4/26/25

The Complete 2023, 24 & 25 INKJET PRINT PROJECTS


The Complete 
2023~24 & 2025 
Inkjet Print Project 
Published December 23, 2024; revised in January 2025, this updated blog 
project page is dedicated to all of my 2023-2024-2025 Inkjet Print Projects 

The Complete 2023-2024-2025 Inkjet Print Project
consists of the following projects:





(plus a small collection of Extra-large Rectangular Inkjet Prints)

Also included are the following Early thematic projects:

Twenty-five photographs, printed 16x20"on 20x24"paper 

Blue Angels    (A Photography Project about Death, Angels & the Blue Pearl (the blog version was revised April 2023)  Inkjet prints made in 2023 (image sizes vary from 16x20" to 18x21")

Silent Dialogues  18x18" images on 20x24" paper Inkjet prints made in 2023

18x21" images on 20"x 24" paper Inkjet prints made in February, 2024 

And finally these Recent (2025) thematic projects have been added to the Inkjet Print Project:

Time & Timelessness  February 1, 2025  All images in this thematic project were drawn from the Complete Inkjet Print Project 2023-2024-2025

The Memory of Light  March 4, 2025  All images in this thematic project were drawn from the Complete Inkjet Print Project 2023-2024-2025

Black and White Photographs   April 3, 2025  All images in this thematic project were drawn from the Complete Inkjet Print Project 2023-2024-2025

Winter's End, Winter's Stones & Plants  April 17, 2025  All images in this thematic project were drawn from the Complete Inkjet Print Project 2023-2024-2025

Introduction
I began the Inkjet Print Project in early 2023, some time after I purchased my new Epson 6000P printer.  In mid 2022 I had scheduled to have cataract eye surgeries on each of my eyes in mid, and than late January 2023.  Both eyes suffered from retinal tears which required me to put off printing for a while until I was able to come up with a way of printing despite sore, healing eyes and a condition referred to as disparity of vision.  Printing images I had never printed before was my first initiative, and that idea then just kept growing and changing once I began a more in-depth decision-making process about which of my favorite pictures I should print and their appropriate sizes. 

I decided first to make 12x12" "study" prints of everything that seemed to me worthy of being printed.  This decision had been influenced by an earlier six year project, The 1994-2000 Studies Project in which I made miniature snap-shot sized square silver-gelatin printed images from a large archive of earlier made 35mm negatives.  I loved the square format and enjoyed the process of reducing the long rectangular negatives I had made with my 35mm film camera into square images (in most cases I simply cropped out a square portion of the longer image).   After I had made over 800 12x12" square inkjet prints, and collected them in published in twelve blog projects called BooksI realized I needed to organize the work into conceptual-thematic frameworks that had recurred throughout my work including those that had been informing my work for many years preceding my creation of (this) Photography Blog (which I had initiated in late 2010) plus all the blog projects I have sine then published.  The many thematic collections, which I call 12x12" PROJECTS, have grown in number to over two dozen projects.

One of the most fascinating revelations provided by the 12x12" Inkjet Print Books & Projects
was seeing how so many of my favorite images appeared and meant different things to me when placed in so many of the different thematic PROJECTS.

When the 12x12" Books and Projects seemed to have come to an end-point, I moved on to the inevitable problem of print scale (print image size) and format (the square vs. the long, horizontal rectangle).  I will write about these issues further below.


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A little History regarding 
The Works that preceded the 12x12" Inkjet Print Project

In 2022, before the idea of an Inkjet Print Project had crystalized and I began working on the 12x12" Inkjet Print Books & PROJECTS, I had felt a strong need to make a collection of inkjet prints of selected images from my 18 Pandemic Inspired blog projects.  About a third of the way into making the prints for the project I ran into several problems: first with the inks for my old Epson printer; then in the middle of the project my poor old Epson 7600 printer died.  

I became strongly committed to getting the project completed and decided to order a new Epson 6000P printer in January, 2023.  But before I could get my new printer and set it up, I had to have my two cataract surgeries (which had been previously scheduled for mid and late January 2023) and shortly after the surgeries I experienced retinal tears in each eye, which stalled my printing project yet again.  After five surgeries I found a way of printing despite my healing eye issues.  I explain all this in more detail in my Pandemic Inkjet Print blog project: 

Twenty-five photographs, printed 16x20"on 20x24"paper  

This Pandemic inspired project (published on my blog June, 2023) had helped motivate me to initiate three other inkjet print projects which were made at about the same time in 2023 (the titles and links are immediately below), and in 2024 I made a 12x12" Project inspired by the Pandemic.

(A Photography Project about Death, Angels & the Blue Pearl (the blog version was revised April 2023) 
Inkjet prints made in 2023 (image sizes vary from 16x20" to 18x21") 

18x18" images on 20x24" paper Inkjet prints made in 2023

18x21" images on 20"x 24" paper Inkjet prints made in February, 2024 



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I have already mentioned how the 12x12" Inject Prints project grew to unexpected proportions and now consists of Twelve Books and over two dozen Thematic Projects. I have dedicated a blog page, complete with an introduction, to the 12x12" project which includes links to each of the 12x12" Books and Projects. Book One of the 12x12" project, begun in May, 2023 and revised several times, includes a lengthy introduction providing a more complete context to how the Inkjet Print Project in all its complexity came into being.

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The idea of the 12x12" formant grew out of a seven year project entitled The 1994-2000 Studies Project.   I love the square format for its ability to concentrate my vision in a straight-forward and often centered way. I had made many silver-gelatin print projects in which I used a square format camera. But especially when I changed totally over to digital photography, I made digital files that were similar to the 35mm format which I used so often when working in film and making gelatin prints. After I completed the The 1994-2000 Studies Project which involved miniaturize square photographs made form all kinds of different formatted negatives, I became comfortable and then eventually loved making square images using as a starting point the 4:3 format on my digital camera and then cropping the images down to a square. 

But of course not all of the images I have made could be successfully transformed from a 4:3 ratio to the square. Indeed many of my Meadow Series photographs, for example, refused to work as square images so I created the 16x20" Inkjet Print Project especially for the Meadow photographs that didn't work as square images. On the other hand, to my surprise, many of the Meadow images worked quite well as squares, and both truly benefitted from a larger sized image size. The 18x18" Inkjet Print Project and the 21x21" Inkjet Print Project were the most recently created projects for those images that seemed to need the larger scale as print images. It was my favorite size, and worked so well for both the straight photographs and the symmetrical photographs I end up with 250 images on the 18x18" blog page. It was an overwhelming display of images with many different conceptual and thematic ideas displayed all together that in August 2025 I felt it necessary to change the way I presented the works as a blog project. Now, as you may have already seen, the 250 prints have been presented under twelve separate titled blog pages (visit the Revised 18x18" Inkjet Print Project).

I had began making the meadow photographs in 2010 shortly after my wife Gloria and I moved to Canandaigua, NY in 2008 (after my retirement from teaching at UW-Milwaukee). The Meadow was one of my earliest projects I published on my blog (which I initiated in November, 2010). All of the meadow images published in that original blog project were presented in their long rectangular format. Later, after working through many of the 12x12" inkjet print Books and Projects, I felt inspired to try printing some of the meadow images as square photographs and was thrilled with the results.

A similar thing happened with my Symmetrical Photographs. They were originally presented on my blog as longer formatted images, mostly because the images I used for the symmetrical constructions were in the 4:3 format. But I had always thought of the symmetrical images as essentially "round" or "circular" images. Finally, I realized there was no reason not to transform the original version of the symmetrical images into square inkjet prints, and in the two larger sizes: both 18x18" and 21x21" images.

Many of the 12x12" prints are perfect in the size and format they are in. However, in the last several months of 2024 I have been having a wonderful time making larger sized prints of some of my most favorite images that seemed ineffective in the smaller 12x12" format. The larger scale prints have yielded some very power revealing images in their different various large sized formats, 16x20" and the square 18x18" and 21x21" formats. I have organized the newly made larger prints according to image size and image format, as you will see below.

In late 2024 and early 2025 through August 2025 I have produced some very good new work and have focused my energy on making more and more of the LARGER prints. There have been many images which have truly benefitted from the larger print scale which--by the way--includes the tonal matte that surrounds the actual image itself. The tonal surrounding matts (they vary in width depending on the image) are an integral part of the image in all of the 12x12" 16x20" and 21x21" print sizes.

The project links that follow provide an online document--or visual Archive--of every inkjet printed image I have made in all the various sizes and formats.


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TO SUMMARIZE:

consists of the following projects:





(plus a small collection of Extra-large Rectangular Inkjet Prints)

Also included are the following Early thematic projects:

Twenty-five photographs, printed 16x20"on 20x24"paper 

Blue Angels    (A Photography Project about Death, Angels & the Blue Pearl (the blog version was revised April 2023)  Inkjet prints made in 2023 (image sizes vary from 16x20" to 18x21")

Silent Dialogues  18x18" images on 20x24" paper Inkjet prints made in 2023

18x21" images on 20"x 24" paper Inkjet prints made in February, 2024 

And finally these Recent (2025) thematic projects have been added to the Inkjet Print Project:

Time & Timelessness  February 1, 2025  All images in this thematic project were drawn from the Complete Inkjet Print Project 2023-2024-2025

The Memory of Light  March 4, 2025  All images in this thematic project were drawn from the Complete Inkjet Print Project 2023-2024-2025

Black and White Photographs   April 3, 2025  All images in this thematic project were drawn from the Complete Inkjet Print Project 2023-2024-2025

Winter's End, Winter's Stones & Plants  April 17, 2025  All images in this thematic project were drawn from the Complete Inkjet Print Project 2023-2024-2025

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Regarding viewing my blog published images:
There is in varying degrees a difference between the actual print I have made and the way it looks published in my blow.  I am very concerned that you see my blog images in the highest quality reproductions possible on your computer.  If you are viewing my blog projects on a Desktop or Laptop computer I encourage you to look over the following statement below--which I have included in most of my blog projects over the last two years:  

A brief note about "How to Best View My Online Blog Images" 
If you are viewing this project on a desktop computer or a laptop, I encourage you to read my blog explanation regarding How to Best View My Online Blog Images.  In brief, click on an image once, then once again; this will (hopefully) enlarge the image and present it in a dark tonal environment at its maximum viewing quality in terms of image sharpness, luminance, tonal gradations, etc.  Once you have entered this alternate viewing space you can then use your zoom-in & zoom-out keyboard or menu options to adjust the image size to your screen, and you can darken or lighten your computer's screen brightness to suit your equipment and viewing preferences. 
 


Additional Related Blog Project Links
     

Please visit the Welcome Page to my blog The Departing Landscape.  It includes the complete hyperlinked listing of my online photography projects dating from the most recent to those dating back to the 1960's.  You will also find on the Welcome Page my several Introductory statements, my resume, contact information . . . and much more.























4/17/25

Winter's End, Winter's Stones & Meadow Plants




Winter's End ~ Winter's Stones 
 & Winter's Meadow Plants
Photographs Made in February & March 2025

The photographs in this brief project are self-explanatory in the way 
that they describe the ever-changing and yet beautiful light, color
and temperature-atmospheric affects.  ~  On the ground level
we have several raised beds for growing mostly vegetables
herbs and flowers.  When we close them down for the
winter I place stones on the edges of the beds and 
 then watch they changes they undergo throughout 
the winter months. The stones become animated 
creatures at times for me.   In the first image their 
little heads seem to be emerging from the snow 
 to enjoy the transforming power of the snow and fog. 


All of the images were drawn from my 18x18" Inkjet Print Project 

Winter's End & Winter's Stones
Image #1 18x18" Square Inkjet Prints
(on 20x24"base) (February 2025)
Bird Bath full with snow and ice, an early winter morning

Winter's End & Winter's Stones
Image #2 18x18" Square Inkjet Prints
(on 20x24"base) (February 2025)

Soft warm light on the cold winter scene--with tilted bird feeder pole--just below our picture window 

Winter's End & Winter's Stones
Image #3 18x18" Square Inkjet Prints
(on 20x24"base)
(March 2025)
Sunset in late winter over the south meadow and pond with fragments of the last snow drifts

When I place the stones on the edges of the beds before winter sets in, 
I also cover our deck table, and a cart (with wheels) with waterproof  
tarps.  I place stones on the tarps to help hold them in place for
those winter days and nights when the winds blow frighteningly 
fast over our deck which is twelve feet above the ground.
The stones also serve as "still life" objects.

Regarding Image #3 above, I took the picture at sunset on a very cold day thinking of how
the fragments of snow drifts resemble the stones that I placed at the base of the tarp 
 covering our round deck table--as shown in the photograph below.  The vertical   
shadows overlaying the image (which look like jail bars*) were created by 
the deck's surrounding wooden railings. 

(*Note: the reference to "jail bars" is related to how I see Trump's debilitating 
and illegal "Executive Actions" he has been creating in an attempt to
destroy the freedoms associated with our great American
experiment: DEMOCRACY.

Winter's End & Winter's Stones
Image #3 18x18" Square Inkjet Prints
(on 20x24"base)
(March 2025)
Warm sunsetting winter light & shadows on our tarp-covered round deck table anchored with stones & rope

Winter's End & Winter's Stones
Image #4 18x18" Square Inkjet Prints
(on 20x24"base)
(March 2025)
Blue-green stone in tarp-covered cart puddle with rain circles

The image above initiates a series of six "portraits" of the same one
stone presented in varying changes of light, weather and points-of view.

Winter's End & Winter's Stones
Image #5 18x18" Square Inkjet Prints
(on 20x24"base)
(March 2025)
Snow-covered stone and tarp 

Winter's End & Winter's Stones
Image #6 18x18" Square Inkjet Prints
(on 20x24"base)
(March 2025)
Cold (blue) spring morning with frozen rain on the stone & tarp-covered cart

Winter's End & Winter's Stones
Image #7 18x18" Square Inkjet Prints (on 20x24"base) (March 2025)
Stone in iced water on the tarp-covered deck cart

Winter's End & Winter's Stones
Image #8 18x18" Square Inkjet Prints
(on 20x24"base)
(March 2025)
Soft cloud-covered light, on a warm windy spring-like day, unveiling the stone again & parts of the tarp

Winter's End & Winter's Stones
Image #9 18x18" Square Inkjet Print
(on 20x24"base)
(March 2025)
Warm sun-setting winter's-end light on the stone (and its reflection) which has 
become an animal crouching in a puddle on our tarp-covered cart

Winter's End & Winter's Stones
Image #10 18x18" Square Inkjet Print
(on 20x24"base)
(March 2025)
Warm light on the stone in water with reflections of its surroundings and several gold-like parts of the tarp  


*
~  Epilogue  ~

Winter's Meadow Plants
Nine "Snow Drawings"

Image #11 Winter's End & Winter's Meadow Plants 12x12 Square Inkjet Print
Snow Drawing, Meadow bush with light blue snow


Image #12 Winter's End & Winter's Plants 12x12 Square Inkjet Print
Snow Drawing, Red-Thorned Twig

Image #13 Winter's End & Winter's Meadow Plants 12x12 Square Inkjet Print
Snow Drawing: Meadow plants

Image #14 Winter's End & Winter's Meadow Plants 12x12 Square Inkjet Print
Snow Drawing: Windblown Meadow Plants in snow

Image #15 Winter's End & Winter's Meadow Plants 12x12 Square Inkjet Print
Snow Drawing: Dancing Meadow Plants in the snow

Image #16 Winter's End & Winter's Meadow Plants 12x12 Square Inkjet Print
Snow Drawing Arched Meadow plant in snow

Image #17 Winter's End & Winter's Meadow Plants 12x12 Square Inkjet Print
Snow Drawing: Windblown plant stems in snow (with two eyes) 

Image #18 Winter's End & Winter's Meadow Plants 12x12 Square Inkjet Print
Snow Drawing: Face with two eyes, a nose and an admiring couple 

Image #19 Winter's End & Winter's Meadow Plants 12x12 Square Inkjet Print
Snow Drawing: A line of snow-covered stones on a raised garden bed








This project was posted on my blog's Welcome Page
April 17, 2025
(The Epilogue was added April 26, 2025)


Related Blog Project Links

Time & Timlessness  A Thematic Project from The Complete 2023, 24 & 2025 Inkjet Print Project

Things In Their Place  A 12x12" Thematic PROJECT

Published December 2023, 2024 & 2025;  this is a revised and updated blog project page dedicated to all of my recent Inkjet Print Projects.  The link (above) includes the following 21x21, 18x18, 16x20 & 12x12" collections of inkjet prints and more




This link includes all of the 12x12" Books and Thematic PROJECTS




(Note: if you are new to my blog projects, and are viewing this project with a laptop or desktop computer, I encourage you to read the following statement about how to best view my online blog-published photographs.  If you would like additional information of this technical subject you may want to click on the link I've provided below.)  

A brief note about how to best view my online published blog images 
In brief: if you are viewing this blog project on a desktop or laptop computer, click on each image once, then once again; this will (hopefully) enlarge the image and present it in a dark tonal environment at its maximum viewing quality possible online.  Once you have entered this alternate viewing space you can then use your zoom-in & zoom-out keyboard (or menu) options to adjust the image size; and you can darken or lighten your computer's screen brightness to suit your equipment and viewing preferences.   If clicking on the image fails to take you to the alternate viewing mode, and you would like additional technical information and suggestions, I invite you to read my blog published article: More about how to Best View My Online Blog Images.  


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Please visit the Welcome Page to my blog The Departing Landscape.  It includes the complete hyperlinked listing of my online photography projects dating from the most recent to those dating back to the 1960's.  You will also find on the Welcome Page my resume, contact information . . . and much more.














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