History of Print Making
History of Print Making
History of Print Making
PRINTING OR REPRODUCTION
All printing processes fall into one of the three major categories. Relief, Planographic
and Intaglio, distinguished from each other, not only by the results they produce but
also by their physical characteristics. The distinction is made on the basis of whether
the design on the Printing plate is raised, flat or engraved.
RELIEF PRINTING / LETTER PRESS
The most common of all the printing process is relief printing or letter press printing,
which refers to the process of making prints from a plate bearing the design in relief. It
is called relief printing because ink applied to the printing block will cover the high
surfaces but will not reach into the law areas, that is they stand out in relief. When
paper is pressed against the plate, it will take on an ink impression only of the raised
portions. The Printing surface consists of types, rules, blocks and other such materials
which have a raised surface like the character of a typewriter.
Letter press is most flexible in matters of corrections and changes or for modifying the
results while on press. About thirty years back letter press serves a wide field,
including, stationery, catalogues, magazines, books and news papers. Now a days
letterpress is used for printing small jobs. The biggest letterpress machines are the
reel fed news paper rotaries, the press being fed with paper from webs or reels
instead of with separate sheets, while the printing surface is cylindrical.
Small jobs of printing are generally carried out on a platen machine. This consists of a
printing surface and an impression surface, which are brought together like a hinge, and
when the paper is pressed against the inked types or blocks, it is printed. Printers type,
photo-engravers line cut and half tone plates, rubber plates, wood blocks and linoleum
blocks, work on the principle of relief printing.
SILK SCREEN PRINTING PROCESS
The Silk Screen method is based on the principle of the stencil. It is operated in a very
similar way to the stencil printing outfits. A silk screen print has normally a hand-
painted impasto-effect, since the stencil can be made to deposit an appreciable layer of
richly pigmented paint. So there is no need for blocks or types, the design being either
cut by hand or photographed with a course screen. This process is ideal for printing on
glass, cloth, wood, metal etc. This is a method of manual printing. Machinery is also
used for this types of printing mainly for Textiles, Wall papers,Big posters, etc. For job
works ie. paper works, are done mainly by manual. Main advantage is that it can print
on any surface , wood, paper, glass, plastic, leather etc. We got very bright colours
because in Screen Printing ink applied directly on the surface of the paper, but in other
printing machinery gives pressure to get the impression.
Different INKS
For Plastic , PVC, Paper ----- PVC Ink is used
For Paper ----- Mat, Gloss or PVC Ink
For Shopping Bag -----Vinyshine, Gloss Ink or Polystic Ink
Colour Reproduction
When the design has a coloured illustration a separate plate must be made for each
colour a full colour design can be reproduced by using the four process colours
(CMYK) ie Cyan, Majenta, Yellow & Black. Let us assume that a full colour design is
to be reproduced. The original artwork is photographed four times, each time, through a
different colour filter. The resulting negatives are called colour separation negatives.
These are not coloured pictures like Kodachromes but appealed as ordinary ‘black and
white’ translucent and transparent screened negatives. However each of the four filters
has removed all but one of the primary colour values as they appear in the original
artwork. That is one filter removes all but the red values another all but the yellow and
so on.
A separate plate is made from each of these four negatives. These colour plates, each
when inked with its corresponding primary colour and printed one upon the other with
black as the last colour, result in a full colour reproduction. Progressive proofs are used
to indicate to the advertiser and printer the accuracy of the colour reproduction and
plate registration. In other words coloures are matched against the original art work and
in as much as four plates are printed successively one upon the other, a check is
necessary to determine if the elements on each plate are falling in the proper places in
the finished job.
A halftone reproduction is produced by means of a series of dots. In making a colour
halftone it is necessary to reangle the halftone screen each of the four times a
photograph is taken of the original artwork. This must be done so that the dots created
by the screen will not fall in the same place on each negative and hence on each plate.
If this were to happen, dots would be superimposed on dots in the printing, and the
desired effect would not be obtained. In printing coloured pictures as opposed to
painting, colours are not be obtained. In printing coloured pictures as opposed to
painting, colours are not directly and physically mixed. Instead, the large number of
fine dots of different colours intermingle on the paper and create an optical illusion.
The viewer does not see a large number of blue dots interspersed among a large number
of yellow dots; he sees green. The eye does the mixing, and viewer sees the colour that
would be achieved in painting by the physical mixing of the same primary colours.
Now the separation of four colour film is slowly outdated and a new method of C T P is
introduced. ie. Computer To Plate.