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LSD blotter art appreciation thread.

I appreciate the nostalgia, but let's try and focus on the blotter art rather than epic batches of acid throughout history (which has little to do with the art really, a purple ohm sign is hardly a piece of art ;) )... the reason being that this would quickly devolve into a thread about batches when we spread that topic over regional forums and not actually in PD!. Some batches may have been consistent for a while and spread worldwide - a huge batch with huge distribution or repeatedly the same iteration... but that is overshadowed by all the blotter designs found with batches that are definitely NOT reliably the same batch/quality over time, or even globally found.

So no criticism but a reminder to keep on topic. :) The purple ohm thing is fine, even mentioning that you loved them but, don't discuss batches instead of art - and preferably stick to the art alone. THNX <3
 
a purple ohm sign is hardly a piece of art ;)

If one chooses to look at it as art, then that's what it is. ;)

While there are definitely some beautiful sheets posted in this thread, I have to say that I really like the idea of a selfcontained image on each tab, not for easy identification but on a purely aesthetic level. The classic blotter art is really only appreciated by people dealing with larger quantities, while the endconsumer normally is just looking at a few tabs and I feel if anyone should be able to appreciate the 'art' it is the person who is consuming the LSD.

This one is very nice I think, though I can totally understand when people say "That's not really art."

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I think you missed the point :D I didn't judge it as 'not art', I was seriously doubting that the ohm art itself was the reason for putting it in the spotlight, rather than the reputation of the batch having that art.
Which as I explained is actually quite a different sentiment than "Blotter art appreciation" (it's batch appreciation), and also not a PD topic.

Hehe I've not taken the religious symbol blotter myself that you posted (though I took a bunk € sign blotter once as my very first time - and economy is a form of religion and it's ironic that it was bunk - bankrupt ;p ), but I've been aware of it for some time.

Doesn't seem completely fair that when you are offered one single hit off that sheet you are forced to have a random religion, but then again being born randomly in the world can mean that you are raised with a random religion, lol. And it's funny that all of them lead to the same 'Way'.

Oh... there's also Wingdings on there - I have no clue what Comic Sans worshipping cult that refers to? :|

By the way, tangent thought: I think it's funny that if it's probable that there is extraterrestrial life, why would people who believe in reincarnation think that they would reincarnate on earth? ;p

Anyway it doesn't have to be a Van Gogh painting on blotter art, it just has to be appreciated for whatever ink is on the paper, not what drug is in the paper. ;) in this thread i mean

This one is beautiful:

mattmanson2_web.jpg


And it's funny if someone only gets a 2x2 square with a reverse swastika not knowing the difference.. ;)

Also yes to Bowie tributes, and any Alex grey art.

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these are the only 'acid' blotters i've ever taken. had a strong nasty chemical taste.

majority of the acid tabs i've acquired and tested positive were blank. just white.

i really like the original colours to the hoffman one tho. wish i can find some soon.

i've found transparent which was also pretty cool. i also found a cool but pretty basic one that had a small smiley face but it tested +ve for a DOx iirc
 
I think you missed the point :D I didn't judge it as 'not art', I was seriously doubting that the ohm art itself was the reason for putting it in the spotlight, rather than the reputation of the batch having that art.
Which as I explained is actually quite a different sentiment than "Blotter art appreciation" (it's batch appreciation), and also not a PD topic.

Yeah ok, looking at consumer's posts again you're probably right. The "that's not art" thing is just a pet peeve of mine.


Hehe I've not taken the religious symbol blotter myself that you posted (though I took a bunk € sign blotter once as my very first time - and economy is a form of religion and it's ironic that it was bunk - bankrupt ;p ), but I've been aware of it for some time.

Doesn't seem completely fair that when you are offered one single hit off that sheet you are forced to have a random religion, but then again being born randomly in the world can mean that you are raised with a random religion, lol. And it's funny that all of them lead to the same 'Way'.

Oh... there's also Wingdings on there - I have no clue what Comic Sans worshipping cult that refers to? :|

It is really quite a strange collection of religious and mundane symbols. The main reason I like it was the thought that whatever you associate with a certain symbol, it will probably have a whole new meaning, if not several, after your trip. But I never had that one either, in fact the one time I took LSD the art was as unidentifiable as the one my3rdeye posted. I'm more a mushrooms kind of guy :D.
 
I have decided a new lifes goal... lay my own rick and morty blotters to spread the gospel of that show around in the distant future. I love that show and will now seek out what it takes to make there be one type of layed blotter artwork available... I am so sick of white on white 8 years ago i got my first white piece of paper, before that it was all blotter, now its all white on white.
 
@tokezu: haha, well mushrooms are pieces of art themselves, fresh :D

@szuko: yeah its my absolutely favorite, too... that cosmic absurdism is just the best!

@post before that: Eh transparent as in plain white (WoW) ? Or transparent as in the pill in 'Limitless' ?

You must mean the former, as I think any microscopic structure 'designed' in a material to absorb, like blotter will fuck up any chance of the material being truly transparent (see through). Just a thought. Any pores that will absorb will also diffract light.

Had plenty of 'original color' hofmanns but with different 'anno' / year printed, varying from 35 to 150 ug - (microgrammage is easily lab tested for free in my country).
Had the 'lick' rolling stones but with the big image and black background - no small pictograms.

I don't actually have the tibetan unit ;p I wish...

I want custom blotter with this (I have a print from the artist of this), it says 'life is meaningless'.:
:) :) goosebumps...

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I'm new on BL and I tried unsuccesfully to insert an image in one of my post today, also I couldn"t edit that post. Awnser me trough private message if you don't want to break the thread flow. Help me please! Tanx
 
@ Mad Hatter: yes we all notice the similarity :) But what seals the deal is details like I already mentioned: the blotter on his hat is a wink to the [ 10 / 6 ] card the mad hatter has on his hat which is like an old school hatters price tag. None of that for Willy Wonka.
Another thing is the clock: it's the clock the white rabbit is so frenzied about, and it's showing the impossible hour 13, it being wonderlandish and the matter being mad.

But yeah thanks for showing us that striking similarity, cannot be unseen..

On the other hand, they are very different in character..

fyi Mad hatter's disease is most likely insanity as a result of mercury poisoning since apparently hatters used a lot of amalgam containing it..

I imagine Michael Jackson had his fair share of Willy Wonka fantasy trips...
 
^ that's a good summation, Solipsis - it's the Mad Hatter for sure.

It's been a long, long time since i read Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and i can't remember if the way Willy Wonka is depicted in the film is true to the way he is described in the book?
Either way, the Mad Hatter (and Alice in Wonderland imagery generally) fits into a lot of psychedelic imagery (and turns up all through the culture..."white rabbit" comes immediately to mind). The surrealism fits perfectly - even if the drugs themselves weren't part of Lewis Carroll's personal experience.
In many ways, i suppose much of the same could be said about Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
Finding mythically good tabs can feel to some of us like locating the Golden Ticket!

One thing i sometimes wonder is the origin of some blotter art.
Are any of the designers known or credited with creating the more notable designs? Some of them are incredibly well designed motifs.

The one that stands out to me more than many others is the Hoffmann bicycle tabs.
Does anyone know any sort of background on these? It is such an impressive design. Do we know when these tabs (or that design) first started circulating? 1990s - or later?
I get the feeling that whoever created that print must have an accomplished portfolio - and likely a recognisable style.
Thoughts?
 
well, pretty sure this mcCloud is also the Bike Ride designer..

courtesy of Ken Kesey said:
LSD Blotter Art
by Thomas Lyttle

THE EARLY DAYS

Early on in the underground trade of illegal LSD, it was distributed in pills or capsules, or sometimes dropped onto sugar cubes. Around 1970, LSD first began to appear on sheets of perforated blotter paper. This trend has continued, and even today, most street LSD is still distributed on perforated or unperforated blotter paper, often covered with logos or art, and sometimes sold under "brand names." In the past, blotter art was printed fairly secretively, with underground producers perforating it using hand-cranked machines, feeding in a single sheet and cutting it in one direction at a time, before flipping the sheet 90 degrees to crank the completing set of perf lines. These days, the art is usually printed via the four-color separation process. One blotter art producer recently even went so far to print his design on a hemp-blend paper with soy-based edible inks. Perforations for blotter are nowadays primarily done by professionals in the print industry via automated die-cutting machines.

As LSD entered our cultural consciousness, it affected a generation of artists. In the late 1960s, "fantastic realist" painters like Mati Klarwein and Robert Venosa were heavily influenced by LSD. The album cover art that they produced for Santana's Abraxas reflected this new style. (This cover later appeared in miniature on LSD blotter art.) In San Francisco, underground comic and rock-and-roll poster artists like R. Crumb and Stanley Mouse soon saw their images appropriated for use on LSD art, which featured the likes of "Mr. Natural" and "Flying Eyeballs." In more recent years, work from contemporary psychedelic artists has also appeared on blotter, such as "Carbon Jesus" (aka "Purple Jesus") by Alex Grey, "Lucifer" by Reverend Samuel, and "Tribute to Preston Blair" by Frank Kozik.

Eventually, satirical blotter art started showing up; one sheet depicted the "FBI Emblems," while another featured the mug of former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev-the popular "Gorby" acid. Every variety of pop art and ideology became fair game, as LSD blotter art spread like wild fire. LSD is a powerful spiritual experi- ence for many, and for some this experience has political overtones. It also seems to enhance the creative process. Occult or religious symbols, moire patterns, and fractal designs have been exploited on blotter art. Examples include: "Chinese Dragons," "Pentagrams," "Tetragammatons," "Eye of Horus," "Knights of Malta Crests," and so on. But one of the most consistently popular inspirations for blotter imagery has remained the lowly comic or animated character. Over the years, examples of appropriated cartoons have included Otto Messmer's "Felix the Cat" and Walt Disney's "Goofy" and "Mickey Mouse Sorcerer's Apprentice," as well as the more contemporary "Beavis and Butt-head," "Bart Simpson," and "South Park."

FROM THE STREETS TO SOHO

The original collector and scene maker of blotter art is Mark McCloud, a San Francisco artist and former art professor. McCloud's collection covered everything from the late 1970s up to today: several hundred types of LSD blotter art. In the early days this art could only be obtained with LSD already on it. He bought these sheets, matted and framed them, and hung them like fine art. Ironically, it was initially quite difficult for McCloud to collect the undipped (and hence legal) sheets of art, making him both an art collector and a potential outlaw due to his interest in this unique form of folk art. But soon McCloud began to produce his own images- as well as make connections to other such artists in the community-and the bulk of his collection shifted to completely legal, undipped blotter. (The older pieces from his collection have been purposefully exposed to ultravio- let light, to destroy any LSD that might have been on them.) McCloud promoted his collection at galleries, and he won second place at the 1987 San Francisco County Fair for his "unusual but timely" art exhibition. National Public Radio gave McCloud exposure, and he won grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, and others.

The year 2000 saw McCloud busted by the federal government for "conspiracy to manufacture and distribute LSD." In a highly-publicized trial, the DEA claimed that he was supplying chemists and wholesalers with perforated sheets of undipped blotter art, as 30,000 of these had been found in his possession. This was the second such arrest for McCloud-having been busted on similar charges in 1992- and in 2001 he obtained his second acquittal. It is estimated that McCloud spent over half a million dollars on his defense, and the prosecution spent unknown amounts of money on a year-long stake out of his home-based businesses.

McCloud, along with New England art and antiquities dealer Adam Stanhope, has recently published a key piece of the prosecution's evidence from his trial: a large binder filled with a collection of blotter obtained from busts across the United States spanning the ten years previous to his arrest, compared side-by-side to art that was seized from McCloud's home. The Bust Book acts as a history of the art of blotter as compiled by the federal government, making it a unique offering in the world of art. It is only available in a limited edition of 250 numbered and autographed copies for $500, or a special edition of 10 that also include an actual sample of the vintage (undipped) "Eye of Horus" blotter art-the oldest piece of blotter art still in existence-for $1000.

SIGNATURE PIECES

Back when I was publishing my journal Psychedelic Monographs and Essays, a friend introduced me to Mark McCloud. With Mark's encouragement, I started my own collection of undipped blotter art. After I had been collecting for a while, I had an idea. I approached psyche- delic luminaries, like Albert Hofmann, Timothy Leary, Ken Kesey, John Lilly, Robert Anton Wilson, Laura Huxley, Alexander Shulgin, and many others, and asked them to sign limited edition, hand-numbered blotter art prints. These then were matted and framed per museum display specs, and sold to galleries, art catalogs, nostalgia buffs, autograph stores, and 1960s memorabilia brokers. This was the beginning of what has been termed "vanity" blotter art. That is, blotter art which has been produced solely for art's sake as a collectible, and which was never intended to be dipped with any drugs. Indeed, in rare cases, including a signature on these pieces made them more valuable to collectors than if they had been dipped with LSD and sold on the streets. (Autographed vanity blotter art has been advertised for prices ranging from $65 to $4000!) Soon I was making decent money from the sale of my autographed blotter art, and in a few years was actually able to quit my job working as a chef, which I had done for 25 years. I spent more time at home, pursuing my true loves of art, writing, and research. One of the first projects I collaborated on with Mark McCloud and Robert Demarest was getting Timothy Leary to sign some of our undipped blotter art. As the figurehead for the LSD movement, Leary was even more famous than the man who discovered LSD himself, Albert Hofmann. Through Leary's archivist Michael Horowitz (who I was doing book business with), I contacted Tim and was pleased to hear that he agreed wholeheartedly with my idea of creating signed blotter. The first sheets he signed were called "Roses," featuring art produced by Stanley Mouse and Anton Kelley, well known to Grateful Dead fans. All 250 of the "Roses" sold out in less than a month!

The original collector and scene maker of blotter art
is Mark McCloud, a San Francisco artist and former art professor.
We then contacted Albert Hofmann in Switzerland, and in 1994 he signed about 15 "Knights of Malta Shields" blotter art sheets. We sent a few of these "Shields" sheets to Tim Leary, and he included his signature alongside Albert Hofmann's-a powerful artistic statement to be sure. [Editors note: Those pieces with autographs from both Leary and Hofmann have sold for the highest prices to motivated collectors.]

The blotter that I've produced has appeared in art catalogs such as ArtRock, Key-Z Productions, and Vroom. Through third-party brokers, my blotter appears all over the world, in rare book catalogs like Flashback Books and Red Snapper. The major auction houses Christie's and Harrods UK have even taken an interest, and my autographed blotter designs continue to increase in worth and collectibility. I've even sold blotter art to police depart- ments, drug counselors, DEA officials, and universities. It's somewhat surreal to see law enforcement agents buy my blotter art for display in their offices.

Timothy Leary signed many sheets of blotter; by doing so he helped to raise LSD's image into the world of fine art. The very week of his death, Leary was signing blotter art sheets for myself and others-Ram Dass was even sitting next to him during one such signing. More recently I contracted with porn star/director/sex educator Annie Sprinkle, PhD, to do a limited edition of "t!t prints:" her breasts were dipped in paints and pressed onto blotter art sheets, which were then autographed. A 2002 project included a new blotter image, this time in collaboration with digital art guru Laurence Gartel, featuring his cybernetic Fetish imagery.

Finally, blotter art has come "full circle" in recent years,
acting as a fantastic support vehicle for the psychedelic community.
Signed and unsigned "vanity" blotter art is now available from many web sites, as well as half-a-dozen other sites. E-Bay regularly holds 50 to 75 "live" auctions where legitimate dealers and those interested in collecting converge. Art galleries around the world, such as Luna Star Cafe (Miami), the Fuse (NYC), and Galerie Macabre (Fort Lauderdale) regularly showcase blotter art. Blotter art collecting has gotten so popular that counterfeiting occasionally occurs. For example, images from Mark McCloud's original underground collection, such as "Red Lightning Bolts" and "Japanese Crests," have been unethically reprinted. H.R. Giger's "Illuminatus I," a signed and numbered limited edition blotter art that was originally produced by myself in cooperation with Giger and his agent Leslie Barany, has been counterfeited; fakes of poor quality were sold at Phish and Other Ones concerts, as well as being hocked on E-Bay. Another potentially questionable approach taken by many underground blotter art producers is the appropriation of images from famous contemporary artists, such as Alex Grey, with- out paying royalties. Underground blotter producers may justify borrowing the imagery that appears on their work, due to a concern that they don't want to implicate the artist by directly involving him or her in the process. And, they themselves quite reasonably wish to remain anonymous. Producers of vanity blotter have a harder time defending such an approach, now that this form of folk art is an above-ground cottage industry. Aside from Mark McCloud's two busts, the legal issues surrounding blotter art have mostly been minimal. I recently went to British Columbia carrying about 50 sheets of signed and unsigned blotter art, and I was stopped by Customs. They immediately knew what it was (or what it was supposed to be). After a lecture that lasted about an hour-one of my funniest-a crowd of Customs officials were drawn into the conversation. They eventually recognized that this was only art, albeit controversial and creative. They seemed amused enough, but at no time did they make any tests or remove anything from my collection for review. I walked right into B.C., Canada with my perforated sheets of blotter art, selling to several collectors there, with a great new story to boot. Finally, blotter art has come "full circle" in recent years, acting as a fantastic support vehicle for the psychedelic community. In 2003, Dr. Albert Hofmann signed blotter art designed by visionary artist Stevee Postman -a piece conceived of by Jon Hanna to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the discovery of LSD's effects and to act as a fund-raiser for MAPS and Erowid.
 
Yea seems it's a lost art. Geltabs are all I see now besides white on white. But then again I don't look real hard. I need some orange Sunshine art if you can find it now that ald-52 is for real.
 
^Go search on the Dark Net Markets. Most of the LSD available is on blotter. I looked on Google and found this page.

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Y'all found several awesome designs. I really enjoy this and also plan on adding other art from the net.
 
Thats definitely the best thing I expect to hear today.

This was the first LSD I ever took.

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We had some of these, they looked super ominous. Literally each blotter was the size of a postage stamp! It was like 2 doses in one.
 
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The Newspaper Edition of the most recent Radiohead Album The King of Limbs contained this sheet along with some other extras and the vinyl. Pretty awesome little edition. I have no idea if anyone has actually laid LSD on them, but I have thought about it. I bought two of the albums, one I opened and one I kept unopened. If I ever wanted to lay something on the blotter, and as long as I never used any of it... it could only increase the eventual value of the album!!
 
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The Newspaper Edition of the most recent Radiohead Album The King of Limbs contained this sheet along with some other extras and the vinyl. Pretty awesome little edition. I have no idea if anyone has actually laid LSD on them, but I have thought about it. I bought two of the albums, one I opened and one I kept unopened. If I ever wanted to lay something on the blotter, and as long as I never used any of it... it could onlyincrease the eventual value of the album!!
Of course they have lsd on them. ;)
 
Sorry for boudke post edit does not work on mobile phones just deletes it.
Thanks @blackpirate for the art unfortunately that print and the one posted below is mainly the only 2 prints I can find for orange Sunshine.
Dumb question is that Hoffman on the postage stamp size sheet.
 
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