Lorrie printing gocco

Lorrie Goes Gocco: Part I

by Lorrie Whittington

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Late last year I bought a Gocco printer. I had wanted one for ages and when the rather tal­ented Mel from Inkmeup bought one and blogged about it, I decided to get one. I bought a sec­ond hand PG10 from the lovely Liz at  Dream­ing Spi­rals. How­ever, as with most things in my life, it took a while to get around to actu­ally design­ing some art and printing.

Get­ting ready

I went through my sketch­books and found a design I liked, drew it out in pen­cil and then over­drew using the car­bon ink pen pro­vided, it came out rather well. Hav­ing pro­duced my art I was ready to Gocco. I decided to get my hus­band Luke to help, was this a mis­take? Well, yes and no. It was help­ful to have some­one help me make sense of the Japan­ese man­ual and watch the Etsy Labs tuto­r­ial, work out the process etc, and some­how we mud­dled through, albiet with a bit of arguing.

Get­ting started

We got the screen fired ok, and were then ready to ink and print. Was it messy? **ck yes! The black ink I used had sep­a­rated and apply­ing it to the screen was hap­haz­ard to say the least. Keep­ing it off the rug required some skill (and a good deal of bar­rack­ing from the OH). How­ever, I got there in the end and man­aged to pro­duce some nice prints. Sadly, due to my exces­sive ink­ing, the screen did not sur­vive and I had to throw it away. So, the prints from this run really are the only ones that will be pro­duced from that design. I printed onto a selec­tion of dif­fer­ent papers and card, mostly Khadi paper, some Conte paper and a few pieces of water­colour paper.

The expe­ri­ence

Things I learnt were: keep the design sim­ple and cen­tral when using a Gocco for the first time. Smooth paper and card prints bet­ter, at least until you have become adept at using the printer, and under­stand exactly how much pres­sure to apply hold­ing the printer closed and for how long. Lastly, (this one cour­tesy of Mel), before apply­ing the ink, rather than squeez­ing from the tube directly onto the screen, squeeze some ink into a plas­tic con­tainer, stir the ink thor­oughly and then apply to the screen using the small pal­lette knife provided.

The result

Here are some shots of the prints I made, plus a cou­ple of me amidst the car­nage. All the good prints can be bought from my shop Art4Sale, I now only have a few left to sell sadly and there won’t be any more of this design.

 

 

About the Author: Lor­rie Whit­ting­ton is a pro­lific and multi-talented visual artist liv­ing on the south coast of the UK. She is one of those unique peo­ple who have man­aged to unite both right and left sides of her brain pro­duc­ing a vision and skill set few hold. This is the first of a two part tuto­r­ial Lor­rie cre­ated on use­ing the Gocco printer.

Related posts:

  1. Going Gocco Part II: the first print run Well, I finally made time to do a print run of the Celtic Heart I designed ear­lier in the week. I drew it free hand…

  • Laughing at all the mess. Is really best to do on a big table, and not one's living room rug.
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