glossary - fine art prints

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Ian Scaife

Lyn Medcalf

Pedro Diablo

Peter Currey

 

glossary - digital printmaking terms

artist's proof

A print from an edition set aside for the artist’s use.

beziér curve

A way of drawing curves in vector drawing software, using endpoints and anchorpoints.

calibration

A means of setting colour for consistency between diffent input/output devices (for example, between a monitor and a printer)

cold press paper

Roughly textured paper made in a mold, used for printmaking and watercolour.

color gamut

Colours that can be reproduced on any given system.

complementary colors

Two colours that, when mixed, produce a neutral gray. Complementary colours are those directly opposite each other on a colour wheel (for example; yellow/purple, red/green, blue/orange).

digital art

Artwork using one or several digital technologies

digital printer

A printing device able to translate a digital image into hard output: includes inkjet, electrostatic, thermal transfer, or laser photoprinting.

expanded-gamut printing

Where manufacturers add extra colours of ink into their devices to extend the range of the standard cmyk (cyan, magenta, yellow, black) printer gamut; for example, by adding lighter versions of the cyan and magenta inks.

gamut

The colour range of a given device (A printer or a monitor, for example)

giclée (pronounced zhee-clay)

Usually either an original print made by a digital process and output (typically) on an inkjet printer or a copy of an original artwork produced originally in other media and then reproduced using digital methods.

inkjet

A digital printing device that employs nozzles to spray ink onto a substrate.

limited edition

An artwork identically produced to a specific number, which bear the artist’s signature and are numbered in relation to the total prints in the edition; produced from a single master.

mask

An effect used to hide parts of an image.

matte finish

Similar to a satin finish, low gloss with very limited reflectivity.

midtones

‘middle value’ tones in an image, neither the lightest or the darkest.

nozzle

The part of the inkjet printhead from which ink droplets are sprayed onto the substrate.

open edition

An identical set of prints from a master that are not limited in number.

palette

The range of colours produced by a particular device, or a range of colours used by an artist in their artwork.

pixel

The smallest and most basic element of a digital image, derived from Pi(x)cture element.

print on demand

One of the advantages/peculiarities of digital printmaking is the ability to produce identical prints sporadically either individually or in small runs over a period of time, known as ‘print on demand’, something almost impossible using traditional printmaking techniques.

print permanence

A print’s ability to resist physical change with exposure to light, heat etc.

printer driver

Software that facilitates communication between a computer and a printer.

proof

An initial print used to assess and adjust the qualities of an image, prior to printing an edition or a definitive version.

RIP (Raster Image Processor)

Software which allows very specific instructions to be passed between a computer and printer, often incorporates features such as colour calibration.

saturation

The purity of a colour.

soft proof

Assessing an image on a monitor rather than on an output ‘hard’ copy.

substrate

The material or surface that receives the printed image, usually paper.

thumbnail

A low resolution version of an image, small in size.

WYSIWYG

‘What You See Is What You Get’. The ability to see the output of a computer more or less exactly represented on screen.

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