In contemporary printmaking, artists frequently number their prints. The total number of prints made of one image is an edition. The number may appear on the print with the individual print number as a fraction such as 5/25 meaning that this particular print is number 5 of 25 prints made.
Prints in color require two or more blocks, plates, screens or stones, one for each color, printed sequentially on top of each other to produce the final work of art. This process is called registration.
Prints
can be classified according to the type of surface used to make them. Those
with raised printing surfaces are known as relief prints; woodcuts are
the most common type of relief print. When the printing surface is below the
surface of the plate, the print technique is classified as intaglio.
There are several important intaglio techniques. Planographic and stencil
methods are also used, and print from a surface that is at the same level
as the non-printing surface.
Wood engravings are made by engraving a block of end-grain, extremely hard wood. The block, being naturally much harder, enables the artist to engrave (rather than cut) a much finer line than is possible on the softer plank surface used for woodcut. Albrect Durer (15th c.) used this technique in many of his works.
Process | Relief | Intaglio | Planographic | Stencil | Common Name: | Woodcut, linocut, embossing | Engraving, drypoint, mezzotint, etching, aquatint | Lithograph | Serigraph (silkscreen) | What Area Prints: | Prints what is left of the original surface | Prints what is below the surface of the plate | Prints what is drawn on the surface | Prints open areas of the stencil | Type of Press: | Manual pressure or letter press | Etching press (clothes-wringer type) | Lith Press (sliding, scraping pressure) | Original Serigraphs are usually hand screened | Materials: | Wood or linoleum block or other film material | Copper, zinc, plastics, etc. | Limestone, zinc, aluminum plates, etc. | Silk, nylon, etc. | Basic Tools: | Knife, gouge, burin, etc. | Etching needles, burins, acids | Litho crayon, tusche, litho rubbing ink, etc. | Squeegee, screen, screen blocker (liquid, photosensitive block or film) |
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