Make+Take: Reverse Screenprinting on Plexiglass
May 7 @ 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
$45.00Let’s Make+Take!
Thursday, May 7, 7-9pm
View our current in-studio Health and Safety and Cancellation Policies >>
About this Workshop:
Join us for this experimental Make+Take where you will have the opportunity to explore screenprinting photos, imagery, and text on plexiglass. We will play with layering, using both sides of plexi, “printing in reverse,” and the interplay of opacity and transparency. Skills learned: overview of how to coat and burn a screen, how to print a reverse image, print on plexiglass, and how to register your prints.
Level: Beginner – no previous experience necessary
Registration closes April 30, 2026 and all materials are provided.
Photographs of student work by Carol-Ann McFarlane
CLASS MATERIALS LIST:
Registration includes all materials—just come ready to have fun! In addition, you may want to bring the following items for class:
- (optional) Personal apron (we’ll have extras) and/or wear clothes that can get inky
- (optional) Notepad or sketchbook for taking notes
MEET YOUR INSTRUCTOR:
Josh Kery is an interdisciplinary artist working in screenprint, textiles, and code, with a background in Fine Arts and Human Computer Interaction. He has exhibited solo at the Frame Gallery in Pittsburgh, exhibited collaboratively at MuseumLab and the Fabric Workshop and Museum, and performed at the Pennsylvania Center for Women in Politics and the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill’s Process Series. Josh earned his BFA from Carnegie Mellon University in 2020. Raised in Boston, he currently lives in Washington, DC, where he works as a freelance designer, developer and content manager, frequently for Richard Lewis Media Group and Remake Learning Days. Learn more about his work at joshuakery.com.
WHAT PARTICIPANTS ARE SAYING:
“I’ve always been interested in screen-printing and this was a great, low-key introduction to it.”
“The class was great and stress free. We had enough space and everything was ready and prepped. Was great to finish a project in good time without feeling under pressure.” (Fall 2024)





