Illustration Processes to 1900 (July 2013)
Illustration Processes to 1900 (I-20), Rare Book School, taught by Terry Belanger, 22-27 July 2013
first thing to ask: date? is it printed on both sides? is the caption letterpress or freeform?
sock impression: on damp paper; kiss impression: on dry paper
letter press -- ~200 sq in of printing space, about 200lb of pressure, so ~1lb per sq in (not much at all)
grass: jobs done in the spaces between other jobs; hence (perhaps?) Whitman's Leaves of Grass?
Relief
can't tell if a relief print is printed from wood or from metal (eletrotype)
if sheet is printed on both sides, 90% certain it's relief
don't get large areas of dead black in intaglio the way you do with relief
Hand press period
Woodcuts
fast to print (about 100x faster to print than intaglio)
don't wear out
ink is such in, so you can stack sheets while wet
done on plank side of wood
occasionally find pen corrections, since labor was cheap and materials were expensive (reverse of today)
C19
Wood engravings
done on endgrain, which is much harder; you an use a burin
advantage over intaglio: can be printed with the text
Civil War Artist by Taylor Morrison, good description of process of making a wood engraving
bolted together smaller pieces of boxwood to make large enough image
Bewick manner -- popularized wood engraving
- vignette: no edges -- not rectangle or oval
- Bewick known for his vignetes; see pg 13 in workbook for a passage from Jane Eyre that mentions Bewick
- many imitators
- large Bewick block collection at the Newberry
- Bewick manner uses white lines when you can, since it's easier
Facsimile -- copy what an artist gives you
Interpretive -- interpret what an artist gives you
White-line -- using a general white line on black background; easier to cut
Stereotype/electrotypes
stereotype begins around 1810; eletrotypes in 1840s
copper-faced woodblock made from original wood engraving; can't tell the different between a printing done from copper face or from original woodblock
plaster in wood engraving means it was used to make a stereotype
sandwich of copper and typemetal: electrotype
flong: paper mache pressing for making stereotypes; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flong
Wax engraving
engrave on wax, in order to make a relief block
often used for making maps, since letterpress type could be pressed directly into the wax (on curves, at an angle, etc)
Photographically assisted processes
Photoxylograph
photograph against a light-sensitized wood surface, cut a wood engraving from the photograph; wood engravings with high photographic quality may have been done by this process
Process relief line engraving
take a photographic negative of a line block, put it on a zinc plate that is painted with a light-sensitive emulsion, shine a light onto it; gelative in emulsion hardens where light hits it, the rest washes away, leaving a relief surface
Process false halftones
also artist's false halftones; looks like halftone but is actually process line block created from a chalky image that already has dotted crayon-y effect; dots won't be regular but printing will be relief
Process relief halftones
same as process relief line engraving, buta screen is between the negative and the light-sensitized plate, so that tonal gradations in the photograph show (on the principle that water/emulsion hardens at different rates around the screen lines
to get a good quality image in halftone, need a very fine screen and very smooth paper; many magazine have high clay content for this reason
can identify it as a relief process by the ink squash
benefit of photographic process: can enlarge or shrink image
first halftone photographs in 1880s
many relief blocks were touched up with a burin before printing; see Drawing for Process Reproduction
relief processes of different types can co-exist on same late 19c magazine page because each page was made as a stereotype/electrotype after setting
C20
C20 developments
Scraperboard
drawing white lines on a scraped white board, to create an image to be photographed and made as a process line block
can look like very detailed wood engravings
preparation process for photography -- not a printing process
Intaglio
if there are flowing lines, it's intaglio
offsetting tells you two plates were in the same place at the same time long enough to offset, but doesn't necessarily indicate from the same shop
pentimento: an alteration that's been rubbed out (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentimento)
difference between litho and intaglio: you can find hairs where ink is wicked in intaglio under high magnification
Hand-press period
Copper engravings
can only do about ~100 impressions, not enough for a book run; by 19C, could get ~1500 copies from copper by beating it first to make it stronger
under pressure of rolling press, lines of copperplate squash together
- refurbishers could touch them up; were paid by the hour (unusual for book trade, because it was such skilled labor)
at about 1000 impressions, it's cheaper to duplicate the plate
Pallaioulo -- Battle of the Nudes (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_Nudes_(engraving))
game of collecting Italian Renaissance prints was over by the end of the 18c -- very rare
copper was very expensive in handpress period
chalcography -- John Evelyn term for copperplate engraving
Chalgographic Museum
Etchings
pure etching virtually unknown in handpress period
speed: map engraver in Ordinate Survey Office expected to do 2x2 inches a day engraved; with etchings, a simple 7x10" plate could be done in ~1hour
engraving gives you a better line; etching, the acid eats out a globe under the surface, which causes it to cave in and deteriorate faster
easier to start with an etched line, then go over lines so the etching doesn't show; this was very common in all periods (almost all engravings have some etching on them)
Ivins claims engravings (the term) should be used for sculptural framing prints; etchings is for prints in books or generally smaller, more ephemeral
Etchings on an ungrounded plate
stopping out: covering etched areas with a waxy substance to re-etch other parts; gives portions a painted feel and different line thicknesses
drypoint -- can only get 10-20 images before the burr breaks off; is only a framing print
Line engravings
line engravings are opposed to mezzotints, stipple engravings and aquatints, which are all tonal engravings
steel-faced copper plates show up in 1870s, can get many more impressions
copperplate engraving after 1880 was for able to be done for a mass market (because of steel face), but it was too late -- photographic methods were becoming available
Mezzotints
can only get ~200 from a plate; not used in books but as framing prints, because rubbing destroys them easily
Prince Rupert is fabled to have invented it (in John Evelyn's Sculptura, or the History of Chalcography), though Siegen did
first known is a large plate of an executioner; it made its way to England as the "Little executioner" (smaller image just of executioner's head), which is in Evelyn's book -- famous image
Stipple engravings
done through a ground; never done directly to the plate
shows up at the end of 18c, disappears with litho
can be hard to distinguish from chal manner litho
Aquatints
white islands surrounded by black sea indicates aquatint
painting the ground onto the plate; can do multiple bites with the acid to get a "terraced" visual effect (patches of uniform darkness, patches of uniform medium gray, etc.; see pg 21)
no color aquatints; only hand-colored
aquatint often used to give differentiation in print destined for hand-colored tone; can use only a few colors to get many colors because of aquatint shading effects
William Daniell, Voyage around Great Britain -- thought to be one of the most beautiful color plate books in aquatint; http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/exhibns/month/mar2005.html
- Tate has the copperplates and did a restrike
C19
Steel engravings
magazines needed many plates to reproduce; would # different copies at the bottom
doctor blade, could force ink into small, very thin lines
can produce lines so thin they aren't visible to the naked eye
takes 10x longer, but you get 100x as many copies (up to 100k)
ruling machine; could make many even lines quickly, of different thicknesses; enabled heavy use of line shading in steel engravings
steel engraving with no plate mark in a book means that a big plate was laid out in a sheet, then printed before the letterpress; so the sheet went through a press 4x (2x on each side)
by 1840s, steel is everywhere
Mezzotints on steel
19c mezzotints virtually unknown (largely an 18c process) except by John Sartain & family; used etching on the print and the plate was probably rocked mechanically in steel
Photographically assisted
Line photogravures
Aquatint photogravures
copperplate, so maybe 500 impressions
often with photofinishing, manipulating it to produce black
process that you cannot see, the aquatint is so fine
upmarket, not screened
Gravure printing
intaglio process
square cells all the same size but of different depth
lends itself to long runs
being used on a high-spreed press; using a doctor blade to ink
Planographic
C19
lithography described by its founder as a chemical process, because the nonprinting surface is in fact lightly etched with chemicals
the bigger the stone, the more likely it will break -- its thickness needs to increase accordingly
no platemark in litho
would take an artist about a day to do a large portrait
not a text transfer process in 19c; transfer litho not used for type, since it didn't fare well
cooler feel to litho; under glass, looks like baked carbon
litho vs. engraving: engraving, under glass, you can tell which lines cross which; in litho, all lines are on the same plane
can get about 1000 copies
for the first time, artists could easily train themselves in the process
litho begins appearing in books in the 1820-30s
can engrave the stone to produce white non-printing patches
mother stone (the storage stone) can have many different litho plates on it; transfer to the daughter stone, where plates are copied repeatedly like a sheet of stamps
litho can be autographic
Pen-and-ink style
Chalk-manner lithographs
500 or so copies; looks like black dots on a white sea
Lithotints
patented process, will be identified on the print
tint stone, sometimes with etching to produce white patches
use two pins in stone for register -- can see pinholes on the edges of the print
Transfer lithographs
Zinc lithography
Photographically assisted
Collotypes
if a print looks like it should be halftone but it isn't screened, it is either collotype or photogravure
collotype: light areas look like deformed triangles, dark like worms (see Gascoigne 40)
usefule for a lighter image
difficult to get very clean edges
Photolithographs
Color (passim)
Hand-press period
woodcut initials: factotum (with letterpress letter inside); arabesque, crible (with dots), floriated (vegetation), grotesque (humans/animals), historiated (tell a story)
dabs -- metal casts in relief, made from a woodblock; heavily used in renaissance for initials and decorative flourishes, so presence of a nearly "identical" woodcut doesn't mean the book emerged from the same press; can be identified often by nail holes in the corner, where the metal was nailed to a piece of wood
Colored woodcuts -- color applied after printing by hand
Color woodcuts -- printed color
key block: black block, used to create color blocks
Edmund Evans -- key name in Victorian color printing (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Evans); also Benjamin Fawcett
Baby's Bouquet: http://www.gutenberg.org/files/25432/25432-h/25432-h.htm
Chiaroscuro woodcuts
A la poupee coloring
painting directly onto the plate
Hand-colored aquatints
watercolors over aquatint; can get much subtlety because of aquatint proces
Color mezzotints
really no color mezzotints in 19c, although a few attempts in late 18c
C19
Hand-colored lithogaphs
Tinted lithographs
tine stone with a register stone
Baxter prints
patented process; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Baxter_(printer)
lay tints in relief, print steel engraving over that, then print color in relief on top -- so intaglio process with relief color
largely framing prints; begin showing up in 1830s and are gone by 1860s, replaced by chromolithography advances
Chromolithographs
Chromo- vs color lithographs
Art of Chromolithography, by Audsley; showed progressive build-up of 22 color plates to create a single image
register is usually very good, compared to relief blocks
Nelson prints
lithography with relief color; have a characteristic blue color
1850-60s; disappear afterward
the lithography can be lightly stippled -- distressing is a sign of metal or stone, not wood
Chromoxylographs
wood engravings building up color through successive blocks; key block (black) is last
Chromotypographs
creating relief blocks for color with type metal; usually a process line block
Photographically assisted
Process line engraving with tint blocks
3 & 4 color halftones
Duotones
two tone process printing, to get subtle shades
Mechanical tints
benday dots; sheets of regular dots, can be used to make relief blocks that are tonal because of overlaying dots (automates cutting process)
looks like a halftone screen, but no variation in dots
Color collotypes
Other
"permanent photographs," or Woodberry types; wouldn't fade like normal photographs; are always mounted on the page and have edges trimmed
Nature prints
pressing leaves or lace into metal, printing from it
fashionable in 184-50s
associated with Braley firm
Stencil prints: pochoir
hand-coloring process using stencils; practiced mostly in France
Silkscreen: serigraphs
not a book process in the 19c
uses water-based ink; heavy coverage