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  2. Monochrome printmaking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monochrome_printmaking

    Monochrome printmaking is a generic term for any printmaking technique that produces only shades of a single color. While the term may include ordinary printing with only two colors — "ink" and "no ink" — it usually implies the ability to produce several intermediate colors between those two extremes.

  3. Monoprinting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monoprinting

    Rather than printing multiple copies of a single image, only one impression may be produced, either by painting or making a collage on the block. Etching plates may also be inked in a way that is expressive and unique in the strict sense, in that the image cannot be reproduced exactly. [ 1 ]

  4. Category : Lists of Indonesian television series episodes

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Lists_of...

    Pages in category "Lists of Indonesian television series episodes" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .

  5. Monochrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monochrome

    A monochrome [1] or monochromatic image, object or palette is composed of one color (or values of one color). [2] Images using only shades of grey are called grayscale (typically digital) or black-and-white (typically analog).

  6. Color printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_printing

    A method of full-color printing is six-color process printing (for example, Pantone's Hexachrome system) which adds orange and green to the traditional CMYK inks for a larger and more vibrant gamut, or color range. However, such alternate color systems still rely on color separation, halftoning and lithography to produce printed images.

  7. Dye-transfer process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dye-transfer_process

    The use of dye imbibition for making full-color prints from a set of black-and-white photographs taken through different color filters was first proposed and patented by Charles Cros in 1880. [1] It was commercialized by Edward Sanger-Shepherd , who in 1900 was marketing kits for making color prints on paper and slides for projection .

  8. Cyan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyan

    Cyanotype, or blueprint, a monochrome photographic printing process that predates the use of the word cyan as a color, yields a deep cyan-blue colored print based on the Prussian blue pigment. [ 36 ] Cinecolor , a bi-pack color process, the photographer would load a standard camera with two films, one orthochromatic, dyed red, and a ...

  9. Woodburytype - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodburytype

    A Woodburytype is both a printing process and the print that it produces. In technical terms, the process is a photomechanical rather than a photographic one, because sensitivity to light plays no role in the actual printing. The process produces very high quality continuous tone images in monochrome, with