Paper experiences

Hoo boy!  I’m going to be up to my armpits in papermaking this coming week!

 

Sunday I am ever so fortunate to have the last minute opportunity to learn Japanese papermaking techniques from Ishar Neumann who runs the Tut Neyar Paper Mill in Israel. There will be 10 of us in a workshop at the Art Academy in downtown Cincinnati. Can’t wait!

 

On Friday and Saturday I’ll be bashing banana trunks with eleven other papermakers (from around North America) outside of Branson, MO. I’m told that the banana fiber is just wonderfully lovely and strong. I’m also told that the trunk is VERY juicy! I’m not sure how many changes of clothes I’ll need!

 

And then on Sunday next some of us will be sticking around to harvest some kozo (Japanese mulberry) before heading to our respective homes.

 

I think I’ll be pretty well set, paper-wise, for awhile after all that! Will give a report after all is said and done.

A week with the kids

Just finished a week of working with the seventh grade art classes at Batesville Middle School. Art teacher Sharon Mulvaney is a gem and really champions her students in their creative pursuits. We are introducing the classes to twined basketry and papermaking/pulp casting this school year.

 

I’m not sure which the kids liked the best – basketry or papermaking. It took a bit longer than I expected to finish their baskets, but they did a marvelous job – some great shapes and some good twining. Papermaking, playing in wet pulp, is always a fun thing and the kids seemed to thoroughly enjoy making sheets. Even the ‘pressing dance’ was tolerated by most of them – although at age 13 there are those individuals who do NOT want anyone to see them do anything that might remotely be considered odd or funny!

 

It’s probably a safe bet to say that the pulp casting was not a favorite. They worked with wire to form a figure first – that was an interesting exercise in itself! The class periods were pretty short – 45 minutes – which didn’t allow for extended delicate work required by some of the wire forms and more than one student opted to cast into an empty dish instead. Once they dry, though, I think they will like what they did.

 

One third of the seventh grade class takes art at any one time, so I’ll be there two more weeks – one week during each upcoming 12-week period. More fun to happen!

Rainy week

It’s been a rainy week. Temperatures on the cool side, overcast skies, water leaking out of the heavens as though someone was trying to fix the faucet (sometimes a downpour, sometimes just drips).

I look back on the week and can’t seem to find any major work accomplished, but I know  a lot of minor stuff has happened: daily pressings of handmade papers to encourage them to lay flat, coaxing a blouse to take on a new role as a vest lining for a collaboration piece, guild organizational meetings, creating lengths of ‘plastic yarn’, surface studio clean-up, a crocheted patch for a friend, butternut squash soup and prepping for a visit to Cleveland.

My godmother is celebrating her 90th birthday this weekend and I’m going to help her! I’ll also spend some time with my ‘kids’ while there. A two-fer trip!

Some interesting contacts were made this week, too. More on those as they develop.

More pulp…

Hoo boy, am I tired tonight!

I’ve been taking advantage of these last couple days of good weather before the week of predicted rains come. I’ve been drying lots of hosta leaves/stems and iris leaves – all courtesy of JosyT’s lovely flower garden.  The driveway has been littered with old sheets full of green and brown leaves. The deck has also had its share of drying sheets.

It seems silly, in a way, to take the time to dry everything if it is only going back into water, but it really makes the cutting easier, the weighing more accurate and the amount of mold much less than otherwise.

After the leaves dried (or mostly dried!), they needed to be cut into 1-inch or smaller pieces. My trusty guillotine paper cutter does a grand job of chopping leaves and stems – only nicked my thumb once so far. It continues to amaze me how much time this part of the process takes.

Everything went into cook pots with soda ash and then into the beater: Siberian iris, bearded iris, hosta leaf stems and hosta leaves. The Siberian iris worked up nicely – no soapiness while beating – with the addition of a bit of abaca to help get things moving. IT was almost all pulp after cooking. The bearded iris was similar although there was just a tad of soapiness.

I’ve heard some people put the hosta leaves and stems together, but others say those two parts make different papers. Both of my pots had some of the other in it (some leaves in with the stems and vice versa). The stem pulp was almost all pulp after cooking. There’s a lot more bulk to the pot of leaves. I’m letting the stems sit in the beater overnight – will empty it out in the morning and put the leaves in then.

What really did me in at the end was the amount of rinsing both hosta pots required. Stooping over and lifting 5 gal buckets of water/pulp – my back needs a rest!

Haven’t pulled any papers from these batches yet. If the predicted rains come this week, the pulps may have to wait a bit.

pulp art

Last Thursday I did a program for the teens at our local branch library on recycled papermaking. Prior to the event, they had cut up old fliers that were printed on colorful papers to use as the pulp.There didn’t seem to be a lot of pulp after I blendered it,  but there were seven nice colors to play with.

After the kids used what they could in the time alotted, I trucked the rest of it back home and figured I’d use it up the next day, just so I wouldn’t have to dry the pulp or put it in the freezer (my preference).

My set up when working outside – since it has been lovely, hot and mostly dry days – is to work off the ‘picnic’ table on the deck, starting in the afternoon when the trees start to shade that spot. I use the railings to dry the felts between pressings and any water pressed out using my weight and board method drops down tot he ground underneath.

Wellll…. the pulp has gone on forever! It must’ve muiltiplied overnight. After two afternoons and evenings, working into the dark (nice to have deck lights!), I’m down to just a bit more pulp. The sliding glass doors have served well as drying racks (you can see some pics on my Flickr site) and it has been fun making ‘pictures’ with a baster in the different vats of color.

The sun is just about off the table now, so I’ll head back out for one more round of sheet forming – and then clean-up!