tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3618025896103645633.post5333724965922406157..comments2023-11-25T08:33:24.935-05:00Comments on art, birds, nature: Continuing Down the Printmaking TrailKen Januskihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16984782169460110520noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3618025896103645633.post-3642292312157044042010-12-02T11:28:19.984-05:002010-12-02T11:28:19.984-05:00Hi Garden Groans,
I'm happy to hear that you ...Hi Garden Groans,<br /><br />I'm happy to hear that you enjoy my blog, especially the part about printmaking.<br /><br />This blog really started out much more about my nature observations and then moved more and more to being about art with nature as its subject. I think I lost some readers but then gained some others.<br /><br />In any case I hope that it is inspiring. It's always hard to know just who your audience is. But I think in the main my audience is other artists who understand the excitement and travails of being an artist, particularly an artist with nature as his or her subject. Or maybe non-artists who also have some interest in seeing how art works, how it just doesn't spring out of your forehead fully formed!Ken Januskihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16984782169460110520noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3618025896103645633.post-87437426273775342832010-12-01T19:12:18.348-05:002010-12-01T19:12:18.348-05:00I am enjoying these posts on your return to printm...I am enjoying these posts on your return to printmaking. You are very brave to try this reduction method. The heron is very fine now. For me fear would set in. Print makers do need to have tolerance for surprises, but you are right, that's the addictive part. It was over 30 years ago that I studied printmaking until the funds to finish art school ran out and I needed to get a job. I'm only now starting to paint and draw again. Reading your thoughts on the process and seeing your progress is a great pleasure and inspiring.<br /><br />NaninaAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com