An assemblage of found objects. The tin cans are pop rivetted together and have copper and brass tags added with words such as careless, ignorant, indiffere...

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Comment by Marian Savill on February 24, 2011 at 12:28am
Thanks Tammy ;o)
Comment by Tammy Seaman on February 23, 2011 at 11:02am
Great job - very cool!
Comment by Marian Savill on February 22, 2011 at 9:34pm
Thanks Grant ;o)
Comment by Grant Dowling on February 22, 2011 at 4:28pm
Thanks Marian... video works well to show this great piece...
Comment by Marian Savill on February 21, 2011 at 7:21pm

Thank you both of you.  ;o)  I'm planning on doing it for some other pieces of work too, just seems a nice way of sharing them and showing the world ;o)

Comment by William on February 21, 2011 at 4:38pm

This Truly Makes This Piece Shine!

 

Comment by Sandra Henderson on February 21, 2011 at 12:07pm
Thanks for sharing this Marian!  It was great to see this very interesting piece from some different angles!!!

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HERE ARE 2 LINKS to TWO of my youtube videos talking and demonstrating about this amazing product:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HIc02QBihJQ&feature=share&list=UUM6N5AOYoyg6eAkbcDWpNFg

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zAPZn5TEyM&list=UUM6N5AOYoyg6eAkbcDWpNFg&index=41

So once i have my image printed onto transparency film, I take my Ezscreen silk screen which has been coated in light sensitive emulsion (These sheets come pre-coated so they are ready to use). Place it onto a black board, then place the transparency image on top (this part needs to be done in a dark room with no direct sunlight). I take it outside and expose it for 1 minute and 40 seconds (but time varies depending on time of day and strength of sunlight). After i have exposed the image i place it into a tub of water for around 5 - 8 minutes. Then i rinse the screen out under fast running water until the unexposed area (the black) washes away. I then expose the screen to the sun for a further 20mins to completely harden the light sensitive emulsion. 

And this is the completed screen ready for printing.  I simply use an old credit card to spread the ink over the screen making sure i do one complete full stroke across the screen (holding the credit card at a 45 degree angle). I immediately wash the screen out under fast flowing water and pat dry. I use fabric screen printing ink which washes out in water (which makes the process easy).

I love this product, their website is http://ezscreenprint.com/ (for full instructions and details on how to purchase this awesome product).

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