Friday, 30 November 2012

Lady Augusta- Trials for clothing

I really want parts of Lady Augusta's clothing to be 3D and so today was about experimenting with very very thin strips of copper :)


For the lace on her dress I rolled metal through with some lace but the metal got too thin and started to crack and curve round so it was really difficult to do!
I then just bent it round with my fingers as it was really pliable.
The feather I just cut out with a pair of (now blunt) scissors which has worked really well but the spikes are rather sharp!





Thursday, 29 November 2012

Alexander Continued

Used a drill to pierce through parts of one plate and then rolled through a 0.5 piece of copper with some lace to create a patterned background.



I used liver of sulphur to make Alexander's coat black and then I layered up masking tape around the areas where I wanted to take off the black colour and gently sanded it off.






Tuesday, 27 November 2012

Alexander Percy- Trials




This is my first copper plate of Alexander. I printed out my design onto acetate, covered my copper sheet with photosensitive film (which cured over night) and then used the UV light beds in the printing room sto expose my drawing onto the metal. Using a sodium carbonate solution, I carefully washed off the film which was not exposed to the light and then went back to re-expose the plate to harden the film. I used stop-out varnish where the light sensitive film was missing and left this to dry for a few hours.
I then placed the copper plate in the etching tank (containing Ferric Chloride) for 5 hours.
After taking it out of the etching tank I then immersed the plate back into the sodium carbonate to remove all of the blue film. I used white spirit to remove the stop-out varnish and then sanded down the plate, running through all of the grades of sandpaper until it was at the finest grade.
Once this was completed, I polished the plate on the polishing mill and stamped the 1mm text into the surface.
Although I like the idea that the text is so small you can barely read it (just like Branwell's writing) for a gallery this would be inappropriate as no one will be able to get close enough to read it when it is in the cabinet on the wall.
I also disliked how the metal warped when the stamps were hammered into it- I much prefer to photoetch my writing into the metal as this will give cleaner, crisper lines.



After doing the first tester- I then decided to do two more for trail purposes. The one on the right will come out similar to the first one- with the lighter lines being those etched- but I really wanted to see what it would look like if I etched around the lines- which is what the prepared plate on the left will do.
The plate on the left was extremely difficult to produce, even to this stage. The first part of the process is to leave it in a sodium carbonate solution but because the lines are so thin where the drawing is, these lines easily came off in the weak solution. There was a small window between the blue film staying on, and all of the film coming off. This was hugely frustrating as it meant that I had to prepare another copper plate with the light sensitive film and leave to cure overnight.





This was the final finished etched plate- I really love this effect as the lines are so crisp and stand out really well against the rest of the copper.

After looking at it- I really wanted to try out enameling the jacket and Alexander's hair. I had never used this process before and so had to enlist the help of Liz, the metalwork tutor.
She showed me the cupboard full of pots of glass particles which were either O for Opaque or T for Translucent.

I decided to do a 'Dark Stone' jacket and so carefully painted on wall paper paste where i wanted the glass particles to stick. I then loosely sieved the glass colour over the metal- making sure that areas were evenly covered.

I then placed it into the enameling furnace and left it in there for about 4 minutes, checking very regularly.






This bottom picture shows what the plate looked like a few minutes after taking it out of the furnace. The surface of the copper oxidized with the heat and has started flaking off and the brown glass is not evenly applied so I will have to re-do it tomorrow.

Monday, 12 November 2012

Fashion

18th Century Fashion






19th Century Fashion







Although I do like both eras of fashion, I honestly prefer the 18th century style of dress as it's just that bit more over the top. When I read Branwell's stories of Angria, I imagined the ladies in his stories to be as over the top in their clothes as their male counterparts were in personality.

Friday, 9 November 2012

Tutorial

Had a tutorial yesterday and Nick pointed out that I was dressing my characters up in 18th century clothes- whereas Branwell would have been writing in the 19th century.
I had done this completely unconsciously!
It was just that I had imagined the characters that way in my head whilst reading the text and so to do them any other way would have been silly.

I did do some research after my tutorial, though, on what the women should have worn in the 19th century- certainly not as glamourous as i was making it out to be!



Thursday, 8 November 2012

Photoetching Sample

I wanted to do a small version of my Alexander Percy picture, but waiting for my order of metal to arrive was a bit of a pain as I kept missing their delivery and they kept on delaying it further. When my metal finally arrived, the workshop had just sold out of their photoetching paper so I had to order a stock for myself online. This was really frustrating as a week after I had ordered, they sent an email to me saying that I had not checked which class of postage I required so they had not sent it out yet.

I thought that I would have received all my material before Reading Week but, because of order delays, it came on Monday.

This really held up my progress as I could not use those extra couple of days to etch a prototype of my drawing and see how it would come out with just one side of etching.

I have now started the etching process on Alexander Percy- and already have come across problems with the drawing. Where the lines have gone thinner than 4 pixels, the photo-etching paper was really difficult to remove in the tank and i had to go over all the lines with a scalpel.

Relevant Transcripts




Wednesday, 7 November 2012