Video Round Up 2021

We’ve loved creating videos and blogs to aid and inspire your printmaking throughout 2021! What started out as a way of reaching our customers whilst our workshops had to be closed down, turned into an ongoing project that’s reached so many more printmakers all over the world. Thank you for watching our videos and supporting us this year.

Browse through all the videos from this year below to see if there are any you’ve missed or want to revisit:

There has been a mini-series on prepping for linocut, including choosing a suitable block, transferring a design and staining your lino:

Choosing which Type of Lino is Right for You

Cutting Down Lino to Size

Preparing Your Lino

Staining Lino to See Your Carving More Easily

Transferring your Design onto Lino

We have made loads more relief printing videos including colour mixing, how to fix ink reticulation and repurposing items for your relief printing kit:

Taking a Proof of your Linocut with a Rubbing

Oil-Based or Water-Based Relief Printing Inks?

Different Ways to Transfer a Linocut to Paper

Repurposing Items for Linocut

Block Printing with Gold Ink

Colour Mixing with Schmincke Relief Printing Ink Set

Using Slama Presses for Relief Printing

Khadi Papers and Mini Kean Ball Bearing Baren

How to Fix Ink Reticulation when Relief Printing

We haven’t forgotten to make more videos about block printing on fabric (something we get asked about all the time!):

Block Printing on Fabric without a Roller – Make Your Own Stamp Pads

Heat Stamps

We’ve even tackled the dreaded clean-up! Screens, blocks and rollers can be saved using the proper clean-up techniques:

How to Fix a Sticky Roller

Removing Dried Ink from Rollers using Zest It Printmakers Washdown

Removing Ternes Burton Tabs from Delicate Papers

Using Zest It Printmakers Washdown to Remove Tape Glue Residue from Screens

Removing Dried Ink from a Screen using Zest It Printmakers Washdown

Screen printing remains one of our passions at Handprinted so there have been loads of screen printing tutorials:

Screen Printing with Puff Paste – Puffy Spiders

Repurposing Items for Screen Printing

Coating a Screen with Photo Emulsion

Mono Screen Printing with Brusho

Screen Printing a Gradient with a Split Fountain

Mixing Your Own Screen Printing Inks for Fabric

Screen Printing onto Dark Fabrics

Screen Printing a Graphite Drawing

If you fancy dipping your toe into the world of exposed screens we’ve got some information to help:

What is an Exposed Screen?

What’s a Halftone?

Creating Hand Drawn Designs for Exposed Screens

Artwork Requirements for an Exposed Screen

Intaglio printing produces such lovely results! Try your hand at the techniques we’ve explored this year:

Drypoint Etching (with Drypoint Plastic)

Using Carborundum Gel to Create an Intaglio Plate

Using Mirror Card to Make an Expressive Drypoint Print

Cardcut Collagraph

One of the most popular projects we’ve done is this monoprint scrim print:

Using Scrim to Monoprint

We’ve got colourful with dyeing too!

Rainbow Spiral Tie Dye

Sgraffito Batik

Finally, there are a handful of other projects we’ve had fun with:

Gum Arabic Transfer

Embossing using Card

Low Tech Lithography: Making Cards with Polyester Litho Plates

Fabric Painting

You can find all of our videos on Youtube, our website, or on Instagram!

20 Handprinted Christmas Projects

Grab your red, green and gold ink and let’s go! Here are 20 Handprinted Christmas projects to keep you in the festive spirit this year.

Gift Wrapping

Handprinted Christmas Project: Bridget’s Furoshiki Fabric Wrapping
This beautiful way of wrapping presents in paper is traditional in Japan but is rising in popularity in the UK too! This fabric wrapping can be re-used again and again. Print your own fabric for an extra personal touch.

Handprinted Christmas Project: Holly’s Stamped Newspaper Gift Bags
Another eco-conscious wrapping option is to make your own gift bags. The project shows you how to make your own from over-printed newspaper but you could use scrap paper, magazine pages or old misprints too!

Easy Block Printed Christmas Wrapping Paper
We love this easy printed wrapping paper idea! Just add a few squiggly lines and some bauble stamps for a bright festive paper.

Printing Wrapping Paper for Christmas!
This project is actually 4 wrapping paper printing techniques – thermofax screen printing, stamping, repeat pattern block printing and Indian block printing!

Screen Printed Wrapping Paper Using Screen Filler
If you’re a screenprint lover this wrapping paper option is for you! Use drawing fluid and filler to create a festive screen and wizz through metres of paper in minutes.

Soft Cut Lino Stamped Tags
Every gift needs a tag. This quick stamp is fast and adds that personal touch.

Printed Christmas Wrapping Tape
Don’t forget the tape! Lots of gift givers are opting for paper tape (no single use plastic and the whole lot can be recycled after use!) If plain isn’t your thing, stamp your own!

Decorations

Handprinted Christmas Project: Shirley’s Star Garland
This star garland is a gorgeous addition to a mantelpiece, banister or window!

Handprinted Christmas Project: Jez’s Printed Bauble
Use your favourite pattern and print up a batch of these beautiful paper baubles. Extra festive points for gold ink!

Stamped Christmas Bird DIY Decorations
These paper birds hang so delicately on a tree. We’ve brusho dyed and stamped them but you could decorate them in any way to like – get the kids involved too!

Printing a Christmas Star
If your tree is lacking a topper, this cardboard star is a low (or no) cost addition. Screen print, stamp, draw or scribble to decorate in your favourite colours and style!

Christmas Veg Printed Place Names & Tags
Add more veg to the Christmas table with these stamped name placecards.

Cards

Drawing Fluid and Filler Screen Printed Christmas Cards
Screen printers rejoice! This fluid and filler method will have you speeding through that stack of blank cards.

Soft Cut Printed Greetings Card
Linocut beginners will especially love this easy block printed card.

Foiled Christmas Card
Add a bit of razzle dazzle to your cards with foil.

Easy ‘Bah Humbug’ Reduction Linocut Christmas Card
Scrooges welcome here with these multi-block cards.

Drypoint Robin Christmas Card
Try something new with these intaglio and monoprinted cards.

Easy Stamped Holly Christmas Card
A Christmas classic for good reason

Safeprint Bauble Christmas Card
Safeprint is a great block printing alternative for kids – no carving tools necessary!

Screen Printed Snowflake Christmas Card
Bring back the classic papercut snowflake with these screen printed stencil cards.

Happy printing!

Meet the Maker: Susan Davies

Hello, my name is Susan and I’m a printmaker/illustrator living in West Sussex with my Italian husband and little boy. I moved back to the UK 6 years ago after living abroad in Rome and Barcelona for 20 years.

Describe your printmaking process.

I work mainly in collagraph and intaglio. I also like to combine mediums, often using drawing, ink, embossing and hand embellishing areas.

The process involves making a plate using a thick card. I normally draw directly onto the card from a drawing/design and use a scalpel and start to carve and tear areas to form textured raised areas and deeper grooves and marks which will pick up the ink. Paper/textiles/PVA/carborundum/string etc can also be added to create the textures required. The plate is then coated in sealing wax to make it waterproof. It is inked and rubbed off using scrim and tissue paper to create tones in colour. It is then passed through the press.

How and where did you learn to print?

I did an art foundation course followed by a textiles degree at Loughborough University. This is where I learnt to screen print, lino print, a little bit of etching and drypoint and learned some more commercial elements of printed textiles, such as repeat patterns and using CAD.

The course was multi-disciplinary. The first year gave us the opportunity to try print, weave or textile art, then specialising in the second year. It was a fabulous course, giving us freedom, but also structure towards the end and a large trade fair in London and an exhibition at the Mall Galleries where we exhibited our work.

I returned to printmaking after many years, after I had my son. I found it was a way to be creative again using few materials and little space. I fell in love with the process and have slowly taught myself how to make collagraph.

Why Printmaking?

Printmaking enables me to combine different mediums, embossing, ink, hand embellishments and my love of drawing. These reveal subtle textures, marks and layers, often evoking more depth in a piece. I also enjoy the surprise element that comes with pulling each print and the labour-intensive process. I often find that I enjoy making the plates as much as inking and printing.

Where do you work?

I work from my studio in my parents’ garden. It is very basic! But it is a huge space and free! It also gives me an area for my beautiful new Gunning etching press, a drying area, an inking area and lots of storage.

Describe a typical day in your studio

I have slowly started to work full time as a printmaker. A typical day varies greatly. If I have some finished plates I will drive the short distance to my studio to start on inking and printing editions. But I often work from my dining table at home when I’m carving plates, drawing and doing admin. My time also revolves heavily around school runs and pick up!

How long have you been printmaking?

I have been printmaking for 2.5 years.

What inspires you?

The main inspiration for my work is my family and our mixed Korean, Italian, British heritage. Where we began and our journey along the way. My little dark-haired son is often depicted in my work. I often depict stories in my prints; animals or landscapes, a nursery rhyme or a tale or a memory. Many times, I will slice the plate up into pieces that can be inked separately and puzzled together to tell a story.

What is your favourite printmaking purchase?

I have recently purchased a Gunning etching press which has changed my whole printmaking process. The difference in the details of my prints is remarkable. It’s wonderful.

What have you made that you are most proud of?

I have recently created six small winter landscapes made from a six plate collagraph. Each tiny piece interlinks to form one whole piece but can be layered individually in different combinations to form different compositions.

I’m also proud of the pieces that manage to come together at the end. I often make a plate that I feel will work but is often impossible to print. The pieces that work design-wise and print easily are like magic.

Where can we see your work? Where do you sell?

I sell my work through my Etsy shop.

What will we be seeing from you next?

I have several projects coming up, focusing more on original, larger pieces for galleries and shops.

Do you have any advice for other printmakers and creatives?

My advice to other printmakers would be to continue what you truly enjoy. Don’t compare yourself to others and have the confidence to keep trying different techniques and mediums. Truly absorb yourself in the process.

To see more from Susan, follow her on Instagram.

Relief Printing with Card Packaging

This is an easy way to create a relief print without using any lino! It’s a great project for children as requires no gouges – you can use scissors (grown ups can use craft knives too). These designs would make lovely cards to send your loved ones. Scroll down to watch a video or read on:


To make our block we need some card packaging. We don’t want to use corrugated cardboard because it will create a stripy print. Card packaging from cereal or cracker boxes is ideal.

Next, cut shapes to add to the block in a single layer of raised design to the block. We need each piece we use to be exactly the same height, so choose one piece of card to cut all the pieces from. If some of the pieces are higher than others we won’t get an even print.

Use a glue stick to stick the pieces onto the block, shiny side down.

For best results, the raised areas of your design should be quite close together, not leaving any large areas between them. This is because the roller may dip down in large gaps and place ink where we don’t want it.

When the glue has dried, roll out some ink onto an inking tray. We are using Caligo Safewash Relief Ink but you can use a water-based ink like Schmincke if you prefer. Acrylic paint is not suitable as it can dry on the rollers and spoil them, and dry on the block too quickly to take a print.

Roll a thin layer of ink onto the block.

Place the inked up block face down onto a piece of paper. Use the heel of your hand, the pad of your thumb, a spoon or a baren to press the block onto the paper. Be careful not to let it slide.

Peel off the block to reveal your print!

To make more prints, ink up the block again. These blocks are very hard to clean (we wouldn’t bother trying!) so stick to the same colour or allow the inks to blend and experiment! After you’ve finished, leave the ink residue on the block to dry.

For this project you will need:

Meet the Maker: Martin Truefitt-Baker

Martin Truefitt-Baker is a fine art printmaker and painter living in the Brecon Beacons national park, South Wales, UK. His linocuts use a reduction method, using a single piece of lino. This is progressively cutaway and overprinted onto paper several times, in a succession of tones, to build up the final image. The prints are of the animals he has seen on his walks through the local landscape, mostly within just a couple of miles of his home. Martin always tries to catch some of the magic in the way the animal moves and lives within its environment. The beautiful Usk valley, rough mountainsides, twisted trees, wildflowers and busy insects fill the backgrounds of his prints.

Describe your printmaking process.

I mostly use a reduction linocut method. 5 or 6 layers of cutting and printing work best for me. I start with the lightest tones working through to the darkest (not always simple black). Some of the layers are blends of two or three different colours of a similar tone. I tend to do this mix on the lino, using careful rolling and blotting, rather than making ‘rainbow rolls’. The full printing process can take weeks (failure is not an option!) so more time goes into designing the print and working out where the various tones will go, than the actual printing.

I design using thin paper, premixed tones of blue acrylic and a black ballpoint pen. Nothing fancy…in fact, the whole point is to avoid getting ‘precious’ about the design. I often scan and print out sections of the design. You can resize, reverse and cut them up and stick them back together, then paint over the top until the finished design seems to work.

How and where did you learn to print?

I did a strange degree in Aberystwith (West Wales) in Visual Art. Half Art history, which was a mistake as I was barely literate; half practical. I ended up specialising in illustration and book design. I started making some simple prints then.

I wrote my dissertation on Edward Bawden. It was the early 80s, he was quite old and his work had fallen out of favour and was more obscure then. He was a lovely gentleman who reminded me of my own grandfather; he seemed bemused that someone would be interested in him. I was lucky to visit him in his home and see him working in his studio. I’d say this had a lasting effect on me. That Bawden/Ravillious/Nash group of artists have since been a big influence on me, in the way they depicted that magic in the British landscape.

Why printmaking?

It links in with the illustration thing. That thrill of seeing an image reproduced. It becomes something else. You look at it differently. I often get asked ‘why don’t you just paint 20 of the designs!’ (it might be quicker) It’s just not the same.

Seeing an image taken from a print and then reproduced as a card is another thrill again. It makes you look at the design in a whole new way.

Where do you work?

I’m lucky that the cottage I live in has an extension on one side that I’ve taken over as a studio. It is in Llangattock (near Crickhowell) in the Brecon Beacons.

Describe a typical day in your studio.

Tea! …work…and the occasional bacon roll…and the cat demanding food.

How long have you been printmaking?

Serious printmaking took a long break of over 30 years while I worked in a Welsh secondary school just outside Merthyr. I’ve only been back printing and painting for myself since 2017. I did a couple of prints that year and a painting and was lucky enough to get into the Natural Eye Exhibition in the Mall Gallery.

What inspires you?

I’ve always been drawn to the quirky and unusual but I’ve found myself more immersed in and inspired by the local environment recently. It is beautiful here and I’m very lucky. The animals and scenery are fantastic. My inspiration for new prints usually comes from seeing an animal in a certain situation. All of my prints are based on real sightings. The animals are in the environment in which I saw them. Additionally, I try to portray them as if I’m there with them, their size, in that place, not just an outsider observing.

What is your favourite printmaking product?

As you well know, printmaking materials are brilliant! You could spend a fortune on new swish stuff. I was an art teacher for a long time. With that territory goes making do with very little, we were so underfunded at times; we were getting materials out of skips. I can feel a rant about society/government neglect of the Arts coming on!

Now if I am to sell work, it has to be made of the best material and as of as high quality as possible. I’ve recently bought a SLÁMA Press, which is great. I don’t use it to print on its own (although it is perfectly able to do so on small to medium prints). I use it to ‘finish’ prints that I’ve put through the press and I know are going to be slightly uneven in a few places. My ‘go to’ inks are Cranfield Caligo Safewash but I also use (and mix in) their traditional colours, if there isn’t a Safewash equivalent. I’ve never had a problem mixing types and I mostly clean up with safe solvent, so it’s not a problem. I’ve not found a better paper for my style of work than Somerset Satin 300gsm.

I find Pfeil tools are the best new tools to buy. I have a mix of new and some finer old second-hand tools.

What have you made that you are most proud of?

It changes. The Winter Fox print that has just been published as a greetings card is a current favourite. It was a struggle to print originally. Now I wish I’d printed a bigger edition but it was as much as I could manage at the time.

The other fox print ‘Vulpecula’ and the ‘Golden Morning Hares’ are up there as well, along with ‘Between Snow Showers’ which is an RHS Christmas card this year.

My first real success and the print that started to set a style for me was the ‘Otter Moon’.

Where can we see your work? Where do you sell?

The logistics and costs of sending work to London galleries have put me off lately, along with the pandemic. I’ve been so lucky to have a few brilliant galleries close by who have shown my work from the start (especially CRiC in Crickhowell).

Facebook and Instagram are good ways for me to show what I’m working on. I have a shop connected to my website.

I keep a blog, which when I remember to write, I try to talk about the things I make (and how) in more depth. 

Art Angels Publishers have used images from several of my prints now as greetings cards (available in all good card shops and galleries!). That’s a thrill to see and each one is also a good advert, out there in the world, for my work.

I’m currently getting work together and framed for a big exhibition in Cumbria at Rheged. Great Print 7. From early December into the New Year.

 What will we be seeing from you next?

I’ve recently started using a Gunning press. I’ve been finding the ‘grunt’ needed to print a large edition of a large print on a book press very hard work. I’m developing two large linocut print designs and one of them should be completed before Christmas. That should make six finished prints this year, a record for me.

I’ve also been experimenting with some intaglio collagraph using carborundum etc. I’m hoping to reflect some of my softer painted work into my prints.

Do you have any advice for other printmakers and creatives?

The technique is secondary to what you want to say. Everyone has something that makes them an individual, express it and enjoy it.

This might be controversial to some! Please don’t just reproduce photographs. Make sure there is a human evident in the process and final image. 26 layer reduction prints from photographs may look great but are pretty soulless (I may get hate mail).

Everyone can draw and paint! Practice will make you better and the rest is just your style, it’s what makes you interesting.

To see more from Martin, follow him on Instagram and check out his website.

Printing a Linocut with a Relief Printing Press

Relief Printing Presses are a great option if you want to speed up your lino printing process. This one is available in A4 and square format. This type of press uses a platen to press down firmly to transfer ink from your block to the paper. Read on or scroll to the bottom to watch a video.

Open the press by pulling up the lever and moving the platen to one side. Remove the piece of foam padding.

Add a few sheets of newsprint or similar to the base board. This padding will help us to get an even print. Experiment with more or fewer sheets to see what works for you and your process. If using, place your registration sheet on top.

Lay the inked up lino block face up in the press. 

Gently lay the printing paper on top. 

Next, lay the foam sheet on top. Use the handle of the press to carefully lower the top platen down on the print stack.

The handle tucks underneath the bar at the side of the press. It then uses leverage to press the platen down on the print stack. Push firmly.

For a more even print, open the press up, carefully remove the foam and rotate the print stack by 90 degrees (if it fits). Place the foam back on top, close the press again and press once more.

Open the press and remove the print.

For this project you will need:
– Relief Printing Press
– Lino (ready carved – tools are here)
– Relief Printing Ink
– Roller
– Inking Plate
– Newsprint
– Paper on which to print

Meet the Maker – Sarah Cemmick

I’m Sarah Cemmick, a linocut printmaker based in the Eden Valley in Cumbria. I have been printmaking for over twenty-five years (give or take a couple of children mid-way through) having graduated from the University of Sunderland with a degree in environmental illustration.

My degree didn’t specialise in printmaking but the print studios were directly below the illustration department so I found myself spending a great deal of time below stairs. My final degree piece was an 8ft tall ostrich in lino. This started my love affair with lino.

I was lucky to be supported by the Princes Trust young business enterprise as soon as I left university so I became self-employed from graduation.

Describe your printmaking process.

I use traditional grey lino for all my prints, I prefer this to vinyl. All my prints are made using linseed oil inks either on traditional printing papers or a fine Japanese tissue that has gold and silver foil flecks.

I’m not a traditionalist in printing though as I prefer to use watercolours to finish my prints. I know this is perhaps against the grain for some but I prefer the finished results, I think it’s the illustrator in me breaking out.

How and where did you learn to print?

Part of my illustration degree was to create a linocut after a sketching trip to the Washington Wetlands Centre in the northeast. I had a drawing of a sleeping duck on the water surrounded by reflections which I carved on brown lino with disposable bladed tools, it’s a miracle I still have all ten digits but it didn’t stop my enthusiasm for the medium.

Why printmaking?

I love the mark making you can create with lino, yes you can have a detailed drawing to transfer to the cutting surface but once you take to it with those carving gouges it can lead you along many paths.

The joy of the first inking, seeing the design appear and then that peel and reveal never gets old. That’s why I keep printing, every cut is a learning curve and a joy.

Where do you work?

About five years ago we took down a fruitless apple tree and built my studio in its place. It overlooks my garden and is about fifteen steps from the back door of my home. It’s the first time I’ve ever had a workspace entirely mine. Designed with my husband David and built by a joiner friend (who also built sets for Star Wars, how cool is that) it’s my sanctuary space.

I have a little John etching press in the centre and four plan chests which are also used for paper cutting and inking surfaces. There is also storage for my framed work and a huge pitch pine cupboard I store my art cards in.

Describe a typical day in your studio.

I spend quite a lot of time on admin from the website, processing orders and paperwork but when I have a printing day all that goes by the wayside.

Always paper preparation first, sizing everything while my hands are clean of ink and preparing the blocks and the cardboard jigs I make to keep the block in the same position for each edition.

Then it’s printing. Some days it’s all one colour but when I’m printing my seafood medley I have all my small rollers and about ten colours on the go.

I print in small batches of each design as I now have so many. They are generally all editions of 25 but through the lockdown, I increased the edition size on some new images to make them more affordable.

What inspires you?

I’m inspired by wildlife, that’s the main body of work I make and always has been. I’m lucky to live in a rural location so can walk out and see hares, red squirrels and badgers along with countless birds without trying too hard. I also love African animals and would like to get back to making more large scale prints using this subject.

What is your favourite printmaking product?

My current favourite is Cranfield copper ink. New to me last Christmas and I just want to make more prints to use it. That and my trusty press, I’d be lost without it.

What have you made that you are most proud of?

I’m very proud of my ostrich even though it was made at the beginning of my career as a printmaker. This year I was asked by a gallery to reprint it for an exhibition. The blocks have been stored for about twenty-four years so I had no idea if they would print. I spent a good few days cleaning them up, cutting away the original background and making jigs for them. The print is assembled in thirteen panels like a giant jigsaw so I’m able to put each block through the press. It printed like a dream and the results will be on display at the Great Print Exhibition at Rheged in Cumbria from December.

I’m also very proud that printmaking is my full-time job, it’s not easy being an artist especially when you’re married to another artist but we work hard and get to do what we love every day. I’m very lucky and never take it for granted.

Where can we see your work? Where do you sell?

I built a website last year a huge achievement as I’m rather hopeless with anything computer related, so all my prints and cards can be viewed and bought on there. I have a wonderfully supportive following on Instagram. Also, I supply galleries around the UK with original prints and cards.

What will we be seeing from you next?

Next up are a couple of projects, I’m working on a botanical hare collection which will be my 2023 calendar, each month there’s a different flora to accompany each hare design.

I’m also working on two new fox commissions which I need to crack on with!

Do you have any advice for other printmakers and creatives?

Be true to yourself, believe in what you’re making and don’t worry about what others think or social media’s fickle ways. Enjoy the process and keep trying. I have great days when it all goes swimmingly and then terrible days when the print gods refuse to cooperate (black ink I’m talking about you) Oh and always keep your spare hand behind the cutting blade.

You can catch Sarah this weekend (12-14th November) at the Handmade In Britain fair at Chelsea Town Hall.

To see more from Sarah follow her on Instagram and Facebook.

You can also find her work at the following galleries: The Courtyard Gallery Appleby, Gallerina Darlington, The Tallantyre Gallery Morpeth, The Old Courthouse Gallery Ambleside, The Gallery Rheged Penrith, The Gallery Norfolk, The Glebe Gallery, The Biscuit Factory Newcastle.

Meet the Maker: Sofia Salazar

Hi! my name is Sofia Salazar. I’m a textile designer from Argentina, and I’ve been living in Norwich for the past 8 years. I come from a family of makers and in my practice, I try to explore and experiment with almost every technique I learn about. Although at the beginning I used to work a lot more on textiles, mostly doing embroidery, in the last few years I’ve shifted almost completely to printmaking; Cyanotypes, linocut, woodcuts, screenprinting, pochoir and even kitchen litho.

Describe your printmaking process.

It depends on the printing technique I’ll be using; some take more preparation and designing than others. For instance, I can sketch with charcoal on a big piece of MDF and just start carving the lines for a very expressive and rough print that will take me only a few hours. Or, on the other side completely, I can spend days or even weeks planning a reduction print on my Ipad before getting anywhere near my lino piece. For a reduction print, I’ll first sketch a design on paper. Once I’m happy with it I’ll start working on it on my Ipad, first considering where to apply colour and how many layers the design needs. Then I’ll define the layers, decide the order in which they should be printed (because I use very strong colours I need to make sure the inks will cover each other completely) and once I’m finished I’ll start trying different colours schemes and combinations. Only once I’m done with that I can start putting the tabs on my paper, transferring the first layer to the piece of lino and thinking about carving.

How and where did you learn to print?

Oh, we are 100% self-taught. I say “we” because my partner has been interested in the process from the beginning and many times he’s the one insisting on trying something new. I’ve known about different printmaking techniques since I was a kid because at home prints were hanging from the walls, from the time my parents were students. I remember since then, paying a lot of attention every time I was in a museum, to see what techniques were used in the pieces I liked. So let’s say I knew the names; I knew linocut was a thing, that etching was a thing, that lithography was a thing. Eventually, I started googling and watching YouTube videos, many times just buying the tools and giving it a try intuitively. We have printmaking books, we’ve read blogs, we’ve tried, failed and succeeded eventually too. We bought our first inks from Handprinted, in 2014 and from then on we’ve been trying almost everything in their catalogue! From my screenprinting screens to my ABIG press, it all came from them.

Why printmaking?

I’ve always liked the possibility of doing multiples without losing the handmade aspect. I like to be able to feel the texture of the inks, to see the colours blending, the uniqueness of the mistakes, to see the relief and marks left by the press. I like the feel of the paper and I love smelling the ink while prints dry around me. I like seeing something materialise in front of me, I like knowing that I’ve been involved in the making of each one of my prints and that you can tell by looking at them that a human made them. I like to think in terms of printing, dividing a design into layers, considering the order in which colours should be printed. I think I enjoy the process throughout.

Where do you work?

I work from home, I have my studio in the front room of our house, in Norwich, so I get to see a lot of passers-by and I love whenever someone stops to look at what I’m doing. I also like coming back from the shops or whatever I’ve been doing out and seeing from outside all my prints hanging on the walls, drying, and the tools on my table.

Describe a typical day in your studio.

Well, I try to take care first of what I like least… so I usually start my day tidying up, makings to-do lists, taking care of emails and preparing orders for shipping. That takes up more than half of my workday, but once I’m done I can “relax” and take care of re-stocking, printing or planning new work. Even though shipping is very time consuming and repetitive, there are advantages, like not needing to use my brain a lot and being able to re-watch films or listen to podcasts or things I can’t really do when I need to focus a lot.

How long have you been printmaking?

I’ve attempted printing on a few occasions before but I’ve been doing it more seriously and non-stop since 2018.

What inspires you?

Other artists at work, either on Instagram, a museum or in a documentary. I love hunting for second-hand art books and seeing people’s sketchbooks and studios. I love to study an artist or a subject in-depth until I hit something new I want to try or make. Wandering around a city just looking at buildings, watching films, people watching. Museums always have an effect on me, always make me want to go home and make something. Of course, I like art a lot and I’m inspired by the likes of Picasso, Matisse, Cocteau, Le Corbusier, Malevich, Arp, Calder, Miro, Picabia, Schiaparelli, Hepworth and Hockney.

What is your favourite printmaking product?

My Hawthorn Roller: I love a good and heavy roller. I find the Ternes Burton Registration Pins essential to my work.

What have you made that you are most proud of?

My partner and my father in law built a big press from scratch back home and with it, we managed to print our first large scale print. A print I’m still very proud of. Also, all my reduction prints take me so much time and effort that I always end up feeling proud even if it’s only for finishing them. I think that’s my favourite technique at the moment; I really enjoy how you carve away layer after layer until there’s almost nothing left of your lino plate. And how there’s no going back.

Where can we see your work? Where do you sell?

You can see my work and my process on Instagram and I sell on my website.

What will we be seeing from you next?

I’m working on some flat pieces for wooden sculptures that I want to try and print instead of paint, but I’m still sampling and trying out materials at the moment 🙂

Do you have any advice for other printmakers and creatives?

Well, I think a good piece of advice would be to follow your curiosity even when it feels like drifting away from your original goal. Exploring new tools, techniques and materials usually leads to new work and even to new styles, so that’s always a good thing to try when you find yourself blocked. Lastly, it is always good to remember what you see on social media is only the best-curated version of ourselves and our work… you rarely see all the failed attempts so it is easy to think you’re the only one making mistakes or not producing daily work that is museum ready!

To see more from Sofia follow her on Instagram.

Staining Lino to See Your Carving More Easily

It can be tricky to see where you are carving when making a lino block, making it more easy to make mistakes. An easy solution to this problem is to stain the lino. That way, the colour of the lino on the surface is different to the inside, allowing cut marks to show easily.

Read on for one simple way to do this (or scroll to the bottom to watch a video).

Choose a bright or dark coloured acrylic paint that is a strong contrast to your lino. We are using traditional grey lino. Red acrylic paint is a strong colour option for staining.

Use a large wet paintbrush to apply acrylic paint to the surface of the lino. We don’t want a thick layer, just enough to cover the whole block.

Let the paint sit for a couple of minutes and then use a dry rag to buff off the excess acrylic paint. We just want to leave the stain behind, not a layer of paint. A damp rag may clean the block too much.

The block can now be carved, showing our gouged lines as we work.

It is recommended to clean the lino before inking up to remove any excess paint that may otherwise transfer to your print.

For this project you will need:
Acrylic paint
– Paintbrush
Sheet of Lino
– Rag

Meet the Maker: Haychley at Stellabox

Hello, I’m Haychley and I’m a linocut printmaker based in Norwich, Norfolk. I’m a full-time printmaker and I work from my little home studio that often features my lovely cat, Stella. I run my own linocut workshops in Norwich and also organise pop-up shops for other creatives in East Anglia.

Describe your printmaking process.

Most of my prints start life as a digital design on Procreate on my iPad. Often my ideas come to me nearly fully formed and I have to work quickly to fill in the details and get them out of my head. Creating my designs digitally to start with allows me the speed to change parts of the design with ease and use layers to plan multi-block or reduction prints. I’m not a printmaker who necessarily follows a strict start to finish process; I’m often working on several linocut prints at once! I like to take my time and enjoy the carving process and then try to set aside several hours when I can test the print on different paper types to see which one suits the design best.

How and where did you learn to print?

I’m a self-taught printmaker. I watched countless hours of videos on social media and just kept persevering until I felt confident in what I was doing. I run my own workshops now for beginners and I’m a big believer that anyone can learn linocut printmaking.

Why printmaking?

I think it’s the freedom to be able to fully control what you create. You are in charge of the whole creative process from design to carve to print. It’s such a multi-sensory medium too; from the feel of the paper and the smell of the ink to the physical exertion of printing by hand. You feel like you’ve really worked hard to produce each print and there’s such a sense of satisfaction when a print is dry and framed or mounted.

Where do you work?

I mostly work at home in my little studio. I’ve made a conscious effort to join groups and organise events that get me out of the house regularly to meet new people and interact with the local art community. I’ve made brilliant connections this way and these in turn have opened more doors for me and pushed me to keep putting myself out there as much as possible.

Describe a typical day in your studio.

There’s not often a typical day for me at the moment. If I’m not at a market or acting as a duty artist in the shop, I usually let my mood dictate what I do each day. Some days I feel like getting lots of behind the scenes work done; updating my website, bookkeeping, organising my studio. Other days all I want to do is put a podcast or TV series on in the background and carve for the day. So long as the essential tasks are done for the day, this way of working really helps my mental health as I’m focused on how I feel that day and not forcing anything.

How long have you been printmaking?

I started printmaking in late 2017. My first prints were far beyond my ability at that point; A3 designs with a lot of solid ink coverage! Those first six months were such trial and error (and very frustrating at times) but I’m so glad I stuck with it. I would get up every day and try again, varying paper types and tweaking my process each day until I eventually cracked it. The actual printing part of printmaking used to be something I dreaded but now it’s one of my favourite parts.

What inspires you?

It always feels so vague to say that inspiration comes from all around but it’s true. I can be walking around the City and see a little piece of stonework and want to go straight home and carve it. My prints tend to vary a lot depending on the time of year, too. Last summer I made a print called Forage that depicts a woman collecting mushrooms under a full moon in the forest. My most recent print was of a girl sat relaxing on the grass and an inquisitive butterfly in front of her dreamt up whilst sat in my own garden. As autumn and winter approach my prints will often get darker in colour and include more cosy nighttime scenes. I try to keep in tune with what’s going on around me in nature and reflect that in my prints.

What is your favourite printmaking product?

Japanese HoSho paper. I’ve tried lots of different paper types over the last few years and always come back to my old favourite! It’s brilliant for printing by hand using a wooden spoon or baren and it’s such a strong lovely paper. I tend to hoard it a little because it can sell out fast so I always have several pads at a time to hand.

What have you made that you are most proud of?

I think I would have to say my Norfolk Broads print. It was my first reduction linocut and taught me a lot about the process. It’s a print that really reflects the beautiful landscape of Norfolk I feel too. Before this print, I focussed a lot on single colour linocuts, often in darker shades, but this is such a bright and happy print that was a step in a new direction for me.

Where can we see your work? Where do you sell?

Most of my linocut prints can be found in my Etsy shop. I hope to integrate my shop into my website by the end of the year too. I have a gallery and blog on my website and I publish a lot of process videos on my Instagram. If you’re local to the Norwich area, I have my prints in the Norwich Art Shop and Anteros art gallery as well as greeting cards in a couple of other local shops.

What will we be seeing from you next?

My next three linocut prints focus on the relationship between women and nature. They’re fun and joyful designs I think; one beach-themed, one of a woman lying on the grass (using the negative space on the block), and a large colourful reduction print of a girl sitting on a lilypad.

I also have plans for a new Norwich themed print based on a gorgeous historical design in the City. It’s one of the best feelings when inspiration strikes and the second I saw it I knew I had to try to turn it into a linocut.

Do you have any advice for other printmakers and creatives?

I feel like the biggest thing I’ve learned is that you have to constantly put yourself out there, even if it’s out of your comfort zone. Nothing will happen unless you make it so try to push yourself to try new events and interact with different types of artists who will help you grow. I’m an introvert so it definitely doesn’t come easy to me but the more you do it the easier it will get, I promise.

If you’re just starting out as a printmaker, my advice would be to just keep going. Become a linocut sponge! Watch all the videos you can on Instagram and YouTube, read online tutorials and try to follow along and absorb all the information you can. Keep varying your technique, paper type, ink, tools, everything you can until you find what works best for you and allows you to create what you want to.

To see more from Haychley, follow her on Instagram or visit her website.