My black vulture linocut print. I saw black vultures for the first time when I was visiting friends in Austin, Texas. Two of them just posted up on the sidewalk a few feet away us. It was also the first time I’d seen vultures so close!
A special little something for a special big someone made on my smaller Line-O-Scribe. I didn't have quite enough of the font to do the whole thing in one go, so I had to set type for one half, print that, and then print the other half. Worked out well enough!
Copy is abridged lyrics from the song Bedroom Eyes by The Knocks.
I also sewed a little envelope out of mulberry paper:
Some older links have been getting shared, I had to take down my shop temporarily and I just put it up. And as a bonus all my stickers are currently $2.50 CAD as I will be changing how I print them soon so all the older ones need to be cleared out.
In addition, until January 18th, you can enter the code PENDULUM10 at checkout for an additional %10 off of the shop or use this link
My donations tab is also open if anybody wishes, the hope is that I'll receive enough purchases to afford the needles for testoterone so everything helps! Happy new year!
Another way of looking at the Minotaur, it’s always gendered as male so I wanted to make a female version of the Minotaur. Started as a simple sketch into a scene.
I have these available for purchase too for $20 each, message me if you wanna grab one!
Nyx's Favor was a divine labor of love from start to finish, with The Crane Wives in my ears and vaguely unfamiliar carving tools in my hands. This is my first year participating in Steamroller Fest, and I was honored to be invited as a spotlight artist for the upcoming gallery show alongside the festival.
The story of this piece lies with the two depicted characters-- Nyx, goddess of night, descending to grant her favor upon a most cherished devotee. The moon wanes as her inky blackness drapes the land and blankets the light. It's a story of opposites-- darkness and light, goddess and mortal, perfect and imperfect.
(If you're tempted to ask how many hours this took, just know the process pictures in the collages on this post were each taken at the end of a workday... so the time spent started to blur together pretty quickly, ha!)