Things like wide
ink brayers, printer's devils and type case quoins, now oddities that turn up at garage sales.
Not exact matches
We did a bit of printing a few weeks ago and used «proper» printers
ink and a
brayer roller thingy but I guess there might be some more small child friendly options out there.
To print a woodcut, the artist covers the surface of the woodblock with
ink using a
brayer, a tool similar to a rolling pin that evenly spreads the
ink.
She uses
brayers — soft rubber rollers usually used for
inking lithographic stones, etching plates or woodblocks — roughly four inches wide to apply one color at a time in curving arcs and swirls on 18» x 24» mid-weight paper.