Tuesday, November 8, 2011
New Print " T strap shoe" for Bata shoe museum
I have a new print "T strap shoe".
It measures 5" X 7" and is 60.00. It is from an edition of 60.
Here is a bit of the process behind the print.
This print was commissioned by the Bata Shoe museum to coincide with their Roaring Twenties exhibit.
So.. Naturally Step 1 was to visit the exhibit!
Our Beautiful Bata Shoe museum designed by Raymond Moriyama.
This is an amazing show -- and it runs till June 2012 -- so still plenty of time to see it!
Some great boots.
Groovy t straps very popular in the 1920s. (I wish they made shoes like this now!)
Check out these floral beauties. Gorge!
Many shoes in the exhibit were created by Andre Perugia a French designer discovered by French fashion designer Paul Poiret. (who I find very fascinating)
Here are some incredible gold shoes designed by Andre Perugia in the 1920s. The roses show the influence of Paul Poiret.
And... here is Andy Warhol's interpretation of the Perugia shoes above created in the 1950s. (Neat eh?)
Step 2: Filled with visions of shoes in my head I begin doing sketches.
Step 3: I decide on the t strap and librarian shoe and get a screen made.
Here is the screen.
Step 4: I cover over + tape the portion of the screen that I'm not using.
Step 5: Mix the pink ink.
Formula = white + magenta + red + retarder (which slows down the drying process)
Step 6: Apply the pink ink with spatula and pull with squeegee.
Ta da. First pass.
Step 7: Apply black ink for layer 2 and pull with squeegee.
Whoosh.
Completed print.
ps! This week I am working on a 2nd print "Librarian shoe" to match this one. It will be same size + price and methinks they would work nicely as a set.
Did I mention Christmas is coming?
Labels:
Architects,
creative process,
New Work,
Prints,
Toronto
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
5 comments:
Gorgeous!!!
so pretty Alanna!
Tots loves it!
very nice :). do you make the screens yourself? or is there somewhere you can take them to have made?
I think that it's so cool that the Bata Shoe Museum is getting such good press about this super-fun show. It's also very exciting to see you doing a print for visitors to remember the show by -rather than a postcard reproduction of something in the show. Your print is a living and breathing reminder of how relevant the objects and the topic still are today.
Post a Comment