16 October 2012

stamp workshop: student work

I forgot to post some photos of work students have done in the past in my stamp workshops. I'm usually having such a good time with the class that I forget to take photos, but here are shots from a couple different workshops: 

some instagram shots from a recent class:

and some photos from a class a couple years ago:
Cathy made a couple lunar stamps & she made a beautiful series of tags w/different color combinations.
Wendy's tags:
one student made super-cute miniature portrait of each person in her family:
and a couple more shots:


15 October 2012

Feliz Workshop

I'll be teaching a couple of workshops at the upcoming Feliz Sale in Austin, on Saturday November 3rd. You can see more details here and sign up for the classes here.
My workshop will be a crash course in relief printing, using hand-carved stamps to print without a press. With the holiday season approaching, I'll be emphasizing using the stamps to create wrapping paper & tags, but I'll also show you methods for printimg on fabric. I'll post below a bunch of photos of stamps I've made for classes in the past & patterns I've created with them. I've gotten kind of obsessed with pattern design lately & stamps are a fantastic way of experimenting with shapes & patterns. I'll bring along some books on pattern design, so you can also get a crash course in repeats, and how to turn a small image into a large pattern. 

a recent fish stamp:
that became this pattern:

Here is a pile of stamps I've made through the years:
and some prints I've made with them:

this continuous pattern was made out of a single square:

Every participant will get a take-home "stamp kit" with stamps, carving knives, stamp pad, papers & fabric to print on & image idea sheets so you don't have to dream up a design yourself if you don't want to.
and here are a couple packages packaged in stamp wrappers, fabric & paper:

27 September 2012

Feliz Sale Austin TX


I'm very excited to be participating in the Feliz Sale in Austin, TX, November 2-4. Read all about it here. The sale will be on Sunday at The Palm Door in downtown Austin from 12-6 (they've been rolling out the "makers" on the Feliz blog & everything looks amazing) and on Saturday there will be workshops. I'm teaching a version of my hand-carved stamps class, with an emphasis on making wrapping paper & tags. Your can read about the workshop here, and I'll be posting more photos here on my blog of what the workshop will involve, to whet your appetite. 
I used to live in Texas, and many of my friends still do, so I always look forward to a visit.


01 July 2012

Workshop at UCLA's Fowler Museum

I'll be teaching a relief printing workshop @ UCLA's Fowler Museum on July 14th. Here's the link to sign up-(click here!)-last I checked there were still a few spots open. It's an affordable way to take my block printing class & also includes a tour of their current exhibit of Tibetan woodblock prints. Because it's a relatively short class we'll be concentrating on carving small images that you can repeat to make into larger images or patterns, & we'll be printing on both paper & fabric.


in stores now!

our labels/tags/recipe cards have hit the stores (or at least the internet).

printing recipe cards, one at a time.

Some photos from before I started printing the recipe cards two-at-a-time. 



and a video:

so much to do & everything's a mess

Alex took a lot of pictures during the darkest printing-15-hours-a-day moments, thanks Alex!, wherein I'd be wearing crazy can't-leave-the-house-in outfits.
Late night in the messy garage:


Womack keeping guard outside the garage:

guillotine-ing.


First thing I'm going to do when we wrap this up is CLEAN, I swear it.

boxes and boxes of boxes


We've been hard at work since April on a mind-blowingly large order from Williams Sonoma (probably not large for them, but positively insane from this one-person print shop's perspective). All other printing projects have been back-burnered in favor of seeing this through, and the back house/shack has filled, emptied, re-filled, emptied, and filled again with piles of boxes of boxes. Now that we're on the downslope, we can all look back at this time fondly, but as you'll see in subsequent posts, it involved a lot of late-night printing and hoarder level messes.

02 July 2011

back from hiatus


wow! a year has gone by! these have been the most insane, say, 18 months, maybe ever--I only finished 'cleaning' after the wedding maelstrom, like, last week. and of course a new mess has moved in to take the old one's place. but now that I've figured out how to redirect my krank press url to the blog (that is until i initiate a website), I figured I'd better breathe some new life into the blog. more new posts soon, soon.

22 May 2010

back from texas


we are back from texas, back from our honeymoon, back from wedding-land. our house is a huge mess, so belated spring cleaning is the task at hand.
but soon! i will be posting photos from the wedding, or in particular, photos of all the craft projects, both successful and not-as-successful...

21 January 2010

cute factory

Somewhere in that holiday fair mayhem, I managed to squeeze in a workshop at Home Ec, which was so so fun. Home Ec, if you have not been there, is a super dangerous place, and basically my version of a candy shop. Jenny has amazingly reliably amazing taste, and everything in the store--fabric, buttons, books, craft kits, aprons, cards, etc--is beautiful and tempting. PLUS she has room/facilities for after-hours workshops, and I was lucky enough to land a spot in the roster.

I wanted to do a printing workshop, but cooking one up that will produce solid results in a mere few hours was a challenge. My solution was to do a class in 'hand carved stamps'. I'd picked up a number of stamping books in Japan last year (wait: two years ago. jeez.) and had been chomping at the bit to make more stamps, plus, it seemed like a quicker/more portable version of the relief printing that I do at Krank.

The class went blazingly well, and as Alex observed when he dropped by, it was a "cute factory." I supplied a sheet of ideas, as well as a number of pre-carved stamps, but everyone rocked a shocking amount of splendid looking stamps in a super short amount of time. Here are a selection of shots--my apologies for the dim lighting, but it was late in the evening...







I'll be teaching the class again at the end of the month--we printed gift wrap (simple folded japanese bags, tags, wrapping paper) and will use the same materials again this time, but now with an emphasis on valentine's day.

20 January 2010

holiday mayhem pt 2!

The second fair we did was Renegade SF, right before the holidays. We *almost* didn't make it, due to horrendous time-management on my part (have I mentioned that I bought myself a small library of time-management self-help books over Christmas?), but due to extreme level-headedness and late-night-driving-willingness from Alex, we made it up to SF in time for the fair.
It took place at Ft. Mason, which was meaningful for two reasons. 1) My aunt Priscilla, who has always been one of my craft heroes, had her weavings in a show there almost precisely thirty years previous, and 2) while taking a fantastic architectural daylighting class in grad school, from another hero, Cris Benton, my group project was to build a large model of this precise building to use as a basis for daylighting analysis. So I was very, very familiar with the building, having once built every truss by hand...

We were blessed with fantastic, entertaining neighbors (Christine from Chocolate and Steel, who I've been lucky enough to sit next to at a previous fair and new friends Papaver Vert and Jen Hewett. I gave my mom a pincushion/bowl from Papaver and I think it was my favorite gift--with the possible exception of Alex and my new membership to the Society for Industrial Archaeology--and if I had nieces instead of nephews I would have given them Jen's Michelle Obama paper doll book, so instead I bought one for myself.) And yet again Alex (migraine or no migraine)and Lucy (and all the vegan snacks she brought) pitched in while I recovered from sleep deprivation.
Many bay area friends, some from the grad school way-back machine, stopped by, including my two favorite twins, Aurora and Amalia, who I tried to teach some bookbinding skills:


In contrast to the warmth and fuzziness inside the fair, it was cold and rainy outside:

and I was so, so glad to have my brand new (some might say overkill but I say: just right!) very warm mega-parka along for the trip:

After the fair we headed east to Carson City to see Alex's mother. I was finally able to pitch in on the driving, and we made it over the pass *just* before they started enforcing chains. By the time we got to Nevada it was beautifully wintery, and we had a nice time staying in casinos in the snow.

We hit one of our favorite birding spots, between Carson and Reno, and it was pretty much frozen over. Not as many hawks as usual, but the whiteout made it easier to spot/enjoy the few that were out and frolicking in the snow.




and may I say yet again how happy I am with my new parka.

holiday mayhem!

This was a super busy holiday season here at Krank Press. I was basically in produce-calendar-reprint-mode (and, er, wedding planning mode, but that is another story) all fall & was always a little behind the eight ball leading up to the two big holiday fairs. The first fair was Unique LA:

This photo is misleading: A) I was always so sleep deprived that I never really manned the booth myself, generally out-muscled and out-brain-powered by Alex and Aandrea "Sell! Sell! Sell!" Stang. and B) This photo makes the fair look a little lonely and gloomy--it was nothing of the sort! very cheerful and busy and we had an awfully good time meeting people and seeing familiar faces. But if you look carefully in the back, you can see what I was doing during most of the fair: collating! I even brought the wire-binding machine along, that's how last-minute this entire fall was.

18 January 2010

glitter

I was very honored, this holiday, to receive one of my sister-in-law Laura's new creations, a beet bag from her new enterprise GLITTERSWEET. It is one glittery bag (this photo doesn't really do the glitter justice) but also one sturdy bag! The intent was to use it for the farmer's market, but since I have been printing a lot more than I have been cooking lately, it has mostly been put to the test toting loads of packages to the post office, probably more than should have been stuffed into it, and still it looks and acts brand new.

Laura has been a sewing monster all fall (5 machines at last count?) and we have been commiserating/cheerleading about the insanity/joy of retail crafting. I was also lucky enough to print her cards. It is hard to match the glitter magic in paper form, so we did the next best thing--silver ink on bubblegum paper.