Yes, serigraph is the technical term. I do not use any photographic process ... no photo emulsion on the screen. I first used a brayer to roll screen block onto a leaf and then pressed the coated leaf onto the screen. I removed the leaf and let the screen block dry. Then I used Prussian blue pigment dispersion in wall paper paste as the ink to print the screen onto paper. Again, there was no photo emulsion used at any step.
Ah, okay. Thanks. For some reason, when I said, "put the object onto the frame to expose it to get the pattern", I didn't consider it a photographic process. :) Oops. Haha. Thank you for the clarification. That's a neat process. If you have a link to a closeup of the image you had made, I'd love to see it. Take care.
Ah, thank you. I think I may have understood what you wrote there, but I do have a question about the process. If I am correct, the "hand pulled screen print" is a serigraph, as seen in this video, here, by the youtube user, Beaharm (video title: Making a Hand Pulled Serigraph (Silkcreen Printing) )? /watch?v=erbn7Y5t-ig Regarding the nature print, I'm thinking you put the object onto the frame to expose it to get the pattern? Can serigraphs have natural gradations, without crosshatching?
I just use a cardboard box full of books and tape it up, i can shoot any of my high powered .22 /.177 rifles or pistols at it with no problem or impact sound, cost 0 dollars to make easy to rebuild and plenty big enough for the targets you can buy or print off yourself. Love the beard, hope all is well and thanks for the video.