Thanks for sharing that animation, it was fascinating. So now I have a whole bunch of questions about your process How large are your images, and how on earth do you digitize them? I imagine you must have access to a large format scanner. Do the layers of paper cause artifacts you have to clean up digitally?
My sister (who also does some papercutting, though not on the same scale) would like to know what kind of paper you use. Thanks!
You're welcome Soliloquy! The cards are 24 inches tall, a little over 17 inches wide. I use Canson Bristol paper for the white and Canford papers for the black and red.
I don't own a large-format scanner, so I have the cards scanned at a local imaging company. I don't know how much digital cleaning is required, but the images are extremely high in resolution since layered paper is so crisp.
[/quote]
Since the originals are so large and are only printing at playing card size, digital artifacts probably aren't much of a problem for the imaging company. I always wondered what technique you used to get the cards digital. I always assumed you had a tripod setup to get a good overhead shot with a digital camera and edit it from there. I hope the I aging company isn't charging an arm-and-leg for the scans. They're definitely known for charging crazy amounts for large scan!
Thanks, Randy