responsive than the green, and I started out with a very dark first layer. I reversed the colours so that the green areas became blue in the second set of prints, and the blue areas became green. That first layer showed through everything else, though, and the whole effect was extremely dark (unless, annoyingly, you held the print up to the light, in which case the colours were almost exactly as I wanted . . . .)
seahorse print - second series (green on blue) © Teresa Newham |
Surely, I thought, I could make that blue colour paler in the third series? well, not exactly. I only succeeded in making it slightly lighter and more vivid. Rather than waste the ink, I rolled it onto the plate then wiped off the areas where I didn't want it to show through the other layers. The resulting prints show a row of ghostly seahorses:
ghostly seahorses after the blue of the third series is printed © Teresa Newham |
adding colours to the third series © Teresa Newham |
drying off the third series © Teresa Newham |
playing around with the final plate of series three © Teresa Newham |
The third seahorse is much more vivid than the others - possibly too much so. I've looked online and noticed that other printmakers who use these inks go along with the punchy colours, and some use different printing techniques, such making separate plates for each colour, or using one base colour (or two combined) with a black overlay. It's something to consider for the future . . .
seahorse print - third series (punchy colour) © Teresa Newham |
Seahorses - reduction linocut prints © Teresa Newham |