Archive for the 'workshops' Category

And yet it is too early to say that the government is winning.

Monday, May 14th, 2012

The twelve week screenprint workshop I have been teaching with the glamorous Angie Crabtree is complete.  We asked our nine high schoolers to print on nice paper for this show at Root Division, but some of the more exciting projects were their clothes and bags.  I wasn’t able to photograph everything, but I did want to record here the little I did get for the ages.  Nice work brahs.  And Angie thanks for everything. Especially the black eye.

A moment of opportunity for us Hamiltonians.

Friday, April 15th, 2011

workshop_web_bannerYo!  I have scheduled my next screenprinting workshop at CELLspace.

In the off chance that you are not one of the three friends and/or family who follows this blog, a Nigerian hacker, or my biggest fan Googlebot (thanks for the 731 hits in April, dude), please feel free to check it out.   There is more info here.

Screenprint Intensive (4 Nights)
Date: Thursdays / May 5, 12, 19, 26
Time:7:00-9:30 PM
Cost: $95 + $20 Materials Fee
Instructor: Jon Fischer
To Register: go to http://www.2featherpress.org/2_feather_workshops.html

A throwback glimpse at how much has changed.

Sunday, March 13th, 2011

Here’s some work from the fourth meeting of the postcard workshop: (more…)

Continue this pattern to reveal the countdown and the flame at the bottom of our rocket.

Thursday, March 3rd, 2011

I am quickly approaching the end of my winter screenprinting workshops.  Tonight marked the third of four meetings of the postcard class in which, after much preparation, we finally got to printing.  Here are some of the pieces completed tonight.

Jason‘s heart (this is one of the best pen and ink rendered stencils I have seen–he got superb line quality)

Alison’s two-layer poem print on wood.  I was impressed how well the text worked here.  I am biased, but the print on wood looks great to me.

Grace’s greeting card.  Her two layers from hand drawings combined very effectively.  Simple and well executed.

Oh yeah, I also figured out how to make an animated gif with PhotoshopWhy I would want to make an animated gif is another story.  But for now it’s time to party like its 1994:

what cute robots!

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2011

More items printed at the postcard workshop:

Jenis print on guitar wood

Jeni's print on guitar wood

Jenis print on guitar wood

Jeni's print on guitar wood

Jenis print on guitar wood

Jeni's print on guitar wood

jason's postcard

Jason's postcard

Grace's greeting card

Grace's greeting card

The title song stretches over 31 minutes.

Wednesday, December 1st, 2010

Apparently my solution for balancing my teaching job is…more teaching? Well here are three new workshops I have enthusiastically committed myself to.  Not just that, but a whole new DNS domain I have enthusiastically committed myself to.   If I were still seeing my psychologist, she would suspect that this is all a way to push aside the hard job of making my own work.  But make no mistake, these workshops are going to be nothing short of awesome.  Screen printing makes the world a better place.

At any rate, I am posting about it before it happens instead of after.  So that’s progress, I guess.

2010workshopsFront2010workshopsBack

There is one obstacle in his path: Greeks.

Sunday, November 7th, 2010

If the public visited my website I would write:

Hey if anyone is interested in getting started with screen printing, you might be interested to know that I am teaching a two night t-shirt workshop through Rock, Paper, Scissors gallery in Oakland.  The workshop takes place last week, which means that  I’m an idiot and it’s too late for you to actually participate.

Good thing its just you and me reading this, friends and Nigerian hackers.

I guess I was laying low because the workshop was a test run of sorts.  Mostly I was a nervous about the ancient screens available for us to use.  You can’t screenprint without a working screen.  But hey, the screens worked fine and I dare say that the workshop really couldn’t have gone better.  I got to travel to West Oakland to spread the Good Word and four very cool people made prints that were way more successful than I dared hope.

Here’s some pictures:

Debbie

Amber

Chad

David

Amber

The author’s rules (which differ somewhat from those of Brill and Landau)

Sunday, September 30th, 2007

More letterpress! So far, my two strongest impressions of printing on a press are related:

1. In the best way, this is the most comically inefficient way to produce words imaginable. It took me two nights (six hours) to reproduce the first fifty-nine words of my September 14th entry in Century Schoolbook 18 with some boldface accidentally mixed in:

blog entry

2. With this in mind, it is absolutely mind-blowing that this was once the way entire newspapers were printed every single day. How is that possible?

He finds young bridge players “weird”

Tuesday, September 18th, 2007

I’m suddenly one those people with not enough time. That in itself wouldn’t be so strange if it weren’t for the fact that, just a few weeks ago, I was fully embedded in the opposite circumstance. Now, I’m writing to-do lists and falling asleep at nine thirty on Friday nights.

But no matter: the postcard (film) project is done!

Well, almost done. Nowell is going to comb through edit #26 on his own to fix the few shots that still bother him, which will probably resemble something like airbrushing out someone’s pimples from a satellite photo (another reason to love collaborating with him). Wow: when we started this project, Nowell was single, I was still in grad school, and nobody knew who John Edwards was. Now Nowell is a married homeowner, I teach the classes, and John Edwards has his own bus. Look at this soundtrack:

postcrad song

We will have all four glorious minutes in streaming Quicktime for your video iPods in no time.

In parallel, I am screen printing a set of postcards for the Castro Street Fair, which takes place at the world’s gayest intersection this October. My art friend, Adrienne, two of her art friends, and I are setting up a booth to sell stuff. This will be my first official set so I am going to try extra hard. My goal is to make fifty sets of twelve San Francisco postcards, all stuff south of Cesar Chavez St.—a continuation of the “anti-San Francisco postcard” theme. (Oh God, if I ever put an art idea in quotes again, please punish me with, um, a week of nothing but reading A.P. Democratic primary articles.) Here are two of the photos I’m printing from:

bonanza restaurant in Bayview
Bernal Heights

Oh, and letterpress: I began my first printing workshop a few weeks ago. You know, like Gutenberg-style. If my screen prints bored you, well, prepare for a whole new way to be underwhelmed that you didn’t realize existed. But this stuff is cool. It makes me think intently about words and, to a greater extent, letters. And not just semantics, but the physicality of letters: typefaces and spacing and the way you can turn commas into apostrophes or quotation marks.

Maybe you kind of have to be there. The first night we were pummeled with a comical barrage of 500 years worth of esoteric vocabulary (“hold your composing stick flush with the galley in order to avoid pied type and then tighten the quoin [with the quoin key, of course]”). There are even the letterpress-originating idioms (e.g.: because a “sort” is an individual piece of type, you are “out of sorts” when you run out of e’s). Anyway, it’s still all quick foxes and lazy dogs. Every person in the workshop contributed three lines to the first exercise. I had the Garamond 18:

song

You don’t have to be weird like Robin Williams

Friday, September 7th, 2007

I’m in San Luis Obispo, the most annoying to spell place in America. School sent me here to attend a teaching workshop for engineers at Cal Poly. What is a teaching workshop for engineers? Great question. A teaching workshop for engineers is a type of prison where people who are good at intonating their voice spend three days trying to convince engineering professors to look up from their Power Point presentations. Oh it’s not even that bad–I happen to strongly believe in all this bullshit and appreciate what these people are trying to do–but why do these things need to descend into self parody so quickly? Why is someone ever insisting on receiving my attention to tell me that “getting [students] to remember is hard, but how many kids know every word to the rap music?” Jesus!

At least I get to observe myself teaching on tape (or rather, I will so when I muster the courage to put my pride where my mouth is and watch it) and at least S.L.O. is a lovely place to visit. I am staying with Tom the Historian, from cruise, and tonight he baked beets and pork tenderloin while the central coast breeze circulated through his antique apartment.

Also, cruise was no fluke: that dude drinks like no tenured professor I know.

[flv:http://www.feather2pixels.com/blog/post_video/SLO.flv 320 240]

His active love life has been frequent fodder

Monday, February 5th, 2007

I am at work. It’s 5:44 and I get wistful here at night so sorry about this. I’m walking back to work after an on-campus dinner. Outside the mess deck, one of my favorite students, Baby Bluehawk, eying my load of manila folders offers to help me finish my grading while she is at work. She’s starting her shift at the library and will be there until ten. A group of five sweating students on an Indian run passes me on the left, chanting militant nonsense.  It’s getting dark and there is a light on in my office.  I hate to quote indie rock on my blog but this has stuck with me for weeks:

“we sailed away on a winter’s day
with fate as malleable as clay
but ships are fallible, i say,
and the nautical, like all things, fades.”

In the distance, a tugboat squeezes a barge out of the Carquinez Straight towards open water as the sunset casts the San Pablo Bay soft pink. I should know more about that–barges and things. But I am just floating through all of this. My energy is focused on things that will surely collapse. People who will surely fade. And I cannot stop myself.

Indicate your degree of support.

Monday, February 5th, 2007

I started a silk screening workshop last week. I don’t know where silkscreen has been all of my life, but I am glad its here now. Anyways the workshop runs for 8 weeks or so and I think I will take the opportunity to make as many postcards as possible. So this will be a temporary departure from translating my own images, but I’ve always said that what I need is more time in front of the computer, dicking around with my digital camera and Photoshop. Oh gosh, why can I not not stop thinking about Morgan Jameson?