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  2. Monochrome printmaking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monochrome_printmaking

    [1] 1835 aquatint showing the first production of I puritani. Coquetry, lithograph by Henri Baron (1816-1885). 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 ...

  3. Salon of 1835 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salon_of_1835

    The Salon of 1835 was an art exhibition held at the Louvre in Paris. It was staged during the July Monarchy and was part of the tradition of Salons dating back to the seventeenth century . Since the Salon of 1833 the exhibitions were held annually.

  4. Aquatint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquatint

    Goya, No. 32 of Los Caprichos (1799, Por que fue sensible).This is a fairly rare example of a print entirely in aquatint. [5]In intaglio printmaking techniques such as engraving and etching, the artist makes marks into the surface of the plate (in the case of aquatint, a copper or zinc plate) that are capable of holding ink.

  5. Currier and Ives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Currier_and_Ives

    The earliest lithographs were printed in black and then colored by hand. As new techniques were developed, publishers began to produce full-color lithographs that gradually developed softer, more painterly effects. Skilled artist lithographers such as John Cameron, Fanny Palmer, and others became known for their work and signed important pieces.

  6. Color printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_printing

    Most early methods of color printing involved several prints, one for each color, although there were various ways of printing two colors together if they were separate. Liturgical and many other kinds of books required rubrics, normally printed in red; these were long done by a separate print run with a red forme for each page.

  7. Lithography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithography

    This very early colour lithograph from 1835 uses large washes of orange and cyan with black ink providing the details. Senefelder had experimented during the early 19th century with multicolor lithography; in his 1819 book, he predicted that the process would eventually be perfected and used to reproduce paintings. [ 3 ]

  8. Chromolithography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromolithography

    Cheaper images, like advertisements, relied heavily on an initial black print (not always a lithograph), on which colours were then overprinted. To make an expensive reproduction print, once referred to as a "chromo", a lithographer, with a finished painting in front of him, gradually created and corrected the many stones using proofs to look ...

  9. 1835 in art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1835_in_art

    June 6 – Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin is received into the Roman Catholic Church. [1]June – Caspar David Friedrich suffers his first stroke, which restricts his ability to paint in oils.