Reduction Lino with Laura Ep 11. Linocut Tools: Honing Techniques for Sharper Cutting
Vložit
- čas přidán 7. 04. 2020
- This video is about how I keep my lino and woodblock printmaking tools razor sharp on a day-to-day basis by honing - includes a hack if you can't get the proper kit using materials to hand! If you’d like to say thanks for these films and help us to fund more, please chip in with a donation at my fundraising page at GoFundMe gf.me/u/zd8bcq
- Jak na to + styl
This is SO very helpful! Especially the workarounds.
I asked a question about this just a few minutes ago ( under another video) and then found this video and it answers my question totally. I must have missed this video earlier, probably because earlier I was too much a beginner to be interested in the subject. Sorry.
Thank you Laura. Really useful
Thank you Laura...I'm new at all this ( painter originally!). Am really enjoying your sharing of advice and experience so generously! :)
Awesome. Thank you from Colorado usa
Great advice, thank you!
Hugely helpful, thank you!
Thank you that was great
Great info! Thanks!
wonderful! I imagine Paradontax toothpaste might work too, it's too gritty for my teeth my dentist tells me. Sodium Bicarbonate is the stuff in it. We use this toothpaste to clean sooth from ceramics out of the raku fire.
Many thanks Laura, how do you feel about the Flexcut Slipstrop? Looks as if it's a honing tool which would do as your method does? I wouldn't mind the Cif and leather option but as I have neither this little tool looks as if it may do the same thing and I can add it to my Xmas list :)
Thank you for sharing your extensive knowledge (-: Marion
Do you also do this for the cheap blades that come with the Abig set?
You certainly can do with them
What's cream cleaner equivalent in the states?
I guess scouring cream - stuff you’d clean a stove top with, slightly gritty gloop. No idea about a brand name for the US though 😳
Laura Boswell ahh. Our brand is called Soft Scrub. Thank you.
maybe Vim would be an equivalent?!
I always feel like I get a huge buildup of the paste/filings on my flexcut stropblock. Is there any reason to scrape that off to get better access to the leather? Do the residual filings in the leather ever affect the honing?