Illustration Processes to 1900 (July 2013): Difference between revisions

From Whiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Line 69: Line 69:


== Intaglio ==  
== 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)


=== Hand-press period ===
=== Hand-press period ===


==== Copper engravings ====
==== 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


==== Etchings ====
==== Etchings ====
Line 79: Line 87:


==== Line engravings ====
==== Line engravings ====
line engravings are opposed to mezzotints, stipple engravings and aquatints, which are all tonal engravings


==== Mezzotints ====
==== 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 haed), which is in Evelyn's book -- famous image


==== Stipple engravings ====
==== Stipple engravings ====
Line 86: Line 102:
==== Aquatints ====
==== Aquatints ====


white islands surrounded by black sea indicates aquatined
=== C19 ===
=== C19 ===



Revision as of 00:15, 24 July 2013

Illustration Processes to 1900 (I-20), Rare Book School, taught by Terry Belanger, 22-27 July 2013

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

don't wear out

ink is such in, so you can stack sheets while wet

done on plank side of wood

C19

Wood engravings

done on endgrain, which is much harder; you an use a burin

advantage over intaglio: can be printed with the text

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

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 its a stereotype

Wax engraving

Photographically assisted processes

Photoxylograph

Process relief line engraving

Process false halftones

Process relief halftones

C20

C20 developments

Scraperboard

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)

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

Etchings

Etchings on an ungrounded plate

Line engravings

line engravings are opposed to mezzotints, stipple engravings and aquatints, which are all tonal engravings

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 haed), which is in Evelyn's book -- famous image

Stipple engravings

Aquatints

white islands surrounded by black sea indicates aquatined

C19

Photographically assisted

letter press -- ~200 sq in of printing space, about 200lb of pressure, so ~1lb per sq in (not much at all)

copperplate: under pressure of rolling press, lines squash together