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Serigraph

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Serigraph (Silkscreen Printing): A complex stenciling process using a fine mesh of polyester or nylon material stretched tightly across a frame. A separate screen is created for every color that exists in the original art.

Serigraph
Serigraphy (also referred to as 'silkscreen' or 'screen-print') is defined as an original color print made by pressing pigment (with a squeegee) through a "silk" screen stencil; in this case a non photographic hand painted stencil.

Serigraph
A form of print making which utilizes stencils attached to porous screens that support delicate areas of the cut design. Most often issued in signed and numbered editions.

serigraph
Refers to a silk-screen fine art print, usually a limited edition series. These prints are created by the silk-screen process using poster inks and are typically matted and framed under glass like other fine art prints and watercolor works.

Serigraphs are works of the artist conceived as serigraphs and had printed either by himself or a master printer under the artist's supervision. Although many prints may be made from each set of screens , each is printed individually.

Serigraph
A print created by stencilling tightly-stretched silk and forcing ink through the silk and onto paper. Also called silkscreening.
Serilith ...

Serigraph
A serigraph (pronounced sear-E-graph) is
produced by the silk-screen or screen-print
printing process. For each desired color, a
photographically-prepared or hand-cut
stencil is created indicating where the color
will be applied.

Serigraph or Silkscreen
The artist prepares a tightly stretched screen, usually of silk, and blocks out areas not to be printed by filling the mesh on the screen with a varnish-link substance.

Serigraph - A print created by using the process of using stencils made on tightly stretched silk. Ink is forced through the silk and onto paper to make copies of the image.

Serigraphy (Silk-screen) - A printing technique that makes use of a squeegee to force ink directly onto a piece of paper or canvas through a stencil creating an image on a screen of silk or other fine fabric with an impermeable substance.

Serigraph - The serigraphic process incorporates the use of fine mesh screens to hand separate the colors of the image. Originally, these screens were made of silk, hence the name by which this process is also known - silk-screening.

SERIGRAPH; literally silk screen print. The ink is squeezed onto the print surface through a mesh of silk or nylon gauze that has been prepared with blocked out areas. Printing process used for large scale printing i.e. posters, or fabric printing i.

serigraphy - A stencil method of printmaking in which an image is imposed on a screen of silk or other fine mesh, with blank areas coated with an impermeable substance, and ink is forced through the mesh onto the printing surface.

SERIGRAPH - (Silkscreen/Screen Print) - A color stencil printing process in which paint, rather than ink, is forced through a fine screen onto the paper beneath. A stencil must be made, and the paper must be run through the press, for each color.

Serigraphs or screen prints are produced by creating a stencil on thin fabric (originally silk, now man-made fabric) that is stretched across a frame.

Sericel & Serigraph: Serigraphy, the printing term for the silk-screen process, ...

tusche - In serigraphy and lithography, a black liquid used most with brush or pen to paint a design. It should never be called lithographic ink, which is another substance entirely.
(pr. toosh) ...

Silk-screen "serigraph" printing has been used only since the early 20th century. It's name derives from the Serian people to whom Europe owes the discovery of silk.

screenprinting (serigraphy) A printmaking technique in which stencils are applied to fabric stretched across a frame. Paint or ink is forced with a squeegee through the unblocked portions of the screen onto paper or other surface beneath.

Screen-Printing / Serigraphy (also referred to as 'silkscreen' or 'screenprint') is a colour stencil printing process in which a special paint is forced through a fine screen onto the paper beneath.

printmaking - design and manufacture of one (monoprint) or a series of prints, such as woodcuts, serigraph, giclee etc.
profile - representation of an object or figure as seen from the side, particularly in portraiture * ...

Discounted Art - Paul Klee posters, prints and serigraphs
Paul Klee a Swiss-born painter and graphic artist ... Stockholms Auktionsverk - Wassily Kandinsky's "Gift to Poul Bjerre" ...

1. The material that is used to create an artwork, i.e. oil, acrylic, lithography, serigraphy, marble, bronze, etc.
2. In paint, the fluid in which pigment is suspended, allowing it to spread and adhere to the surface.
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Canvas Transfer - Art reproduction on canvas which is created by a process such as serigraphy, photomechanical or giclée printing. Some processes can even recreate the texture, brush strokes and aged appearance of the original work.

Mec art
term for mechanical art in connection with photo and serigraphies search artarchiv.com
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Historically, the major techniques (also called media) involved are woodcut, line engraving, etching, lithography, and screenprinting (serigraphy, silkscreening) but there are many others, including modern digital techniques.

'zheeclay,' it is is derived from the verb gicler meaning to splash. This new medium is a blend of art and technology that produces copies with a higher resolution and broader color range than such other methods as lithography or serigraphy.

When it was taken up by artists in 1930s America the term 'serigraph' was used to denote an artist's print, as opposed to commercial work. The term 'silkscreen' (silk was originally used for the mesh) was and still is used, particularly in America.

If someone else does the work, then it is a reproduction. Woodcuts, etchings, engravings, aquatints, lithographs, and serigraphs are forms of original prints. Each involves the artist's hand in brushing, or cutting.

See also: Painting, Lithograph, Plate, Fine art, Serigraphy