My Space

Xylographer

Frederic Girós

Self-taught, Fred­eric has prac­ticed the art of xy­log­ra­phy, or wood­cut­ting, since 1999 and is recog­nised as an ar­ti­san by the Gen­er­al­i­tat de Catalunya. He has made around 200 xy­lo­graphs, in­clud­ing book­plates and artis­tic books and has ex­hib­ited in Mex­ico as well as Cat­alo­nia. He lives in Gaüses, a small vil­lage in the Em­pordà, part of the town of Vilo­priu. The wood­cut­ter crafts out a pat­tern he has pre­vi­ously drawn onto the wood which will even­tu­ally be used as a print­ing plate.

The tra­di­tion and meth­ods go back cen­turies and were first found in north­ern Eu­rope where the trade be­came pop­u­lar with the ad­vent of the paper. Often it was used to cre­ate re­li­gious books. It re­gained pop­u­lar­ity at the be­gin­ning of the 20th cen­tury with book­plates and ex lib­ris by artists such as Ri­quer, Ri­cart, and Oriol Di­vine.

1. Arkansas whet­ting stone: For sharp­en­ing the gouges and chis­els. It is a del­i­cate op­er­a­tion.

2. Gouges and chis­els: Var­i­ous styles (“V”, “U ...) and sizes. All of them used to notch and carve the wood and wood and achieve dif­fer­ent tex­tures and lines.

3. Woods: Of vary­ing qual­i­ties which are well sanded. For its hard­ness and de­tail, box­wood. Rollers are used to sand evenly.

4. The fin­ished plates: These are the fin­ished wooden plates which are used to trans­fer my cre­ation onto the print­able sur­face.

5. Spat­u­las: I use these to ex­tract the ink and place it on the stone or glass for the rollers.

6. Rollers: to evenly spread the ink on the wood ma­trix which is then trans­ferred to the paper. The ink cov­ers the sur­face of the ma­trix is not waisted and pen­e­trates the etch­ing.

7. Man­ual press: The trans­fer of the ink onto the paper (print­ing) can be man­ual or me­chan­i­cal. In the first case a man­ual press is used to place the paper against the inked ma­trix and get the im­print

8. Me­chan­i­cal press: Me­chan­i­cal pres­sure re­places man­ual pres­sure which now be­comes uni­form.

9. Inks and dyes: For wood­cut inks com­monly used for fresh wood are en­graver's ink or lith­o­graphic inks, which can be ei­ther oil or water based.

10. En­grav­ings. The stamp is the re­sult of the process of en­grav­ing an image on paper which was etched wood. Since its in­cep­tion wood­cut­ting was used pri­mar­ily for cre­at­ing re­li­gious im­ages, we often use the word with re­li­gious con­no­ta­tions, but in fact that is only part of it. The wood of the cheery tree is much ap­pre­ci­ated.

http://​xilofera.​blogspot.​com.​es

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