Good Timber Does Not Grow With Ease Print
Linocut print on 11x14 archival printmaking paper. Black Cranfield Oil Based ink print. Edition of 5 prints
I make my linocut prints by hand carving the reverse of an image on a linoleum block. Then I use this block to stamp the image onto a page.
I ship these in clear plastic with a hard back, inside a rigid mailer.
———
Based on the poem by Douglas Malloch. The man grew up among the forests, logging camps, and lumber mills of Michigan.
“Let other bards their harps attune To sing of gold and courts and kings; But leave to me the hush of June, The music that the forest sings”.
In our family, we can relate to the sentiments of this man. This piece captures a bit of that.
Linocut print on 11x14 archival printmaking paper. Black Cranfield Oil Based ink print. Edition of 5 prints
I make my linocut prints by hand carving the reverse of an image on a linoleum block. Then I use this block to stamp the image onto a page.
I ship these in clear plastic with a hard back, inside a rigid mailer.
———
Based on the poem by Douglas Malloch. The man grew up among the forests, logging camps, and lumber mills of Michigan.
“Let other bards their harps attune To sing of gold and courts and kings; But leave to me the hush of June, The music that the forest sings”.
In our family, we can relate to the sentiments of this man. This piece captures a bit of that.
Linocut print on 11x14 archival printmaking paper. Black Cranfield Oil Based ink print. Edition of 5 prints
I make my linocut prints by hand carving the reverse of an image on a linoleum block. Then I use this block to stamp the image onto a page.
I ship these in clear plastic with a hard back, inside a rigid mailer.
———
Based on the poem by Douglas Malloch. The man grew up among the forests, logging camps, and lumber mills of Michigan.
“Let other bards their harps attune To sing of gold and courts and kings; But leave to me the hush of June, The music that the forest sings”.
In our family, we can relate to the sentiments of this man. This piece captures a bit of that.