One-day workshop with Kristin Walker
Sunday, October 29, 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM
Tuition $90
Materials $30
In this workshop students will learn to expose, washout, and print from their own photopolymer plates. We will discuss text and image, how to create a successful plate from both computer-generated images and designs, and hand-drawn ones, how to mount your plate, and will also cover all basic letterpress operation. Students will get to print a small edition of up to 40 prints from their plates in up to two ink colors.
All materials are provided, including paper, inks, and plate material. Participants must bring their design printed in black on transparency material. The design should be no larger than 5 x 7 inches.
Whiteaker Printmakers is offering a series of three letterpress workshops in October, 2017. You may register for individual workshops or for the entire series. The price for the series is $310, giving you a discount of $30.
October 15:
Linocut Printing on a Letterpress
October 22:
Traditional Letterpress with Handset Type
October 29:
Letterpress with Photopolymer Plates
Reserving Your Spot
Register and pay in full to reserve your spot. To cancel a workshop enrollment, please email studio@whitprint.com. You'll get a full refund if your request is received at least four weeks before the start of the workshop, or a 50% refund if it is received at least one week before the start.
About the Instructor
When Kristin Walker discovered letterpress printing in the spring of 2003, she found herself immediately drawn to the rhythmic sounds of hundred-year-old antique machinery, the smell of printer’s inks and oil mingling together, and the deliciously tactile impression of metal type and images on cotton paper. Kristin pursued many different avenues in art and design during college, and ultimately earned double-BFA degrees in Multimedia Design (with a focus in graphic design and printmaking) and Photography from the University of Oregon in 2007. After college, she attempted to find work in a professional photo studio, but settled for a job in corporate marketing and design. A chance connection and quick friendship with a retired, third-generation letterpress printer, Bob Giles, reignited Kristin’s passion for antique machinery and old-fashioned printing...she quit her marketing job in order to found Twin Ravens Press (www.twinravenspress.com) in the fall of 2007.
When she’s not teaching paper arts or doing commercial or artistic work for Twin Ravens Press, Kristin also enjoys teaching and participating in various forms of social partner dancing (including blues, jazz, lindy hop, and tango), traveling, eating spicy food, and cuddling cats.