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I’m coding a system in JavaScript that generates sentences of “meaningful nonsense”. Here are some examples. I set off on this path because I’m working on a series of generative diagrams and I wanted them to have titles. Immediately I was drawn in by the effect of the diagrams next to the semi-nonsensical words. Since then, I have developed these diagrams a lot, including using my sentence generating system to add scribbled notes to the sides of them. Here’s an early example and one of where my diagrams are up to now. I have also been using this system to generate “truths” and to provide content for typographical artworks. All of this is an ongoing experimental work in progress but I’d like to share how it works so far. Sentence Structures My system consists of sentence structures, curated word lists, and various rules for how to fit words together. Here’s a small sample of my current sentence structures for titles and for truths. // Diagram titles [ ["gerp", " ", "noun",...
a year ago

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More from Blog - Amy Goodchild

Chaos in the medium: watercolour plotting

Over the past few weeks, I've been experimenting with painting in watercolours using my AxiDraw plotter. Watercolour is a medium I enjoy painting in (by hand) as a personal hobby, kind of separate from my public art making, so it’s been interesting to combine it with code. I’ve thought about trying this for a while but I was finally spurred on to do it after I visited Licia He’s studio in April. This article is not intended as a tutorial, but more of a scrapbook of what I’ve been trying, the results I’ve created and the mistakes I’ve made (and continue to make). Set up There are a variety of ways to control an AxiDraw plotter. I do it by creating svgs using JavaScript. I open the svg in Inkscape and use the AxiDraw plugin to control the plotter. If you’re wondering how to create an svg in JavaScript - I wrote my own class to do this, after finding that other libraries weren’t working as expected for me. My svg builder is on github and you can feel free to use it. An svg is essentially a series of paths. Usually a plotter moves a pen around those paths. When plotting with watercolour, we also need to create paths to pick up paint, swirl the brush in water and dab the brush on paper towel. Here’s what my set up looks like in real life, with all the equipment taped in place next to the plotter. Watercolour set up in real life I’ve mirrored the real world set up in code. Doing this required a bit of trial and error to make sure things were placed in the right place, but it wasn’t as finicky as I expected it might be. There is a decent margin for error since the areas for the paints, paper and water are relatively large. Watercolour set up in code This output would paint a series of vertical wavy lines on the paper. The blues and greens represent the colours that will be painted, while the thin red line represents the path that will be exported as an svg, for the paintbrush to follow. Notice that there are red circles around the paint areas, lines in the water area, and dabs on the paper. These are all added to the svg in order, so the paint brush will: Swish through a long path in the water Dab the paper towel Circle around one of the paints Swish a short path in the water Paint one vertical line This then repeats for each of the vertical lines. Testing testing Here are the very first watercolour tests I plotted. You can see there are issues with the colour fading out, where the paint has not been refreshed often enough. Or with the results becoming uneven and “scratchy”, where the brush does not have enough water on it. I’ve experimented a lot with the order of actions described above, because picking up more or less water before or after picking up paint makes a difference to the effects created. Brushes In those initial tests I was working with a thin brush, with the bristles cut very short. My thinking was that this might allow for detail but, in fact, the bristles spread outwards, creating visible bristly edges, which I hate the look of. I’ve done some testing with different brushes. Brush 1 is the one I cut short, resulting in a scratchy line. Brush 2 and 3 are similar, but 3 performs ‘better’ - note the defined gap in the centre of the ‘a’ and the correct alignment on the start/end of the circles. A long brush can lead to “inaccurate” shapes, due to the way the bristles are dragged over the paper and become pushed around - you can see what I mean in the 4c photograph below, where the bristles are dragged from the left to the right. This effect can be reduced by carefully setting the height of the brush so that the tip only just touches the paper and by using brushes with firmer bristles. Brush 3’s bristles are much more collected than brush 2’s. Many of these brushes are flat and I placed them diagonally in the plotter. Particularly with brush 3, you can see how this results in thinner lines in the / orientation and thicker ones in the \ orientation, creating a calligraphic effect. The last four tests on the first sheet all use brush 4, but I altered other conditions: 4a - Speed 70%, brush placed with tip just touching paper 4b - Speed 20%, brush placed with tip just touching paper 4c - Speed 20%, brush placed lower down 4d - Speed 20%, brush placed lower down and weight applied The difference between the results of a and b shows that a slower plotter speed can help more paint reach the paper and create clearer lines. The difference in height of the brush in each of these is only a few millimetres but the difference in the results is marked, demonstrating how this process is (happily) difficult to control and filled with chaos introduced by the medium. Brush 4 has been damaged a bit by test 4d, where the brush was weighted down. It’s visible in the photo of the brushes above - the bristles were neater before the tests. I do like the smushy effect of the circle though, it could be interesting to play with that. Brushes 5, 6, and 7 are wider but it’s still possible to write readable words, just at a larger size. The diagonal orientation effect of the diagonal flat brush is also more pronounced here. The first shape on Brush 7 uses the same circular path as all the other brushes - the bristles in contact with the paper just haven’t moved that much. Wider brushes generally lend themselves to smoother edges and no risk of scratchy areas, while thinner brushes are obviously necessary to create detail. I’ve been on the look out for brushes in the shape of brush 3, but shorter and narrower. I also haven’t yet experimented much with brushes of different shapes. This is an ongoing exploration! Smooth lines The first “proper” outputs I created were these Perlin noise adjusted rows of lines. It’s interesting that in the tests of the thinner brushes, the colour often runs out before the end of the word or even the short sine wave. Whereas in these outputs, a slightly wider brush manages to continue the full length of a sheet of A4 paper. Even a small difference to the width of the brush seems to make a big difference to how much water and paint it can hold. Watercolour Words I’ve tried a few different ways of creating typographic pieces, using the handwriting I coded in Javascript (you can read about that here). In this first one I simply repeated the same word in different shades, using a large brush. I particularly like the areas where one word bleeds into its neighbours. I’ve also experimented with using a few words or a short phrase, in different layouts. I love aspects of these, but they don’t quite feel like “finished” pieces, due to the amount of white space. One thing I’m particularly liking is the smudged areas of colour. I dripped water onto the paper by hand as the plotter was working, so that the paint would run. In this video you can see the drips of water on the paper and how the colour spreads and distorts as the brush moves through one of them. I love how this takes advantage of the watercolour medium. In some of these next pieces, I automated this by drawing circles (actually I used the letter ‘o’) in water ahead of the main letters in paint. In this video you can see the ‘o’s drawn in water - showing up as pale purple as the water tray had taken on a good amount of paint by then. As the ‘j’ is drawn, the colour spreads out into the water. These single letter typographic pieces are my favourite watercolour plots I’ve created so far. Few things make me happier than a cloudy gradient. Layering In the past couple of days, I’ve been working towards making the sentence/phrase/word pieces feel more complete by experimenting with layering. I feel like there is something interesting here, but much more refinement is needed. Creating these is a time consuming process so experimentation is slow. I’m working on better integrating the layers, so that the words or other foreground content feel naturally part of a painting. Going forward There are some practical things I need to improve upon - I haven’t been pre-soaking my watercolour paper, which means it warps when it gets wet. This is particularly problematic when trying to set the paintbrush to an exact height above the paper, because the paper is not all the same height. I’m finding the painters’ tape, which I use to create nice clean edges, often lifts up during the process. I’m hoping this may improve when the paper is pre-soaked. I need to get some much smaller brushes to try out. I also have lots of ideas for ongoing exploration! One thing I’ve just started doing but am not ready to share yet (the first test is literally in the plotter as I write this) is using photographs as inputs for representational paintings. Currently this feels like something to try out for fun rather than something I’d want to “really” use the process for - but who knows where it will go. I’m mostly thinking about ways I can make the most of the combination of the exactitude of the robotic method with the chaos of the physical medium. 😍 Enjoyed this article? I’d love it if you could give a boost on Twitter, thanks! ✨ And don’t forget to sign up for my weekly newsletter, filled with updates.

a year ago 29 votes
Coding my Handwriting

Coding my handwriting in Javascript - how I did it and what I’m doing with it.

a year ago 28 votes
Generating The Alphabet

My current generative artwork-in-progress includes text, but I don’t want to use a font. In browser based art work, using a “web safe” font could produce inconsistent results, while including a font file would mean a large file size. Additionally, I don’t want a visual element of the project to be something I didn’t create myself. Instead of using a font, I made my own path-based alphabet using p5.js and JavaScript. Fonts, how do they work? I started by looking into what the various points on a font are called. (Mad props to whoever decided that one of the heights in the y-axis of a font should be referred to as the “x” height.) I defined my letters around a central point, mid_x and mid_y. In hindsight it would have been better to work from a bottom left point and I’ll be adjusting this at some point, to help improve my kerning, which is currently inconsistent. Within a Letter class, I defined these key locations like x height, cap height etc, in relation to the font size and the mid point. For example, the full height from base to cap is equal to the font size. From y_mid to y_x is 1/3 of the full height. I also defined some small distances I could adjust a point by, in relation to the height. this.adj_1 = this.h_full * 0.05; this.adj_15 = this.h_full * 0.075; this.adj_2 = this.h_full * 0.1; this.adj_25 = this.h_full * 0.125; this.adj_3 = this.h_full * 0.15; this.adj_35 = this.h_full * 0.175; this.adj_4 = this.h_full * 0.2;   Defining a Letter Each letter is defined by a set of initial paths, of just a few points. Creating these paths was an iterative process of nudging them into the right places. I used a font as a vague guide and also wrote letters on paper to see how they “should” look. The results are a bit of a jaggy scrawl. Don’t worry, there’s more. create_a(){ this.paths = [ [ // stem {x: this.x_left+this.adj_2, y: this.y_x + this.adj_4}, {x: this.x_left+this.adj_3, y: this.y_x + this.adj_1}, {x: this.x_mid+this.adj_2, y: this.y_x}, {x: this.x_right, y: this.y_x+this.adj_2}, {x: this.x_right, y: this.y_base-this.adj_4}, {x: this.x_right+this.adj_1, y: this.y_base}, ], [ // round {x: this.x_right-this.adj_1, y: this.y_mid-this.adj_15}, {x: this.x_mid-this.adj_1, y: this.y_mid-this.adj_1}, {x: this.x_left, y: this.y_mid+this.adj_35}, {x: this.x_mid, y: this.y_base}, {x: this.x_mid+this.adj_2, y: this.y_base-this.adj_1}, {x: this.x_right+this.adj_2, y: this.y_base - this.adj_4}, ] ]; } Curving the paths The next step is to smooth out the paths using Chaikin’s curve algorithm. (Shout out to Aaron Penne for making me aware of this algorithm some time in 2022, I think) Let’s look at a simpler path to see how it works. Chaikin’s algorithm is run recursively and, in each round, we create a new path with the following steps: Copy the first point (the ends stay in place) For the rest of the points before the last point: Add a point 25% of the way to the previous point Add a point 25% of the way to the next point Copy the last point. After one round, we have this. The new path is marked in red. Path after 1 round of Chaikin’s curve algorithm Then we apply the same steps to the resulting path. Here are the results after 2 and 3 rounds. Path after 2 rounds of Chaikin’s curve algorithm Path after 3 rounds of Chaikin’s curve algorithm And here’s the final result. Satisfying. Let’s see what that does to the letters. After 1 round of Chaikin’s curve algorithm After 3 rounds of Chaikin’s curve algorithm Curved paths About 3-4 iterations of the algorithm is enough to get a nice curve at small sizes. If the font is to be used larger (with the points further apart), then more iterations will ensure you don’t get pointy edges. Using Chaikin’s algorithm makes it possible to get smoothly curved paths by only defining a few points. Minimizing Defining the paths in relation to the mid point and cap etc helped me figure out how to draw a letter. For example, I found it easier to think, “the stalk of a b starts at the cap and goes to the base”, rather than “the stalk of a b starts 14.1 pixels above the mid point and ends 7.4 pixels below it”. However, the resulting code was verbose and pretty blergh (as above in the create_a function). To slim it down, I wrote a function which went through each letter and generated new code with everything translated into simple numeric values. // Get string of new code let string = ""; for(let l of this.letters){ string += "create_" + l.letter + "(){\n"; string += " this.ip = [\n"; for(let path of l.ip){ string += " ["; for(let p of path){ string += "{x: " + nf(p.x, 0, 1) + ", y: " + nf(p.y, 0, 1) + "}"; if (path.indexOf(p) != path.length-1) string += ", "; } string += "]"; if (l.ip.indexOf(path) != l.ip.length-1) string += ",\n"; else string += "\n"; } string += " ]\n"; string += "}\n"; } console.log(string)   Here’s the resulting code for the letter a. Much smaller. create_a(){ this.ip = [ [{x: -2.8, y: -3.4}, {x: -1.7, y: -6.8}, {x: 2.3, y: -8.0}, {x: 5.4, y: -5.7}, {x: 5.4, y: 2.9}, {x: 6.6, y: 7.4}], [{x: 4.3, y: -1.7}, {x: -0.9, y: -1.1}, {x: -5.1, y: 3.9}, {x: -2.1, y: 7.4}, {x: 2.3, y: 6.3}, {x: 5.4, y: 2.9}] ] } These numbers are based on a font size of 20 and are simply scaled for different font sizes.   Shapifying the path Here’s the whole alphabet so far. It’s looking pretty natural but it’s also a bit spindly. It’s easy to adjust the stroke weight, but handwritten letters are not usually exactly the same width all the way along the strokes. To enable paths with varied widths, I turned the paths into 2D shapes in an algorithm I call ‘shapify’. To see how it works, here’s that zigzag shape again, after it’s been curved. To create the shapified path, we go along this path and, at each point: Find the angle from that point to the next (for the last point, finds the angle to the point before and flip it 180°) Using Perlin noise, choose the width the path will be at that point. Here I’ve drawn a line at each point of the path, to demonstrate those angles and widths. Notice how each of the lines is a slightly different length and their angles follow the curve of the path. From there it’s easy to see how we can draw a path around the inner path to create our variated width path. At the end of the line, it draws a little loop of points around 180° to create a nice round line cap. I did not know I would be making this weird little wormy guy when I started this article. Side note: My ‘shapify’ algorithm is not at all perfect. When the stroke width is wide, these awkward inner loops appear at tight corners. It’s the same issue I explored in this article. Luckily, in this implementation the whole thing is filled anyway, so it doesn’t matter too much. One last thing I did is to jitter all the points slightly using Perlin noise. This adds another layer of natural feeling to the letters as well as giving them variety. Here’s how the whole alphabet looks: Aesthetic edits Now that the system is set up, it’s possible to play around with all kinds of settings to create different effects. For example, instead of altering the line width with noise, we can do it based on the letter placement. (Thanks to Piter Pasma for the suggestion.) Or we can mess around with higher resolution noise for more jitteryness. What does it weigh My letter class is now 9.7kb. This includes: Path definitions for all letters A-Z in lower and uppercase, and 7 punctuation marks. Letter spacing (although I’m still fine tuning this) Function to resize paths for font size. Function to create the smooth path by calling Chaikin algorithm (but not the algorithm itself, as that’s a function I also use elsewhere) Functions to create and draw NaturalLine objects which handle jittering the path points and shapifying the path etc (but not the NaturalLine class itself, as that’s used all over this project) There are definitely ways I can cut it down more as well. (I am not interested in tips on how to cut down file size at this time, thanks lol.) When I started defining paths, I was a bit worried I was on a fools errand because I pretty much had to define the whole alphabet before I could really test the look of the results in place, but now that I have it on the WIP outputs, the handwritten effect is looking just how I wanted. Enjoyed this article? I’d love if you could give it a boost on Twitter. Thanks!

a year ago 29 votes
A strange kind of physical reality

A long-form generative art project coming to fxhash in partnership with FAB DAO on 11th Jan 2024. This series is inspired, in the abstract, by the images I visualise when reading about quantum theory. Particularly thoughts of particles spreading out as waves and then collapsing into particles again at a moment of interaction. At the quantum scale, classical ideas of space and form come apart, replaced by concepts, probability and mathematics. Yet I cannot help but imagine tiny structures. There are moments when it feels like, if I concentrated closely enough or reached out in just the right way, I could perceive my hand floating through the particle soup. The title is a quote from "Physics and Philosophy" by Werner Heisenberg These example outputs demonstrate all the palettes in the collection. Grey Rainbow Elf Buzzzz Gem Avocado Amethyst Punch Chalk Tangerine Fading light Rough seas Space dust Slice Space waltz Bright ochre Highlighter A strange kind of physical reality opens with a limited allow list for FAB DAO members at 6pm on 11th Jan 2024 and then opens for full release on 12th Jan.

a year ago 29 votes

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Meet The Maker: Polly Marix Evans

Hello, I’m Polly, and I’m a linocut printmaker based in the Eden Valley in rural Cumbria. Much of my work features a character known as Bun-Head, a feisty woman who has come to hold a special place in the hearts of her many followers.  My prints are simplistic, using contrasting areas of predominantly black and white, with bold lines and angles, and the small figure of Bun-Head. I like to think that my work can be empowering, edgy, sensitive or plain quirky in the depiction of the ups and downs of daily life. Loafing around - the importance of doing fuck-all    Describe your printmaking process. Sometimes the sketch comes first, sometimes the title of the work comes before the sketch.  But I can see the image in my mind.  Often the ideas don’t appear at the most convenient moments.  Quite often my best ideas come in the middle of the night, then I’m up with a scratchy pencil trying to jot things down before I forget them.  Then I sketch.  Not always straight away.  I have numerous sketchbooks with pages that just have a word or two on them.  I flit backwards and forwards through the books gathering things up like a magpie and putting them together. I like it best when an idea works instantly, not too much rubbings out and redrawing.  Some never work at all.  Some I come back to months later.  Some are just me letting off steam and will never move out of that sketchbook and onto the lino.  Once I’m happy with my sketch I trace it in order to transfer it to the block.  Then I carve the block.  Some blocks are really simplistic and quick, but others – especially with lots of lettering take much longer – or a tangled scribble, who knew a scribble could be so tricky to carve?  Once I think I’m done with the lino cutting I often do a rubbing – just so I can get a rough idea of how it might look in print.  The printing, the inking is the really fun part. I mainly use black ink on white paper.  There are some coloured prints, sometimes I apply the colour after the black – with a finger or a mini stamp-block – some I use registration pins and might have a jigsaw of coloured blocks printed first with the black ink block pulling it all together when that’s printed on top of the colour.  I live in an old, cold stone house – it can take weeks for a layered colour print to dry fully in winter. I much prefer being a printmaker in summer when it’s warmer and things dry swiftly and the lino is warmed by the sun and so much easier to cut. But all said, I get so excited seeing the first print reveal, it’s like magic and you never quite know whether it will hit the spot or not. VPL - visible pencil lines - the artist wears a see-through skirt Still waving, not drowning How and where did you learn to print? I was given a second-hand John Bull printing set for my 6th birthday which lived in an old powdered milk tin in the playroom cupboard – this was the beginning of my obsession with printmaking and ink.  I loved those little rubbery letters and spent hours playing and experimenting.  Though, really, I guess I learnt to print properly on my Foundation Art course at Northbrook College in Horsham, West Sussex.  It was an old house converted to a college and there was a tiny weeny print room with just about enough space for 2 people.  I was nearly always one of those 2 people. The bonus was that the vending machine was right outside the print room door so Andrew (the other one-of-two printmakers) and I could always pounce of people who’d gone to buy a sneaky bar of chocolate. Then I went to Manchester when it was still the Polytechnic, though it morphed into Manchester Metropolitan University soon after I started.  It was the only university I’d visited where printmaking wasn’t hidden down 27 long corridors, with half a dusty old press on its own in a room looking all neglected.  And you didn’t have to spend your first year on painting or sculpture, I knew I wanted to print.  So I spent the best part of four years printing and that was me hooked. My lover says my tomatoes taste the best Why printmaking? Oo, that’s a tricky one.  I love drawing – I have endless sketch books full of ideas and mini drawings.  I don’t mind painting, unless it’s oils which are so slow to dry that it’s like a toddler doing a painting and you have to be careful it doesn’t go all brown and look like a giant poo!  But painting is still slow-ish, and I’ve always worked quickly, once I’ve carved that lino block the prints just reel off.  I can’t do 3D and that’s final – even kids’ birthday cakes, I have these amazing ideas and then it all goes hideously wrong and I remember why I’m a printmaker and not a baker, and I can’t even get clay to hit the wheel if I try pottery, let alone the centre of the wheel.  Why printmaking?  I love ALL of it.  I love every single bit of the process.  I love the sketching, the ideas. Transferring them to the block – working out how best to carve – what to leave, what to take away.  And you never know what it’s really going to look like until you pull a proof – and yes, there are occasions where I literally clap my hands and jump up and down with delight because it’s really worked!  It’s come out exactly how I saw it in my mind’s eye.  Why printmaking?  I can make more than one.  I love seeing those editions.  I love the multiples all hanging in rows in the print racks.  And I love the ink!  When I haven’t printed for a while I take the lid off the box my inks live in and I inhale.  I breathe it all in.  It’s amazing.  Words can’t describe how it makes me feel.  It’s the same when I’ve got a ceiling full of racks with prints drying – I walk into my studio and I smell that ink.  I adore the darkness I can get with that black.  Those great blocks of colour.  It’s so intense. And you can say so much just with a line, or that contrast between the black of the ink and the white of the paper.  It makes me buzz.  It literally sends tingles down my spine. sketch- Swallowed by The Overwhelm Flomp - snooze time where do you work? I work from a room at the back of my house.  It was the everything room.  It’s still the spare bedroom at times; guests get to sleep amongst my artwork. It was a bit of a playroom too – I’ve had prints accidentally shot out of drying racks by Nerf guns (but Nerf gun bullets also make really good Pfeil tool cover guards) The guinea pig spends her days with me in the winter when it’s too cold for her to be outside.  Sometimes I share with racks of drying laundry.  But now the kids are older and only one still lives at home full-time, it's really become my studio properly. Describe a typical day in your studio. There’s not really a typical day.  A lot of people romanticise being an artist, but there’s a lot more to it than just pulling prints –  there’s a lot of admin work, accounts, selling fairs, etc. -the duller bits of running a business.  But a ‘favourite’ day would be a creative day.  I tend to gather flocks of sketches and ideas in my sketchbooks and then have sessions of doing a certain part of the process – so I’ll cut a lot of blocks, 5 or so, for a few days, then I’ll spend a week printing.  I print until the drying racks are full.  And when the drying racks are full, I balance on furniture and tie bits of string to things so I can use clothes pegs to hang up even more prints.  I try to work ‘sensible’ working hours and, as a single parent of 3 children, this used to be dictated more by school runs or people needing to be fed.  But it’s very easy to get totally lost in my work, or just think I’ll finish cutting this block, or using up this ink, or pulling the remainder of this edition, that suddenly I’ve missed lunch or it’s far later than I thought, or it’s dark and I should probably be in bed.  Also working from home means you can stray back in to the studio when you’ve really only gone to check the back door was locked – I’ve been caught before, by the middle daughter, cutting lino at midnight after saying I was shattered ‘What exactly do you think you are doing, mother’ – talk about being ticked off by a teenager!  How long have you been printmaking?  I’ve been printmaking on and off since I was 19, or maybe 6.  I’ve been full-time printmaking for about 7 years now. Before that I had various breaks from printmaking, or art in general – some forced. The Story Of Bun-Head  What inspires you? My inspiration comes from life.  The good bits, the dull bits, the really gritty unpleasant bits.  Or things that just pop into my head.  So I never quite know what’s going to happen next.  And sometimes I’m surprised with what I come up with – a friend related my work to ‘taking a walk through Polly’s mind’ – which is what it really is.  But a lot is from me and my emotions.  Viewers don’t need to know my exact reason for making a print, my work can speak to people on an individual level.  My prints show how life has affected my art and, in turn, my art then affects the viewer’s life.  If people come away feeling some sort of emotion then my job is done.  Though there are always some who only see the quirky, comical side of my work.  There are some prints that are just this, like ‘The overwhelming joy of stripy tights’ but others tackle issues like mental health, domestic and sexual abuse, feminism and equality.  Basically they can be light and funny or an expression of the thick, dark and scary soup of life that laps at the feet of so many.  And surviving!  They are about getting through that stuff and coming out the other side. The Overwhelming Joy Of Stripy Tights What is your favourite printmaking product? Caligo safewash inks have revolutionised my printmaking from home.  When I was at university everything was solvent based, or the water-based products really didn’t hit the mark.  Now I can just put my rollers and blocks under the tap at the end of the day. Japanese vinyl is my favourite surface to work with – I can get such a crisp line and so much detail.  When it’s too cold to cut easily I sit on it for a while or, in the depths of winter, I alternate having a hot water bottle on my lap or on the block.  My really favourite printmaking product is my little Albion press.  It used to belong to my ancestors and was discovered in a garage in 2019.  My dad arranged to have it restored for me, but sadly he died of covid in June 2020 before he saw it in use in my studio. Where can we see your work? Where do you sell? I sell on Etsy - that’s my ticking over sales.  I also have galleries that stock my work on a regular basis – a fair few in Cumbria, as well as The Heart Gallery in Hebden Bridge, The Craft Centre at Leeds City Art Gallery.  I’m currently working on expanding this list across the country.  I’ve been invited to exhibit at The Great Print Exhibition at Rheged for the past six years, and for Great Print 9 they had a major feature on Bun-Head, and me!   This year I took part in Printfest in Ulverston for the first time and won The Founders’ Award.  I’ll be at Art in The Pen at Skipton in August 2025, and GNCCF in Manchester in October.  I have work in The Derby Print Open this year, which runs for the month of June. And I’ve just had a print accepted for the RA Summer Exhibition. What will we be seeing from you next?  Your guess is as good as mine!  There will always be Bun-Head, even when her hair is chopped off or in a ponytail.  Maybe a bit more colour?  Though black is still a colour I’m never retiring, that’s for sure! The second I turned off the lights all these thoughts came swishing around my head Do you have any advice for other printmakers and creatives? There is no wrong way.  You don’t need to follow the rules, or the crowd.  Keep experimenting.  Keep doing what you do.  Don’t compare yourself to anyone else, comparison is the thief of joy.  The second you stop experimenting and playing and pushing the boundaries, you lose yourself and your individuality. A fork in the road Whore skin - damn, woman, put that ankle away To see more of Polly, follow her on Instagram, Facebook and her Website!

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