| etching |
The technique by which a form of wax or resist is placed onto the metal surfaced and scraped off in preparation for an acid bath (generally nitric acid or a mix of nitric, sulfuric acids and water). The resulting effect is to quickly remove metal and produce a striking visual effect. Used most often during the 16th and 17th centuries, there are only scattered references from the 14th and 15th centuries, although the technique appears in common use in jewelry and art metal. ...
Ãâó: www.chronique.com/Library/Glossaries/glossary-AA/a...
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| etching |
The technique of reproducing a design by coating a metal plate with wax and drawing with a sharp instrument called a stylus through the wax down down to the metal. The plate is put in an acid bath, which eats away the incised lines; it is then heated to dissolve the wax and finally inked and printed on paper. The resulting print is called the etching.
Ãâó: art.abbottpages.com/glossary.html
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| etching |
a method of intaglio printing in which the lines or tones of image are drawn into a prepared ground on the surface of a metal plate and then bitten in acid before being printed.
Ãâó: www.zimmerworks.com/vprintmaking.htm
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| etching |
Marks are made through an acid-resistant coating on the plate, after which the plate is bitten in a chemical bath to etch the image into the metal.
Ãâó: www.wesleyan.edu/dac/coll/glossary.html
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| etching |
an intaglio printing technique that yields prints which are characterized by their freedom and vitality, as opposed to the relative stiffness of engraved prints. a fine-pointed tool called an etching needle is used to draw the image on a metal plate coated with a waxy layer. this surface is much easier to draw on, and allows the artist to create fluid, expressive lines. the plate is then placed in acid, and the lines that have been etched are incised ("bitten") by the acid. ...
Ãâó: www.ona.com/en/glossary/355/
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