Posts Tagged ‘politics’

studio_8354

Thing number 386 that they don’t teach you in art school: how to navigate local business excise tax laws.

My wonderful and brilliant accountant, Alyssa, takes care of the heavy lifting of my federal business taxes, but since the deadline to pay the Washington piper falls before the federal paperwork even arrives in the mail, I file my state taxes on my own. To be perfectly honest, I take a kind of perverse pleasure in bean-counting—there’s something satisfying about the annual financial housekeeping rituals of compiling and tallying. But now that I own a business in a state that relies solely on sales tax revenue, business excise taxes and weird, archaic, late 19th-century property-assessment laws that tax my homemade bookshelves and vintage filing cabinets (I kid you not), the annual tax ritual has turned into an entire weekend curled up with my calculator.

Since I’m obviously a tax-happy liberal gal who loves her some socialist blueberries (not to mention public libraries and paved roads), I’m perfectly glad to fork over the revenue—I’d just love it if they’d just levy an income tax instead, and spare me (and all those poor state employees) the paperwork nightmare!

Political grumblings aside, I’m just chalking this up to All Those Really Important Things You Have to Learn on Your Own When You Start a Business. I’ve got some fun stuff to share with you, but I’ve gotta get this stuff done first. In the meantime, playing in my head over and over again is that little diddy Bobby McFerrin sang on Square One: “Anything you wanna be, you’ve got to know math.”

So true, Bobby. So true.

fem_demo_1

When it comes to letterpress printing, process is everything. And since that process is not always evident in the final product, I thought I’d share the technical aspects of the Feminist Broadside series. Now, as I said in the last post, letterpress printing is traditionally done using metal or wooden type—or in the case of the photo above, relief images cut into type-high (.918 inches in the US and UK, in case you wondered) blocks. What Jessica and I have been doing, however, ain’t your grandpa’s letterpress. Thanks to a fairly new technology called photopolymer, we’re able to create our own relief plates right in the studio, without having to carve a block by hand or etch a plate with nasty chemicals. Photopolymer has also created a bridge between the traditional print shop and the modern digital world—as you’ll see in a moment. As far as the Dead Feminists go, Jessica and I still have both feet firmly planted in the traditional world—we just dip a toe into the digital realm now and again. Here, let me explain.

fem_demo_1a

This is how it begins for each print: a pencil drawing, at full size. This is the stage where I not only design and illustrate the piece, but also start thinking about color choices: what the colors will be, what element will be which color, where the colors will overlap, how to make things work logistically. Now, this pencil layout isn’t enough to make a plate; for the photopolymer process to work properly, I have to translate the sketch into a solid black-and-white ink drawing.

fem_demo_2

After everything is pencilled in, I lay a sheet of vellum over the drawing and trace everything in ink.

fem_demo_3

Since each broadside is printed in two colors, each color means a separate run through the press. So as a result, I had to trace each color separately—being careful to stay as true as possible to the original drawing, since the colors had to line up exactly on press. If you were to line these two color separations up, on top of one another, you’d see how the colors will interact in the final piece.

fem_demo_4

fem_demo_5

Here’s what I mean. You can see the separation that will become the grey color in Tugboat Thea here, laid directly over the inked octopus below. This is definitely the old-fashioned way of doing things; there are plenty of digital methods of color separation. I guess I just prefer the physical connection between the pen and the hand—even despite the greater risk of screw-ups (as you can see if you look closely at the word “to” above).

fem_demo_6

Here’s where I dip that toe into digital waters. Once I’m finished inking, I scan the finished line drawings at a super-high resolution and load them into Photoshop (above is the pink separation for Prop Cake). This is where I clean up any mistakes (ahem) and convert the drawings into bitmap (pure black and white, with no grey) files. Jessica sends me her written colophon, and I set the text digitally. Then I export everything to the proper file type, and send the files to a local service bureau to have film negatives made. So now we’ve gone from analog to digital and back again.

fem_demo_7

Here are the negatives for Tugboat Thea; grey separation on the top half of each one, teal on the bottom. As you can see, there aren’t any right angles in the bottom half (octopus) of the teal separation, so if you look closely you can see the little tick marks I added (above and to the right of the starfish) to aid with color registration. Those marks line up with a grid etched on the metal base we use to lock up the plates on press; once we had the plates exactly where we wanted them, I simply shaved those little tick marks off with an Xacto knife, so they’d no longer print. Real slick.

fem_demo_8

Anyway, photopolymer is a light-sensitive plastic that works just like making a contact exposure in a darkroom does. First I take a negative, place it face-down on an unexposed plate, and load both pieces onto the exposure tray of Jessica’s platemaker (which looks remarkably like an Easy-Bake Oven).

fem_demo_9

The negative is held flush with the plate by a layer of plastic and a vacuum system; the plate is exposed with UV light (some DIY enthusiasts also accomplish this using glass and a bright, sunny day, but photopolymer is awfully expensive to use in sketchy experiments in the cloudy Northwest).

fem_demo_10

Next I place the exposed plate in the wash-out unit, where it is scrubbed gently with soft bristle brushes in a tank of cool water. Everything that is exposed is hardened enough to resist scrubbing, while everything else dissolves away. (And turns the water a sickly shade of yellow. Mmmm….plastic byproducts. Still, it’s less toxic than many other printmaking techniques.)

fem_demo_11

What we’re left with is a raised plate ideal for relief printing. The real benefit of photopolymer is that it can reproduce nearly any image, and can hold an incredible amount of detail. I can transfer my drawings directly to the plate, without adding the laborious step of carving the image into wood or linoleum (backwards!), or etching copper with acid, for example. It’s not exactly an economical option for letterpress printing, but the results can be exquisite, and the possibilities are nearly endless.

fem_demo_12

Here’s our new octopus plate on press, all inked up and ready to print—it’s stuck to that gridded base with removable adhesive. The thickness of the plate and base together add up to exactly .918 inches. Ah, precision feels good.

fem_demo_13

And here’s how it looks on paper.

fem_demo_14

Here you can see the registration between the colors. This is the hard part—I’m sure that despite my best separation efforts and useful tick marks, Jessica is ready to tear her hair out whenever she sees what insane registration issues I’ve thrown at her this time. She’s not a master printer for nothing, though—tiny, 9-point colophon type? No problem! Large, solid color blocks? Bring ‘em on! Exacting registration with no margin of error? Sigh. Just get those plates locked up, will you?

fem_demo_15

Actually printing these broadsides is where all our careful planning and preparation goes right out the window. We can sketch and plot as much as we like, but many of our artistic decisions end up being made on the fly, right on press. Here Jessica is mixing ink for Prop Cake, according to some choices I suggested in our handy-dandy color recipe book.

fem_demo_16

You can see our original draw-down (color test) in the upper left corner. So far, so good.

fem_demo_18

The orange turned out exactly as we’d hoped, but when we started printing the pink separation, we hated the result. What looked so good in the draw-down lost all its contrast in the print. It was awful, trust me.

fem_demo_19

So Jessica changed the color right on press, until we were happy with it.

fem_demo_20

Action shot!

fem_demo_21

Here’s the finished product, all lined up in the drying rack.

If lining up the color areas is the hardest part of printing, keeping an eye on the ink consistency was probably the most fiddly. We’re using a very unusual paper for the series—one made from recycled clothing—that is extremely “thirsty.” Not only are there inconsistencies in the paper that can throw off the overall quality of color; but we had to add ink to the press after every fourth or fifth print. As you can see, this is a pretty organic process—lots of variables, small corrections and compromises along the way. (And a whole lot of cursing and starting over.)

All of this is par for the course for a letterpress project—it’s an exacting, sometimes frustrating process, but that’s what I love about it. And the finished product … well, it’s like nothing else. Ah, letterpress, how I love thee.

Now if only it didn’t require several metric tons worth of equipment…

newtugboatthea

Well, here she be. (Or should I say, Thar she blows?)

At long last, Thea is here, barnacles and all. Jessica and I unveiled her at our Pressing Matters talk at the Tacoma Art Museum this morning. I have to say, I was nervous that with the weekday morning time slot, we’d be hoist on our own petard for the big debut. Since 10:30 on a Tuesday is generally only available to senior citizens and the unemployed, we were afraid we’d be lecturing a bunch of empty chairs. Boy were we wrong. Many thanks to all of you who skipped out on work, took a long (and very early) lunch, or otherwise carved out an hour of your day to spend with us—we raise our pirate flags to you. And to Allison Baer, TAM’s very own renaissance woman who made it all happen, you get the biggest Jolly Roger of them all. Thank you.

This week I’m going to post some of the things we talked about today at TAM, about the making of Tugboat Thea and the Feminist Broadside series (no, I haven’t forgotten about those photos I teased you with earlier; those posts are coming soon, I promise). But for now, let’s just get down to brass tacks about the print. Here’s the blurb we’re sending round to our mailing list:

“There are so many things left to do.”
—Thea Foss

Hot off the press! Our newest addition to the letterpress Feminist Broadside series, Tugboat Thea, is printed from hand-lettered original typography and hand-drawn illustrations and patterns (in fact, everything was done by hand, the hard way!). This piece is a collaboration between Chandler O’Leary of Anagram Press and Jessica Spring of Springtide Press, in honor of enterprising women everywhere.

The illustration is inspired by Thea Foss, business pioneer and entrepreneur, who founded the Foss Tugboat company in Tacoma, WA—at a time in history when it was not only courageous, but nearly unheard of for a woman to do so. Here Thea is portrayed as the figurehead of her own tugboat, surrounded by crashing waves and sea life native to her home waters of Puget Sound.

The poster was printed on an antique Vandercook Universal One press. Each piece was printed at Springtide Press—not far from the water—in Tacoma, on archival, 100% rag, recycled paper, and is signed by both artists.

Edition size: 89
Paper size: 10 x 18 inches

Colophon reads:

Norwegian immigrant Thea Christiansen Foss (1857 – 1927) arrived by train to Tacoma in 1889 as Washington achieved statehood. While her husband Andrew was at work she spent five dollars on a rowboat, launching a marine transport business that would grow into Foss Maritime, operating the west coast’s largest fleet of tugboats. Thea inspired the character “Tugboat Annie” featured in a Saturday Evening Post series, motion pictures and a television show. Tacoma’s Thea Foss Waterway is an inlet connected to Puget Sound named in her honor.

As our self-induced period of secrecy is finally over, the prints are now officially available for sale. I’ve got to warn you, though—they’re going fast. If you live on far shores, you can get your copy (and see more detailed photos) on the Anagram Press Etsy shop for $35. If you’re local, just send me a message in a bottle (though email might reach me sooner) if you want to arrange pick-up and avoid Etsy’s shipping fees.

One last thing: we’re finally offering subscriptions to the whole series. In exchange for committing to purchase at least one print of each edition for the length of the series (we reckon there’ll be a new print every three or four months), the subscriber price is $30. If you’re interested, just drop me a fishing line at chandler [at] anagram-press [dot] com.

As Samwise Gamgee would say, “Well, I’m back.”

At least, I’m back for most of you; folk who know a lot more about this sort of thing than I do tell me that it’ll still be a few days before all the Internet gods recognize my new web host. So if this post doesn’t appear for you until after its posting date, I’m sorry. But hey—my main email address appears to be working now. Huzzah!

thea_peek_11

Sure am glad to have sorted out this website business, because I have news: Thea’s back, too.

This is just a sneak peek of the pencil sketch for now; Jessica Spring and I are unveiling Thea’s new look on Tuesday, so we’re saving the surprise for then. In the meantime, though, perhaps a little background info?

The new Tugboat Thea is the the fourth installment of the Feminist Broadside series, a letterpress collaboration between Jessica and myself. We started the series shortly before the 2008 election, when we simply felt the need to make an artistic contribution to the historic events unfolding around us. Jessica sent me a quote by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and asked me if I might like to illustrate a political poster she wanted to print in time for the election. Well, she probably shouldn’t have left me alone with my pencils, because I got a little carried away.

feminist_broadsides1

A few days later the whole edition (we only printed 44, in honor of the 44th President) was sold out. And then we rubbed our eyes and pinched ourselves to make sure it had all really happened. You see, letterpress is not exactly the artistic equivalent of the Tickle-Me Elmo, with trendy-savvy folk snapping up the Next Best Thing before it’s gone. So you could have knocked us over with any number of small, dainty objects.

Well, that was fun, we thought. Let’s do another! The Feminist Broadside series was born. Just to keep things interesting, though, we made up a few rules for ourselves:

1. Each poster has to feature a quote by a feminist. Not necessarily a woman, but since it’s easier to link a woman with the idea of feminism, women will probably be featured more often. But hey, we’re always on the lookout for quotes by feminist men (and believe me, they’re out there in droves, bless ‘em), so if you have any ideas, feel free to drop me a line.

2. Said feminist must be deceased. (Hence the unofficial nickname of the series, the Dead Feminist Set.)

3. Whatever the quote, we need to find a way to tie it into some relevant issue (like the election for the first one, or other timely themes). This is usually Jessica’s job, as she’s got a particular knack for brewing up ideas from scratch.

4. The whole thing, including any type or lettering (except the little colophon at the bottom) needs to be hand-drawn. I like to do things the hard way, after all—it’s not that I’m ambitious, it’s just that I want to make sure that carpal tunnel sets in by the time I hit thirty.

For the second print in the series we focused on an issue near and dear to our hearts: sustainability. Victory Garden (above, center) was our response, and this time nearly every print was sold within forty-eight hours, despite a larger edition size. What the heck?! we thought. Even the next print, Prop Cake, despite its controversial subject matter (marriage equality) and edition size of 108, is nearly sold out. Who knows how long people will be interested in these things, or how many broadsides there’ll be in the series—all we can say is that we’re grateful for the response people have had, and we’re having way too much fun to quit now.

The latest broadside has been a little bit of a different process, at least on my end. We had the chance to create a prototype of sorts when we were asked to make steamroller prints at the King’s Books Wayzgoose this year. Since several hundred people were there to witness the steamroller in action, but only eight huge Tugboat Thea prints exist, we decided to take another crack at it for the official series.

thea_peek_22

This time, though, there’s a bit of a twist. That’s all I’ll say for now.

As part of the unveiling of the new Tugboat Thea, Jessica and I will be speaking at TAM on Tuesday morning. If you’re in the area, and you can fit the weird time slot into your schedule (sorry about that), here are the details:

Pressing Matters:
Contemporary Collaborations Highlighting Women in History
Tuesday, May 12, 10:30 a.m.
Tacoma Art Museum, 1701 Pacific Ave.

Tugboat Thea will be available for sale at the event, and will also be up in the Etsy shop and posted here on the blog (with photos and all the info!) by that afternoon. We’re taking pre-orders now; if you’re interested, or want to subscribe to the entire series, just shoot me an email. The price for subscribers is $30; regular price is $35.