NWD at CafePress: Beta
I have finally gotten around to opening up a Ninth Wave Designs merchandise store at CafePress.com. So many bloggers have set up CafePress stores as a way to offset the costs of blogging that I thought this would be a great way to pay the Typepad bills without adding Google advertising to the blog. I have a large backlog of original Celtic artwork available to adorn the variety of products offered by CafePress, so I have started listing items for sale with an eye toward the upcoming St. Patrick's Day holiday. I have begun with a few different images of St. Patrick himself, like the journal shown here, as a way to tie in with the festivities. I am happy to announce that the store is in what I would call the Beta stage: Fully operational, but with a number of minor tweaks and adjustments still to be made. Additionally, I will be adding loads more products to the store as the days progress towards March 17th, featuring a number of additional artwork images. Check back daily to see what is new!
I thought I would give you a little background information on the artwork featured in the NWD CP store. The images featured on the journals, mugs, tee-shirts and other products are all original Celtic designs created by yours truly, and were done primarily between 2000 and 2005. I created this artwork all by hand, without using the computer for any part of the design. Call me a Luddite, but my creative inspiration for this artwork comes from the illuminated manuscripts of early medieval Ireland, so although my technique does not replicate that historic method (no goats were skinned in the process of making my art) I still experience a connection to that time in working entirely by hand.
The images are first drawn out in pencil on graph paper and then transferred to artist quality illustration board. I ink the outlines of the artwork and then paint the design using liquid acrylic inks. My method of mixing colors for these somewhat complicated designs involves using only three primary colors of ink, intermixing them to get all the colors in the image. This helps build a strong relationship between all the colors used in the image, and eliminates much of the chances of having colors clash within the design. Some color areas of the paintings are built up with as many as 8 or more layers of colors to create the right quality for the image. The process of creating this artwork is very labor intensive, with even a small painting (5" x 7") taking me several weeks from start to finish.
Have a browse through the first items now available, and if you see something you would like to order you will also be able to enjoy helping to support the NWD blog - future posts as well as the archive of all the Moleskine related information created since July 2005. Bookmark the store and check back again soon for new items including a number of Celtic tee-shirt designs and images created from my Alchemy Notebook project. If there is a specific type of product you would like to see that is
not listed yet just let me know and I will add it to the offering. Enjoy!
In sorting through my stuff in preparation to move I have found a few odds and ends that I have added to the 














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