Showing posts with label prints. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prints. Show all posts

15 October 2017

White Line Printmaking

Blue & Gold by Constance Brewer  7" x 7" White line print on Stonehenge paper. Daniel Smith watercolors.



Updates have been thin on the ground of late because I was pushing to get my latest print done. The Blue & Gold Macaw pictured above. It's a bit different from my usual relief printmaking in that it's a white line print. What is that, you ask? How is it different from the usual lino or wood cut block?

The following from Jeanne Norman Chase as written in 1999 on the Baren Forum.

"White-line woodblock printmaking began in 1915, the first woodblock printmaking unique to the United States. Western artists admired the Eastern traditional type of woodblock printing made by the Japanese artists. The Eastern art form required several blocks of wood to produce a finished print. The Western printmakers of 1915 created their own style of woodblock printing using only one block of wood.

The method started with a group of six artists in Provincetown, Massachusetts and this new form of woodblock printmaking became known as the Provincetown print, or white-line woodcut. Their work has been exhibited worldwide, and recently at the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC.

The registration was uniquely different since only one print at a time would be printed. The side of the paper was tacked to the board and folded back, in the same way that a book would open. This would keep the registration lined up at all times and the print could be left while other prints were inked.

The paper is attached to the left edge of the block with thumbtacks, then gently folded back. This makes the register. The paper is repeatedly lifted and printed so this method keeps the paper in constant register.

The lines are cut into the block with a V-shaped cut of the knife. The lines remain white in the finished print, as only the raised areas which are left receive any color. It is a relief print in reverse.

To print a color, mix it alone on a palette. Apply the paint to the area (or areas) that you intend to print. Fold the paper down on top of the block and rub very gently over the inked area with the wooden spoon."

This method takes a while. I started working on the prints in August, figuring I would have plenty of time to do 20 prints before the Oct. 31 deadline. Here it is the 15th and I'm just getting done. I had to learn on the first few prints to put enough color on first time. My prints were coming out too light otherwise. I also found that I couldn't do more than two prints in a sitting, because the woodblock would retain the wetness and cause some areas to spread. I also decided next time I did this I would a) cut the lines deeper  b) use a bigger woodblock,  and c) only make 4 or 5 prints.

Since this was for a Baren Forum Exchange, I needed to make 20 prints to exchange with the other participants. I'm going to get 19 other white line prints in the exchange, how cool is that? The extra print goes to Pacific Northwest College of Arts (PNCA) in Portland, Oregon to be archived.

I love these print exchanges because I get so many prints from artists around the world. I study and learn from them. If you'd like to see some of the exchanges, go to the Baren Exchange Gallery and click on any of the active links. Some outstanding work there. Now, onwards to more prints, and some 'Underground' work for the Gyroscope Review cover. Art never rests.

10 September 2017

Printmaking Progress


So part of my vacation included taking a printmaking class. This one focused on relief printmaking but used a Vandercook Proofing Press instead of an etching press or a baren. I've never used a proofing press, so it was an adventure. First we used different kinds of alphabet type to run prints, then they became the backgrounds for other prints. In setting the type we learned the odd terminology of typesetting and using a Vandercook press - placing 'furniture', quoins, keys, lock-up, platen, cylinders, packing, pressure, ink distribution and proofing. Whew!

The next day we brought our lino blocks and locked them in the press bed using the 'furniture'. We then ran prints using plain paper of different weights, and also used some of the pre-printed type images we made the day before. I used Tinman, a linoblock I carved in class. You'll see some of the variants below, along with another print I did cutting pieces out of a flexible medium that had a sticky backing. We stuck them down on an acrylic block positioned on the press. And locked in with furniture, of course. (Furniture is blocks of wood in various lengths and thicknesses that are used to position the block on the press and keep it from moving. Quoins are small metal rods that can be expanded with a Key to help make the whole thing immobile.)

After we finished with the press, there was still cleaning it, a lengthy and smelly process involving dismantling the press rollers, cleaning them with rags and solvent, cleaning underneath where the rollers were, and reassembling the whole thing. So if you wanted to do multiple colors, you spent a lot of time cleaning. Or you printed in one color and did another the next as we did.

What I learned in that class can be applied to my etching press and home studio. I have various blocks I've carved and will be printing them in the next few months. I also am doing a white line print for a Baren woodblock printmaking group. It's a new process for me, a bit tedious, but I think I like it. Those prints coming soon.

What did you do on YOUR vacation?














Dachshund print that refused to play nice in the press and kept fading. Hand printing for the naughty doggy.


26 February 2017

13 November 2015

Fragment Friday - The Peace Print 2015



Once again I participated in Artist Maria Arango-Diener's Puzzle Print. The theme this year was "Peace". Printmakers from around the world carve a piece of the puzzle block sent to them by Maria, and send it back when carved to be assembled and printed. No small undertaking! 160 artists, eight sections of 20x30 inch paper times those 160 artists. It is an undertaking powered by love.

This is the tiny section of woodblock I received, long and skinny, perfect for a Corgi!
Can you find the Corgi in his puzzle slot? Facing off against a tank, Corgis are all about bringing peace to the realm.
Max with his ever present tennis ball on a mission to get everyone to relax and play fetch.
Also included with my eight prints was a 260 page book detailing the making of the Peace Print and a page for each artist and their print.
My page and what Peace means to me. 


08 November 2013

Fragment Friday

Fantastic Garden 2013: Monumental Collaborative Puzzle Print #4 (click to enlarge)

1.  I got my prints from the Fantastic Garden Puzzle Print  My Garden Gnome is residing among the birds, bees, flowers and fairies. See if you can spot him in the above image, floating about in his bubble.
2.  Poem A Day is going swimmingly. I'm writing longer - and better - poems thanks in part to a book I picked up. The Crafty Poet: A Portable Workshop by Diane Lockward. Highly recommended. 

3.  The leaves are finally off the trees and it feels more like November. Of course the spitting rain/snow we had this morning added to the gloomy feel. How do you survive the long trudge that is November? 

4.  Are you a Christmas planner or a Christmas pantser? (Do you plan ahead or wing it?)  Every year I think I'll plan Christmas out and make/buy gifts ahead of time, and every year time slips away from me like water in a dog bowl. November appears longer than it really is. No wonder the stores push Christmas early. It's for those of us with no time sense. 

5.  The spun thrummed mittens are finished. Now I'm spinning Shetland wool and saving all the fur tufts off the Corgis for a Shetland-Corgi hat. Or more mittens. We'll see. Depends on how much more the Corgis shed- and knowing Corgis, it could be quite a bit.


18 October 2013

Fragment Friday

"Sheep Mug Shots." Shina plywood and black waterbased ink on 8x12 Masa paper. Edition of 35. For the Baren printmaking Exchange # 58


1.  I demand the fall season I was gypped out of.... The leaves are still on the trees and there's snow on the ground. Something here just isn't right.

2.  Has anyone seen "Gravity" yet? Debating going to see it in 3D here. Hope it doesn't make me nauseous, all that zooming through space. Looking forward to rewatching Pacific Rim on DVD. Yeah, so I like Kaiju monster movies. I blame my brother Anon taking me to see Godzilla as a kid.
 
3. Still spinning fleece into yarn, but also on to dyeing yarn and knitting mittens. The dye is Kool Aid. Never thought I'd be buying lots of packets of Kool Aid after my kids were grown... These will be thrummed mittens - they have little bits of roving knitted in for warm fluffy strands on the inside of the mittens. 

4.  I need to decide whether I'm doing the November Poem A Day this year. Since I'm already writing almost a poem a day it wouldn't be too hard. I really should be doing NANOWRIMO, but that's another story.

5.  I decided I liked carving prints in shina plywood. Not quite as forgiving as linoleum, but more so than cherry. It took the ink nicely and wasn't hard to use with a baren. I think I shall test drive another print.More sheep? We'll see. 




18 June 2011

Exchange 48 - Helios & Phaeton

Print for Baren printmaking exchange number 48.

Medium: Woodblock print (hand rubbed or pulled on a press, B&W or colour, any pigments, any paper)
Theme: MYTHOLOGY, which includes myths and legends from every culture both ancient and modern throughout the world.
Paper: Chuban , about 10 x 7.5 inches (about 24.5 cm x 19 cm)
Paper type: No restriction


Print Title: Helios & Phaeton
Paper Dimension: 10" x 7.5"
Image Dimension: 9.5" x 7.5"
Block: Shina
Ink: Daniel Smith Water-based Relief (Lamp Black)
Paper: Stonehenge
Edition: 45

Comments:
Helios & Phaeton (From Encyclopedia Mythica)
When Phaeton (The son of the sun-god Helios) finally learned who his father was, he went east to meet him. He begged his father to allow him to drive the chariot of the sun across the heavens for one day. Helios reluctantly allowed it. The horses, feeling the reins held by a weaker hand, ran wildly out of their course and came too close to the earth, threatening to burn it up. Zeus noticed the danger and with a thunderbolt he destroyed Phaeton. Phaeton fell down into the legendary river Eridanus where he was found by the river nymphs who mourned him and buried him. The tears of these nymphs turned into amber.

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27 March 2011

Year of the Rabbit

A month late, but my Year of the Rabbit prints went hopping around the world yesterday, off to numerous locations in the US including Puerto Rico, and also to Canada, England, Brazil, Turkey and Australia.


From Wikipedia:
The Chinese Year of the Rabbit ( å…” ) is actually the Chinese Year of the Hare, as China has seven native species of hares and no native species of rabbits. The Chinese applied their word for hare to the first rabbits to be taken to China, and the word is now erronously back-translated into English as rabbit. The hare is the fourth animal in the 12-year cycle of the Chinese zodiac.
From Chinese Culture Center of San Francisco:
1915, 1927, 1939, 1951, 1963, 1975, 1987, 1999

People born in the Year of the Rabbit are articulate, talented, and ambitious. They are virtuous, reserved, and have excellent taste. Rabbit people are admired, trusted, and are often financially lucky. They are fond of gossip but are tactful and generally kind. Rabbit people seldom lose their temper. They are clever at business and being conscientious, never back out of a contract. They would make good gamblers for they have the uncanny gift of choosing the right thing. However, they seldom gamble, as they are conservative and wise. They are most compatible with those born in the years of the Sheep, Pig, and Dog.
From Wikipedia:
The zodiac traditionally begins with the sign of the Rat, and there are many stories about the origins of the Chinese Zodiac which explain why this is so (see below). The following are the twelve zodiac signs (each with its associated Earthly branch) in order and their characteristics.[1]

   1. Rat  (Yang, 1st Trine, Fixed Element Water): Forthright, tenacious, high-adaptivity, meticulous, charismatic, sensitive, intellectual, industrious, charming, eloquent, sociable, artistic, and shrewd. Can be manipulative, vindictive, self-destructive, envious, mendacious, venal, obstinate, critical, over-ambitious, ruthless, intolerant, and scheming.
   2. Ox (Water buffalo in Vietnam) (Yin, 2nd Trine, Fixed Element Water): Dependable, ambitious, calm, methodical, born leader, patient, hardworking, conventional, steady, modest, logical, resolute, tenacious. Can be stubborn, dogmatic, hot-tempered, narrow-minded, materialistic, rigid, demanding.
   3. Tiger (Yang, 3rd Trine, Fixed Element Wood): Unpredictable, rebellious, colorful, powerful, passionate, daring, impulsive, vigorous, stimulating, sincere, affectionate, humanitarian, generous. Can be restless, reckless, impatient, quick-tempered, obstinate, selfish, aggressive, moody.
   4. Rabbit (Cat in Vietnam) (Yin, 4th Trine, Fixed Element Wood): Gracious, good friend, kind, sensitive, soft-spoken, amiable, elegant, reserved, cautious, artistic, thorough, tender, self-assured, shy, astute, compassionate, lucky, flexible. Can be moody, detached, superficial, self-indulgent, opportunistic, stubborn.
   5. Dragon (Yang, 1st Trine, Fixed Element Wood): Magnanimous, stately, vigorous, strong, self-assured, proud, noble, direct, dignified, eccentric, intellectual, fiery, passionate, decisive, pioneering, artistic, generous, loyal. Can be tactless, arrogant, imperious, tyrannical, demanding, intolerant, dogmatic, violent, impetuous, brash.
   6. Snake (Yin, 2nd Trine, Fixed Element Fire): Deep thinker, wise, mystic, graceful, soft-spoken, sensual, creative, prudent, shrewd, elegant, cautious, responsible, calm, strong, constant, purposeful. Can be loner, bad communicator, possessive, hedonistic, self-doubting, distrustful, mendacious, suffocating, cold.
   7. Horse (Yang, 3rd Trine, Fixed Element Fire): Cheerful, popular, quick-witted, changeable, earthy, perceptive, talkative, agile, magnetic, intelligent, astute, flexible, open-minded. Can be fickle, arrogant, childish, anxious, rude, gullible, stubborn.
   8. Ram (Yin, 4th Trine, Fixed Element Fire): Righteous, sincere, sympathetic, mild-mannered, shy, artistic, creative, gentle, compassionate, understanding, mothering, peaceful, generous, seeks security. Can be moody, indecisive, over-passive, worrier, pessimistic, over-sensitive, complainer, weak-willed.
   9. Monkey (Yang, 1st Trine, Fixed Element Metal): Inventor, motivator, improviser, quick-witted, inquisitive, flexible, innovative, problem solver, self-assured, sociable, artistic, polite, dignified, competitive, objective, factual, intellectual. Can be egotistical, vain, arrogant, selfish, reckless, snobbish, deceptive, manipulative, cunning, jealous, suspicious.
  10. Rooster (Yin, 2nd Trine, Fixed Element Metal): Acute, neat, meticulous, organized, self-assured, decisive, conservative, critical, perfectionist, alert, zealous, practical, scientific, responsible. Can be over zealous and critical, puritanical, egotistical, abrasive, proud, opinionated, given to empty bravado.
  11. Dog (Yang, 3rd Trine, Fixed Element Metal): Honest, intelligent, straightforward, loyal, sense of justice and fair play, attractive, amicable, unpretentious, sociable, open-minded, idealistic, moralistic, practical, affectionate, sensitive, easy going. Can be cynical, lazy, cold, judgmental, pessimistic, worrier, stubborn, quarrelsome.
  12. Pig  (Boar in Japan and Elephant in Northern Thailand) (Yin, 4th Trine, Fixed Element Water): Honest, gallant, sturdy, sociable, peace-loving, patient, loyal, hard-working, trusting, sincere, calm, understanding, thoughtful, scrupulous, passionate, intelligent. Can be naïve, over-reliant, self-indulgent, gullible, fatalistic, materialistic.

For the record, I am not a Rabbit. Are any of you?

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22 August 2010

Devils Tower - View Two

Wow, August kind of took the bit in its teeth and ran away with me. Busy with printmaking and some writing, but I neglected to update on the status of the 36 Views of Devils Tower series.

Devil's Tower View Two is up at the ConstanceBrewer blog. This time I did a preliminary sketch on canvas as well as some drawings.

Devils Tower View Two oil sketch 5 x 7 in.

View Two was a reduction print. From Wikipedia:
In relief printing, a reduction print is a multicolor print in which the separate colors printed from the same block at different stages. Usually, the lightest color of the design is printed first, then the block is "reduced" by carving to the areas which the artist wants to print the second color from, and so forth. The disadvantage of reduction printing as opposed to printing from multiple blocks is that once the first color is printed, the matrix for it is destroyed in the creation of the printing matrix for the second color. It is impossible to undo mistakes.

It's that "Impossible to undo mistakes" thing that can really throw a wrench in your day. Am I totally happy with the print? No, not really, but it was a good learning experience. I'll do another one - just not the next print. I have the idea to try, try again at moku hanga, and have been assembling the materials to give that a go.

I also ended up with two variants on the print. One a black and white outline, the other is a colored pencil variant. I have a side series being planned of things around Devils Tower - flora, fauna, signs, other interesting rockpiles. I'll post those as they appear in my repertoire.

Now, onward to View Three!



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11 July 2010

New Blog is Up and Running

Not that I told anyone before now, but I've created a new blog to showcase my artwork. You can find the blog on Blogger - conveniently named ConstanceBrewer

Hey, not original, but I'm just glad my name was still available.

I have a rather large series of prints I'm planning, not to mention a bunch of oil and acrylic paintings, so I decided to separate things out a bit and keep this blog more for writing and poetry, and the other for art and art type postings.

My first post is about my new print series, 36 Views of Devils Tower. You can go read all about it HERE.

Preview -



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09 May 2010

Get A Free Ebook From Kris Reisz And Win Artwork!

Remember that super-secret, hush-hush art project I was working on a few months ago? NO?

Ah well, I forgive you.

Hard to keep track of things you have no knowledge of.

So, the secret project is complete.



Periphery Arts teamed up with author Kristopher Reisz in celebration of the release of the new version of his novel Unleashed.

I created four black and white lino block prints based on four Kristopher Reisz short stories. The prints are eight by ten inches, (3) and nine by twelve inches (1), printed on Japanese Masa paper with Daniel Smith water based relief inks.

But here - I'll let Kristopher tell you in his own words.



"Hooray! Both a spiffy new trade edition and the Kindle version of Unleashed came out Tuesday!

To help promote it, I also released a short story collection, Quiet Haunts and Other Stories, as free ebook. (Click here to download it.)

Quiet Haunts contains a couple old favorites and a couple new stories that haven't appeared anywhere else. And just to make sure you guys knew how much I love you, I got Constance Brewer, the enormously talented printmaker, poet, and scourge of evildoers everywhere, to illustrate each story.

Constance sent me three copies of each print. One I'm keeping, but I want to give the other two away. So send me an email at KrisReisz@gmail.com with CONTEST in the subject line and your name andaddress in the body. Next Tuesday (May 11th), I'll pick eight people who'll get both a copy of Unleashed signed by me and a piece of original art signed by Constance.

So to recap...

Pick up Unleashed, now in lovely trade paperback and Kindle editions.

Then download Quiet Haunts and Other Stories to enjoy my stories and Constance's art.

And finally, shoot me an email KrisReisz@gmail.com to win awesome stuff.

How much more Kristopher Reisz-y goodness could you ask for!?

Kris Reisz


There you have it, boys and girls. Win artwork! Get a free ebook! Go buy Unleashed for Kindle or in paperback!

It's Win-Win-Buy!

It's awesome-y Kris Reisz goodness!

It's good for the economy!

What are you waiting for?

Note: Unleashed was a fine read, I enjoyed it. But don't just take my word for it. Both my teens liked it so much they had to have their own copies or much fighting would commence. What more could you ask for - A book both mom and kids can fight over!

So pick up your copy. And remember what the man said. Don't make me scourge you.



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21 February 2010

Year Of The Tiger Print

The official (for me) Year of the Tiger print for the Baren Forum Chinese New Year's Card Exchange. I had delusions of color, but decided I liked the black and white image just fine. I have two more tigers carved, in woodblock and test printed. This Bengal tiger is the one going to travel around the world, however. (If you want a tiger to travel to your house, drop me an email and I'll send one packing as soon as I get the exchange prints on their way.)

The Exchange Rules:
Baren Forum began sponsoring its annual New Year's Card Exchange for the 2000 new year and has continued this popular exchange in each subsequent year. The exchange prints are to be designed around that year's Chinese Zodiac Animal. Each year, members sign up by providing their name and mailing address, then print and mail a card to every other participant by mid-February of the new year. Prints should be hand-pulled, about 4 x 6 inches and may be in any media (not limited to woodblock). There is no 'moderator' -- you are on your honor to mail a print to each person on the list just as each of them are on their honor to mail one to you.



4" x 6" Lino block print
Hand rubbed with wooden spoon on Masa paper
Daniel Smith water-soluble relief ink - Lamp Black
Open edition




09 February 2010

Lino Block Print of the Month - February

In response to a challenge from a friend - and to take a break from carving other prints - I did this lino print in a few hours. It was drawn directly on the block, carved and printed as soon as it was finished. The carving took the majority of the time, as my hands got tired quickly working on the unmounted linoleum. It wanted to buck and buckle and leap out of the bench hook at the most inopportune times. But several cut fingers later (Note to self: Keep tools sharp!), I was ready to print.


The carved lino block - 8 x 10 inches

The objective was to 'go with the flow' so to speak, and not be so uptight about the art. The drawback of being a drafts(wo)man, is getting anal at times about sketching and drawing. No guts, no glory with this print. Marker to block, and carve away. Scary, and a little bit traumatic, but I seemed to have survived. Will I make it a habit? Um, a definite maybe?


Finished print 9 x 12 in
Black water soluble ink from Graphic Chemical
Hand rubbed on unbleached mulberry paper
with a bamboo baren and wooden spoon
Open Edition



09 November 2009

Baren Print Exchange # 42

All turned in to the exchange coordinator, so I can move on to creating other prints. Although I have urges to do an etching on metal plate of the same drawing, just because I can. Or think I can. It all depends on if I get my etching press balanced this weekend.

Title: Red-Winged
  • Medium:Woodblock print (hand rubbed or pulled on a press, B&W or colour, any pigments, any paper). Note: The Baren Exchange is a program for forum members to create, exchange and display editions of woodblock prints. Relief prints pulled from wood substitutes and wood-like materials, including linoleum, corian, MDF, resingrave, and similar are acceptable as are collagraphs. Coordinators are obligated to reject prints whose primary method of production is by other means. For example: monotype, intaglio, stencil, lithography, ink jet, laser, photocopy, etc are to be rejected by the coordinator.
  • Theme: Open
  • Image size: Any size and orientation within the paper
  • Paper size: Chu-tanzaku, about 3 x 9 inches (7.62 x 22.86 cm)
  • Paper type: No restriction
Six colors over three lino blocks. My registration technique needs work, but all in all, I'm almost feeling brave enough to tackle a moku hanga print. I used the same methods on the lino blocks, so now I just have to get some good quality knives and gouges to carve the wood blocks.



I just ordered a wonderful eBook from printmaker David Bull called Your First Print. It's basically a "complete overview of the making of a woodblock print using the traditional Japanese techniques."

Just in case anyone out there *cough* Anonymous *cough* had a sudden urge to delve into the ancient art of Japanese woodblock printmaking. Because having hobbies like spinning sheep and dog fur into yarn just isn't enough for some people . . . .

20 September 2009

Back to Printmaking

It's printmaking Exchange time again over at the Baren Forum. Well, actually, the signup for this exchange was July 1st with prints due November 1st. I actually had my images partially carved by August 1, put them aside and promptly procrastinated by doing other prints.

The gory details
  • Medium:Woodblock print (hand rubbed or pulled on a press, B&W or colour, any pigments, any paper). Note: The Baren Exchange is a program for forum members to create, exchange and display editions of woodblock prints. Relief prints pulled from wood substitutes and wood-like materials, including linoleum, corian, MDF, resingrave, and similar are acceptable as are collagraphs. Coordinators are obligated to reject prints whose primary method of production is by other means. For example: monotype, intaglio, stencil, lithography, ink jet, laser, photocopy, etc are to be rejected by the coordinator.
  • Theme: Open
  • Image size: Any size and orientation within the paper
  • Paper size: Chu-tanzaku, about 3 x 9 inches (7.62 x 22.86 cm)
  • Paper type: No restrictions
I was a bit flummoxed by the paper size requirements at first.

The only images that came readily to mind were a train (horizontal), but I'm not really into choo-choos, guitar (horizontal) but I've had my fill of guitars - a later post - and a rock climber rappelling (vertical). Liked the idea, still do, but none of my sketches were coming together. Then I remembered a Japanese printmakers, Hiroshige, a ukiyo-e artist. He did a lot of Chu-tanzaku images.


Now I had an idea, a print with one of my favorite creatures, a red winged backbird sounding off.Since this was a new print size for me, I chickened out and carved in linoleum rather than the shina plywood. Until I can afford some good quality moku hanga carving tools, I'm going to stay away from anything more than the basics in wood.


Two of the carved lino images. I added some reeds to the cattail the red wing is sitting on, and decided on a fall cattail, beige and fluffing out. So five colors for this print, baby blue sky, tan cattail (olive where it overlaps with the sky color) light black bird, yellow beak, feet and shoulder patch, and a dash of red for the shoulder patch. We'll see how it goes, registration is not my strong point.

I have the paper soaking for printing in a ZipLock bag. Stonehenge Natural White, I'll probably try some prints on Masa paper, maybe some Mulberry paper also. If I'm happy with the results, you'll see a final image. If not... back to the studio and some frantic carving. Keeping my rock climber drawings close - just in case.