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Lithography

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lithography - In the graphic arts, a method of printing from a prepared flat stone or metal or plastic plate, invented in the late eighteenth century. A drawing is made on the stone or plate with a greasy crayon or tusche, and then washed with water.

 


lithography
A mechanical planographic process based on the chemical repellence of oil and water. Designs are drawn or painted with greasy ink or crayons on specially prepared limestone.

Lithography - Originally, a method of printing using a smooth slab of porous stone upon which an image is drawn with a grease crayon.

Lithography
Originally, a method of printing in which an image is drawn with a grease crayon on a smooth slab of porous tone. After the drawing is made, the artist or printer treats the entire surface with solutions of gum arabic and nitric acid.

Lithography
The art or process of putting designs or writing, with a greasy material, on stone, and of producing printed impressions therefrom.

Lithography
A printmaking process in which a polished stone, often limestone, is drawn upon with a greasy material; the surface is moistened and then inked; the ink adheres only to the greasy lines of the drawing; ...

Lithography
Logotype
A personalized type or design symbol for a company or product.

lithography A process of making prints by drawing on limestone or a zinc plate with a greasy crayon. The stone or plate is then wetted and a greasy ink is applied that adheres only to the drawn lines.

Lithography: uses the principle that oil and water don't mix as the basis of the printing process; a method of printing using plates whose image areas attract ink and whose non image areas repel ink.

Lithography: Printing process based on the principle that oil and water never mix. The design is drawn onto a porous stone with a greasy crayon.

Lithography - Printing technique using a Plano graphic process in which prints are pulled on a special press from a flat stone or metal surface that has been chemically sensitized so that ink sticks only to the design areas and is repelled by the ...

LITHOGRAPHY - LITHOGRAPH
A printing process in which a surface, as stone or sheet aluminium, is treated so that the ink adheres only to the portions that are to be printed. The resulting image is a lithograph or a lithographic print
MAGIC REALISM ...

lithography A planographic printmaking technique based on the antipathy of oil and water. The image is drawn with a grease crayon or painted with tusche on a stone or grained aluminum plate.

LITHOGRAPHY - traditional planographic printing method which involves drawing or painting with greasy crayons or inks on a limestone block. The surface is then moistened with water. An oily ink is applied to the stone and adheres only to the drawing.

In lithography, a waxy liquid used to draw or paint images on a lithographic stone or plate.
Twill
A basic weave characterized by a diagonal effect. Reverse twills can form herringbone and diamond effects.

Chromolithography - A color-printing process in which separate printing plates are used to apply each component color.

chromolithography - A lithographic process using several stones or plates - one for each color, printed in register. The result is color prints, to be distinguished from colored prints that have the color hand-applied after printing.

Offset Lithography
The image is transferred from the stone or plate to a roller on the press which then prints the inked image onto the paper.

Offset lithography is the process of taking
an original piece of art and separating the
colors using a scanner or digital camera
which feeds the image directly into a
computer. Combining this information with ...

What Is Lithography?
Lithography is a planographic method of printing, which was invented in 1798. The name derives from the Greek words for litho (= stone) and graphein (= to write).

In color lithography or color photolithography, a stone or plate is required for each color used. The term photolithography is also applied to a process used in integrated circuit manufacture.

Offset Lithography is usually a four color process where the image is photographed and color separations are made for red, yellow, blue and black. Usually, half-tone (tiny dot patterns of varying density) plates are made for each color.

New York Lithography by Louis Lozowick 1925 Louis Lozowick was born in Ludvinovka, Ukraine in 1892. ... Berthold Lubetkin (1901-1990) was a Russian emigré architect who pioneered modernist design in Britain in the 1930s. ...

American term for lithography.
Decorative arts
Collective name for art forms like ceramics, tapestries, enamelling, stained glass, metalwork, paper art, textiles, and others, which are deemed to be ornamental or decorative, ...

An Introduction to Vintage Poster Art History of Lithography by Marshall Jung
Like most print media, graphic arts were dependent on the invention of the printing press. This allowed for the mass production of all shapes and sizes of posters as well.

Lithograph: Fine art lithography utilizes a traditional printing process whereby the artist's original image is transferred onto stone or metal lithography plates, usually by hand, or chemically.

For example a sculpture in the medium of bronze or marble; a painting in the medium of oil paint on canvas, tempera on panel, or watercolour on paper; a drawing in the medium of pencil or crayon; a print in the medium of etching or lithography.

lithography A printing process in which ink impressions are taken from a flat stone or metal plate prepared with some greasy or oily substance. Back to Top
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Art Deco (1925-1940) - The influence of the art deco period can be seen in most areas of design, including architecture, lithography, furniture making, and the production of household items.

The illustration of printed matters could be considerably standardised due to the lithography technique invented by Alois Senefelder.

He began work as a graphic artist, having learnt lithography techniques in 1830, and been employed on Charivari and La Caricature (1830-35) until the latter's suppression by the government.

This is still true today of the traditional printing methods, but most prints are made by offset photolithography, called lithographs, and since they are produced by the means of photographing an original, the buyer only has the word of the artist.

In lithography the surface that receives the image to be printed is not engraved but remains flat. The printing ink is attracted to areas that are made greasy and resisted by areas that are made wet with water.

Lithography was invented in 1798 in Solnofen, Germany by Alois Senefelde. The early history of lithography is dominated by great French artists such as Daumier and Delacroix, and later by Degas, Toulouse-Lautrec, Picasso, Braque and Miro.

Types include oils, watercolors, acrylics, ink, pencil and charcoal,etc. Reproduction medium types include lithography, offset lithography, silkscreen, serigraphy and giclee. Mixed media is the use of two or more materials and/or reproduction means.

Lithography: A print made by drawing a design with oily crayon or other greasy substance on a porous stone or, later, a metal plate; the design is then fixed, the entire surtace is moistened, ...

Original: the term 'original' can imply exclusivity or the idea that the work is 'one of a kind' rather than a copy by any method including offset-lithography, digital printing or by forgery.

(The term literally means "spurt " or "spray.") These special inks produce incredibly true colours without the dot pattern associated with offset lithography.

printmaking - The category of fine art printing processes, including etching, lithography, woodcut, and silkscreen, in which multiple images are made from the same metal plate, heavy stone, wood or linoleum block, or silkscreen, ...

Resist: Any material, usually wax or grease crayons, that repel paint or dyes. Lithography is a grease (ink)and water (wet stone or plate) resist printing technique. Batik is a wax resist fabric artform.

Those arts in which lines, marks, or characters are impressed on a flat surface, usually paper. These include drawing, engraving, etching, lithography, etc., but also reproductive processes such as printing, when they are more than utilitarian.

french term for poster - used for publicity in public areas already in the 15th century - important platform for many artists since lithography techniques appeared
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The artist, or other print maker under the artist's supervision, then covers the plate with a sheet of paper and runs both through a press under light pressure. For colour lithography separate drawings are made for each colour.

See also: Lithograph, Painting, Plate, Impression, Etching