Showing posts with label Hand-made Paper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hand-made Paper. Show all posts

Saturday, 10 June 2017

Second Wind–Third Part

The completion of the project. I don’t think I’ve ever completed a project so quickly!

Yesterday I made the cover and did the binding.

These are the materials – originally I thought I might use some of the inked kitchen paper but in the end decided against it. The patterned papers are from my stash, both from Tim Holtz paper stacks; the purple one is the back of a printed sheet that I knew I would never use. If I hadn’t had this, I would have inked some paper myself, but I thought this was a good opportunity to start using up some of my stash that’s been hanging around for several years! For the cover boards, I used cereal packet card.

I also found a sheet from a paper stack I was given ages ago, which again I thought I’d probably never get around to using – the design on it reminded me of raindrops so I thought that would do for the back! I forgot to photograph it with the above, but you will see it in a minute.

To help me cut the world map sheet where I wanted it, I made a frame out of scrap paper. The hole is the size of the finished cover, and the surround being the amount needed to fold around to the back. I chose an area on the map where hurricanes are prevalent.

The papers cut to size.

I stuck the papers down onto the card using a glue stick, and then turned them over, cut off the corners, and stuck the folds over using double sided tape.

The finished cover boards.

I used the purple paper for the end papers. I stuck these inside the boards with double sided tape. I am pleased with this choice of paper because it really brings out the touches of purple on the pages.

The covers ready for binding.

The beginning of the binding process, with the boards and pages marked and pierced ready for the waxed linen thread I used.

After this I forgot to photograph the binding process. This was my first attempt at a Coptic binding and it was great fun to do. The advantage of this binding is that the pages will fold absolutely flat as you open the book, making it ideal for art journals etc. You can also add as many pages/signatures as you like. Because there is no cover over the spine, the stitching is visible, and can be made very attractive. As it was my first attempt I decided to keep it simple, but there are all sorts of fancy variations you can do, to make a decorative stitched spine. There are plenty of images online.

I followed along with a brilliant Youtube tutorial and once I got into the swing of it, it was really easy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z1cTB6_4w5E

After the binding was completed, I added the title on the front of the book, using my Uniball Signo white marker pen, and outlined the letters with a medium sepia archival pen.

Here is a view of the stitched spine of the Coptic binding.

The back of the book, with my blog details.

To finish the cover, I added some shading under the title to make it stand out better, using my Derwent Graphitint in Warm Grey, and blended it with a fine wet brush. I went around the edges of both front and back covers with Black Soot Distress Ink, using a hand-made blending tool.


Here is the flip-through of the whole completed book.









 

 









As a recap on the thoughts behind this project, I am pasting in what I wrote at the end of the first part.

I have been thinking about “second wind” in the context of my own life. It’s funny how while its primary meaning is something destructive and terrifying, this expression usually means something quite positive when used in a metaphorical sense. Since my cancer, which necessitated the removal of my entire colon which was already diseased with ulcerative colitis, I have definitely come into my “second wind” in a positive sense, and am enjoying many activities I thought were lost to me, and many new ones besides. The negative aspect of my second wind struck me early this year when I had a blockage and was admitted to hospital for emergency surgery. The eye of the storm was the whole of 2016 when I was pretty well, and I thought that was the end of it, not realising that the second wind was just around the corner.

Cancer very often leaves a swathe of destruction in its path, both physical and emotional, and yes, there has been destruction in my case, but what remains has enabled me to rebuild my life from the ruins, and what I now have is very much better than what I had before. While I was going through the thick of it, somehow, at the centre, I always had my own personal “eye of the storm” where I had peace and joy, and remained positive. I hope my little album in some way depicts this journey, as well as illustrating the terrible beauty of one of the most destructive weather events on earth.

I hope you have enjoyed this little project. I am really keen to do more books in the future – in the meantime I have my Infusions mini-album to finish!

Thursday, 8 June 2017

Second Wind–First Part

WOYWW visitors – please see previous post.

I know this was supposed to be the year of the UFOs (UnFinished Objects) and that I wasn’t supposed to be starting any new projects until I’d made good headway on completing ones I’d already started, but sometimes the creative urge just grabs one, and one has to give in!

I have just finished listening to the audiobook version of Dick Francis’ novel Second Wind, in which a meteorologist flies through the eye of a hurricane. Apparently after the complete calm of the eye of the storm, when the second half of the circular weather pattern passes over, this is known as the “second wind” and it can be even more destructive, finishing off anything left after the destruction of the first.

This captured my imagination, and I thought I would like to make a little album just with a series of simple brush-stroke illustrations in an attempt to capture it. In my stash I have quite a few folded sheets of hand-made paper which I think were the covers of some wedding service sheets that I picked up after a service. I tore them in half horizontally against a ruler so that I could mimic the existing deckle edge of this gorgeous natural-coloured and textured paper.


I did some experiments because I knew it was likely to be highly porous, and I didn’t want any bleed-through.

 

With just one coat of clear gesso, there was still considerable bleed-through, but with a second coat, this seemed to solve the problem, especially if I dried the piece fairly quickly with my heat gun and didn’t leave it sitting around saturated for too long. I also tried Finnabair 3-D matte transparent gel medium, some professional artists’ fixative in an aerosol can provided by my hubby, my own casein-based manual pump fixative, and some Rustoleum Crystal Clear sealant spray, also in an aerosol can (that stuff stinks!). This was the only other substrate that allowed no penetration, so I decided on two coats of clear gesso, which is a lot more user-friendly.

All substrates allowed the application of water-based paints/inks without beading, and in every case it was possible to reactivate the paint with water after drying. The clear gesso gives quite a tooth, but since the paper is textured anyway, I didn’t think this mattered.

It was important that the chosen substrate was transparent, as I didn’t want to cover the fibrous texture of the paper, or its natural, undyed colour.

As for the painting, I did a series of test pieces on scrap printer paper, which buckles horribly when wet, and does not allow one to blend the watercolours after they have been applied, but it was just to give me an idea of the sort of thing I wanted to paint. I used watercolours, and towards the end, added some Distress Stains.


Once they were done, I wasn’t very pleased with them, and decided that less was more, and that once I began on the hand-made paper, I would keep the brush strokes to a minimum, and try to simplify the designs.

I have chosen a limited palette: black, yellow and orange, and little touches of purple. I decided to use the Distress Stains exclusively in the end, as the colours are more intense. The colours I chose were Black Soot, Mustard Seed, Wild Honey, and Dusty Concord. I smeared these onto my craft sheet and picked them up with a brush – for the detail I used several sizes of smaller round brushes, and for the black swirls, a large fan brush, wetting the brush a little first.

Here are the pages in order. They show first of all a peaceful scene, and then the arrival of the hurricane, the first wind of which increases in size and strength.





The first wind then begins to diminish as we approach the eye of the storm.


For the eye of the storm, I made this picture the only double page spread of the album. This illustration is not only the physical centre of the book, but is also the focal point of the concept.

The following pages show the arrival of the second wind, its development and its diminution.





The final picture shows the emergence once again of a peaceful scene in the aftermath of the hurricane.

Watch this space for further progress on this little book. I intend to add some more detail, maybe in the form of small amounts of acrylics, including some spattering, and possibly some touches of gold, using embossing, foiling, gilding flakes or gilding wax, and maybe some archival marker pen.

For the binding I am planning on my first attempt at a Coptic binding, using undyed waxed linen thread, and using some sort of boards for the front and back cover.

I have been thinking about “second wind” in the context of my own life. It’s funny how while its primary meaning is something destructive and terrifying, this expression usually means something quite positive when used in a metaphorical sense. Since my cancer, which necessitated the removal of my entire colon which was already diseased with ulcerative colitis, I have definitely come into my “second wind” in a positive sense, and am enjoying many activities I thought were lost to me, and many new ones besides. The negative aspect of my second wind struck me early this year when I had a blockage and was admitted to hospital for emergency surgery. The eye of the storm was the whole of 2016 when I was pretty well, and I thought that was the end of it, not realising that the second wind was just around the corner.

Cancer very often leaves a swathe of destruction in its path, both physical and emotional, and yes, there has been destruction in my case, but what remains has enabled me to rebuild my life from the ruins, and what I now have is very much better than what I had before. While I was going through the thick of it, somehow, at the centre, I always had my own personal “eye of the storm” where I had peace and joy, and remained positive. I hope my little album in some way depicts this journey, as well as illustrating the terrible beauty of one of the most destructive weather events on earth.

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