File:Transfer printing on enamels, porcelain and pottery - its origin and development in the United Kingdom (1907) (14590292587).jpg

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Identifier: transferprinting00turn (find matches)
Title: Transfer printing on enamels, porcelain and pottery : its origin and development in the United Kingdom
Year: 1907 (1900s)
Authors: Turner, William, -1643
Subjects: Transfer-printing Pottery Enameled ware
Publisher: London : Chapman and Hall New York : Keramic Studio Pub. Co.
Contributing Library: Getty Research Institute
Digitizing Sponsor: Getty Research Institute

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k work)was done by laying wax on a copperplate and thenpricking dots by an etching needle. It was then bittenin by acid, and was completed by a specially shapedgraver. In fact, it was really a combination of etching,dry point and graver together. No doubt the pottery 99 Transfer Printing. engraver followed the book-plate artist very closely,and so far as his materials would permit him. It iswell-known that, after the stipple-print of Bartolozzi,and the school of engravers that followed him haddeclined in pubHc favour, a new system arose. It wasin reality a mixed system of line, stipple, and etching,and especially was it developed when the copperplategave way to steel (about 1820) as the favouritemedium. The transfer print for porcelain was, no doubt,affected by the fashion, and specimens—though rare—are still found with line and stipple work intermixedupon them and passed through the press. Illustrations of the bat print will be found atFig. C 17 and Fig. D 8. 100 Plate No. XXXIX.
Text Appearing After Image:
Fig. D 6. CUP, PSEUDO-JESUIT CHINA, PAINTED.Chinese Fig. D 7. SAUCER, PSEUDO-JESUIT CHINA, PAINTED.Chinese. TRANSFER PRINTING On Enamels, Porcelain and Pottery, THE AQUATINT PROCESS.NOTHER exceptional process in the development of the transfer print was that of the appHcation of aquatint. If the bat system is obscure thisone is more so. But, as the bat has been said to be the child ofstipple, aquatint may be said to be the grandchild sofar as ceramics is concerned. Like stipple it wasdiscovered on French soil and introduced into Englandprobably about 1770. The process was intended tomake the stipple process more expeditious. A solutionof resin, spirits of wine, and water was formed. Onflooding the plate with this, the alcohol and waterevaporated, leaving the rest dry—a mere resinousfilm—which, by the action of the water and con-traction, split up into minute particles. This wasstippling or dotting out by wholesale. Each openparting exposed the metal which was then bittenin by mean

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Author Turner, William, -1643
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Flickr tags
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  • bookid:transferprinting00turn
  • bookyear:1907
  • bookdecade:1900
  • bookcentury:1900
  • bookauthor:Turner__William___1643
  • booksubject:Transfer_printing
  • booksubject:Pottery
  • booksubject:Enameled_ware
  • bookpublisher:London___Chapman_and_Hall_
  • bookpublisher:_New_York___Keramic_Studio_Pub__Co_
  • bookcontributor:Getty_Research_Institute
  • booksponsor:Getty_Research_Institute
  • bookleafnumber:200
  • bookcollection:getty
  • bookcollection:americana
Flickr posted date
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29 July 2014

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