BOOK & PRINT

TRADITIONAL BOOK ARTS include printmaking, bookbinding, gilding, water marbling, and paper making. I have tried my hand at many different aspects of book design and construction. I find that books are perhaps the holistic way to combine my many artistic interests including illustration, typography, and traditional craft. 

LITHOGRAPHS

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ABOUT THE PROCESS

Lithography feels like the printmaking method most connected to expressive drawing. For me, it feels like a more direct translation from a sketch than most of the relief techniques I enjoy. I have practiced both plate and stone lithography and have experimented with layered prints that employ masking and traditional water marbling. 

RELIEF PRINT

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ABOUT THE PROCESS

I have worked in many types of relief print but primarily wood cut and letterpress. My letterpress training began in 2010 and in that same year I began commercial work under the moniker Panthera Press. My private press primarily produces custom stationery such as wedding invites, but when I have time I like to experiment with more conceptual prints. 

GILDING

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ABOUT THE PROCESS

Gilding has a long history within the book arts because it has such a powerful effect on the viewer. It is also a craft I find incredibly challenging. Mixing and applying a traditional plaster base for gilding is a difficult process to learn, but worthwhile for the focal point it can add to a design. I have experimented with many ways to apply gold to a design including traditional raised gilding, powdered shell gold, and more modern metallic pigments. 

 

Antediluvian

A Book Exploring Antiquated Words

 

This accordion style book emphasizes the arbitrary nature of language by inviting the viewer to view each letterform individually (page by page). It is only when the viewer reaches the final letter that he/she realizes the jumble of letters was actually a word. To enhance this effect, I chose obscure, antiquated words that were long and cumbersome to read. I view this work as a chance to play with type and use faces I would normally over look. I am usually very traditional with my typography – choosing mostly serif faces and rarely using more than one in a project (depending on the different manifestations like italic and small caps for emphasis). In this work letterforms are the dominant feature. The images are fused with the type in such a way that the two become one. The image style is tailored to the word in an effort to help the viewer determine the meaning of the word subconsciously.

 

 

Antediluvian

A Book Exploring Antiquated Words

 

This accordion style book emphasizes the arbitrary nature of language by inviting the viewer to view each letterform individually (page by page). It is only when the viewer reaches the final letter that he/she realizes the jumble of letters was actually a word. To enhance this effect, I chose obscure, antiquated words that were long and cumbersome to read. I view this work as a chance to play with type and use faces I would normally over look. I am usually very traditional with my typography – choosing mostly serif faces and rarely using more than one in a project (depending on the different manifestations like italic and small caps for emphasis). In this work letterforms are the dominant feature. The images are fused with the type in such a way that the two become one. The image style is tailored to the word in an effort to help the viewer determine the meaning of the word subconsciously.

 

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