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Sugar Lift Process

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
76 views3 pages

Sugar Lift Process

Uploaded by

mboichinikerana
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

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Sugar Lift Process:

Sugarlift Using Ball Hardground:

Ball hardground, because it’s thin and delicate, works very well for a process
known as sugarlift. Sugarlift is a means of controlling value through aquatint
while controlling shape through brush marks. Picasso’s Satyr Unveiling
Sleeping Woman (1936) is a superb example of sugarlift etchings. The image
has one scraped and burnished correction, but the majority of the tones are
controlled by exuberant use of the brush. Other artists who have produced
notable work in sugarlift include: George Roualt and Misch Kohn.

Like other etching processes, the first step in sugarlift is degreasing the plate.
You immediately have 2 choices. You can aquatint the plate first or you can
aquatint the plate last. For purposes of simplicity, we will aquatint last.

Step one:
After the plate has been degreased, the artist paints on it with a solution of
simple sugar and India ink. Depending on the consistency, this solution might
tend to pull apart itself creating bubbles, or it might be more faithful to the
brush stroke. The material may pull back on itself changing the shape after
the brush has passed or, if it’s thicker, it will register a repair of the brush.
The drawing can be manipulated with rags and water.
Nothing has happened to the late in terms of texture or printing at this point.
When a satisfactory drawing has been completed, the plate is allowed to dry
or is moved to a hotplate set at 250 degrees.

(The plate on which the image is being formed is sometimes well served by
having a second plate next to it. The second plate allows the printer to warm
the braer, or small roller, with which he’s going to coat the plate with ball
hardground.)

Step 2:
Within a short time the sugarlift is sure to be dry and ball hardground needs
to be rolled over it. The ball hardground acts as a lubricant when the roller
passes over the sugarlift. To start applying ball hardground, one may draw on
the plate with the melting hardground or draw on the extra plate which has
been added next to the first. Ideally, the roller is warm and the ground is
highly liquid due to heat. The intention is to cover the plate with that thin
amber ball hardground layer that is used for needling. Once again the plate
needs to be smoked. The layer of soot will turn the plate black and make it
more acid resistant. The coated plate is removed from the hotplate and placed
in a tray of cold water.
Patience at this point will reward the artist with greater detail. The artist
should allow the sugarlift to sit in water and gradually soften. The sugar lift
technique described above, in spite of its complexity, appears spontaneous
when printed.

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Step 3:
After soaking for a minimum of ten minutes, the artist may hurry the process
by lightly stroking the surface with his or her fingers or a feather.

Step 4:
The plate is then aquatinted and etched.

Variations on lift grounds:

Solvent and Talc Lift

Another lift technique can be executed with asphaltum. After the asphaltum
has been baked, it is laid on a flat surface. The artist mixes a creamy solution
of talcum powder and mineral spirits. This creamy material is laid on the
asphaltum with a brush and allowed to sit for 2 or 3 minutes.
At that point a cotton ball or other very soft absorbent material is soaked in
alcohol and lightly passed over the asphaltum lifting the brush marks. Open
areas created through this technique sometimes retain a thin film of resist
which can be cleaned from the plate by a minute or two in the acid. Like
other liftgrounds, the plate is aquatinted at this point and the tone created.

The processes described above can be applied after an aquatint resulting in a


softness and irregularity which may be desirable.

Rubber Cement

We’ve all had the experience of rubbing rubber cement off of a smooth
surface. You can draw with rubber cement. The drawn plate can then be
sprayed with enamel or lacquer. Once that’s dry, one can rub the rubber
cement from the plate.

Object Lift - Stencil Lift

If the acid resist is sprayed onto the plate, all sorts of variations can be
created. Objects can be placed on the plate. The spray simply doesn’t reach
the plate and the area covered is able to bite.

Crayon Lift

Lithographic crayons or other soaplike products one can be used to draw an


image. The litho crayons melt at a lower temperature than ball hardground.
By using one pass of the roller to apply ball hardground a transfer will occur.
The crayon sticks to the roller and lifts, creating a crude crayon like passage
that will etch.

Powdered Sugar

Still another interesting way to create an image is the use of powdered sugar.
The melting temperature of sugar is far higher than asphaltum or ball
hardground. So whether one uses a bag to sprinkle it on the plate or simply

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throws it on the plate, the sugar must be melted using the hot ring. Once
melted, the plate can be coated with ball hardground, placed in the tray, and
the sugar will be dissolved in water. The resulting tone is, in fact, a negative
aquatint; that is, there are thousands of holes in the ground rather than beads
of resist. This ground can be developed slowly through multiple repetitions to
create a dark area. A process with a similar appearance is called saltground.
Saltground employs ball hardground and salt. Any material that has weight
and can be dissolved in water will function for this process. The artist first
lays a ball hardground and while the plate is still hot – so hot that the ground
is liquid – the artist proceeds to sprinkle the plate with salt or some other
water soluble powder. Because the ground is extremely soft, the particulate
material will drop through the liquid ground to the surface. The plate is then
submerged in water and the particulate is dissolved. Again, the result is
thousands upon thousands of holes which etch rather than valleys of between
dots of resist. The resulting darks from either powdered sugar or salt require
multiple applications but they have a great deal of depth to them.

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