Stencil and Photographic Silkscreen Printing For use with Lesson 6 FOR EDUCATION USE ONLY ©2009 The Andy Warhol Museum, a museum of Carnegie Institute.

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Presentation transcript:

Stencil and Photographic Silkscreen Printing For use with Lesson 6 FOR EDUCATION USE ONLY ©2009 The Andy Warhol Museum, a museum of Carnegie Institute. All rights reserved. You may view and download the materials posted in this site for personal, informational, educational, and non-commercial use only. The contents of this site may not be reproduced in any form beyond its original intent without the permission of The Andy Warhol Museum. Except where noted, ownership of all material is The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh; Founding Collection, Contribution The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.

Tape your silkscreen using two-inch masking tape. Tape both sides of screen.

Place your Layer 1 stencil on top of a piece of your final printing paper. Make sure the open area of the stencil is in the center of the final printing paper. Keep the stencil From moving by taping it to the printing paper using two small pieces of blue painter’s tape.

Place your silkscreen in the hinge clamps, securely tightening the clamps.

Register the stacked stencil and print paper to the silkscreen. Use tape brackets on the print surface/table to mark the corners of 3 sides of the printing paper. These marks will be guides so that each piece of paper is placed in the same place on the table, ensuring that the printed shape is in the same place on each piece of paper.

Carefully remove the small pieces of blue painter’s tape holding the stencil in place on the final paper. * Be careful to not move the stencil from its position.*

Carefully close the screen over the stencil paper.

Print the first color using enough ink for adequate coverage.

The stencil will stick to the back of the silkscreen because the ink acts as an adhesive. For large areas of color (like the background Layer 1) you may need to flood the silkscreen or make two passes with the squeegee.

Continue this process, placing each piece of paper inside the tape marks until all 10 pieces of paper are printed. Remove the stencil from the silkscreen and discard. Clean the silkscreen and squeegee thoroughly. The two-inch tape you placed around the edges of the silkscreen in Step # 1 should remain until you are finished printing.

When Layer 1 of your print is dry, place the photographic Film Positive for Layer 4 onto your print and register it to the first printed layer. Tape this to your print using two small pieces of blue tape to ensure the Positive does not move.

Register your next stencil (Layer 2) to the Film Positive. Once it is in the correct place, use two small pieces of painter’s tape to secure it to the print.

Remove the Film Positive.

Place the stacked stencil and print paper under the silkscreen and use tape to mark the edges of your print, as in Step #4.

Repeat the previous steps for printing and cleaning the screen.

Register your next stencil (Layer 3) to the Film Positive. Once it is in the correct place, use two small pieces of painter’s tape to secure it to the print. Remove the Film Positive

Place the stacked stencil and print paper under the silkscreen and use tape to mark the edges of your print. Remove the small pieces of blue tape that secure the stencil to your print.

Repeat the previous steps for printing and cleaning the screen.

To print Layer 4, register your Film Positive to your print using small pieces of painter’s tape to secure it to the print.

Clamp your second silkscreen with the photographic image burned onto it in the clamps and securely tighten.

Register your print to the screen and place tape marks on the corners of 3 edges of your paper.

Remove the Film Positive.

Print your final layer and clean your screen.