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- Aquatint - Wikipedia
Aquatint is an intaglio printmaking technique, a variant of etching that produces areas of tone rather than lines For this reason it has mostly been used in conjunction with etching, to give both lines and shaded tone [1]
- Aquatint | Definition, Process, Facts | Britannica
aquatint, a variety of etching widely used by printmakers to achieve a broad range of tonal values The process is called aquatint because finished prints often resemble watercolour drawings or wash drawings
- What Is Aquatint? - The Art of Etching With Tonal Depth
Aquatint is a printing technique where an artist can create beautiful works of art with intricate details, using toned areas instead of lines, and produce subtle changes between dark and light areas
- Introduction to Aquatint Printmaking - Jacksons Art Blog
Aquatint is an etching process that allows you to create areas of tone within a print either alone or alongside other forms of mark-making such as hard and soft ground etching, drypoint, and engraving
- What Is Aquatint? - Creating Tonal Depth Through Etching
The aquatint process is an intaglio printmaking technique, yet unlike traditional etching, it is used for creating tonal effects instead of lines Aquatint printmaking utilizes acids to create indentations on the surface of a plate so that it may hold ink for printing
- Modern Aquatint
Many other acrylic solutions such as the Badger aquatint solution developed by Keith Howard, the Lascaux Aquatint Solution, or ZAcryl’s hard ground, also work as a spray aquatint
- The Printed Image in the West: Aquatint - The Metropolitan Museum of Art
A means of etching tonal values, aquatint was named for the effects it creates, which look rather like ink or watercolor washes
- Aquatint - Tate
Like etching, aquatint is an intaglio printmaking technique, but is used to create tonal effects rather than lines Intaglio refers to printing and printmaking techniques in which the image is incised into a surface, and the incised line or sunken area holds the ink
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