| If you’ve ever
considered going into print, there’s never been a better time.
Recent statistics show the art market retail spending is on the
upward march, with increasingly affluent and (hopefully)
taste-conscious buyers looking to buy original and limited
edition reproduction works.
Until recently however, most
"enthusiastic amateurs" will have been put off by the
cost of printing. Why should you have to commit yourself to
spending the wrong side of ?1000 only to find out your
masterpiece doesn’t sell? Well, the answer is you don’t
anymore.
The days of artists being
beholden to printers are past, digital technology has seen the
emphasis move from the machine room to the desktop. These days
it’s as important to be au fait with a PC and scanner as it is
to know your Burnt Umber from Light Brown.
There are three
"core" processes available to you to reproduce your
work, these are:
Digital Offset
– which uses the same process to put the ink on paper as
"conventional" printing, but does away with film,
plates and separate proofing systems. No minimum quantity, fast
turnaround and great quality.
Offset Litho
– the conventional route, which while producing a super result
has lots of front-end set-up costs associated and usually
involves minimum print runs in the hundreds. Turnaround times
can be quite long and colour proofs of your work are often
produced using a different process to the final printing, which
can be confusing and inaccurate.
With both the above processes
you can also produce Postcards, Greetings Cards, Invites,
Catalogues, Brochures, Portfolios and just about anything else
you can imagine that involves putting ink on paper.
The third and most recent
addition to the artists reproduction armoury is Giclee.
Pronounced Jee-Clay, it’s apparently taken from the French
"to Squirt", so while lacking any poetic value, it’s
been adopted by the art world as the Trade term for what is
basically very high quality ink-jet printing.
One of the most important
things you can ever do is find a sympathetic printer who
understands the demands of fine art reproduction and can supply
you with samples that prove their competence. Very few printers
will have all the above processes at their disposal – so do
shop around. The
Fine Art Trade Guild list reputable companies who have had
to submit their work for approval and quality testing, so it’s
worthwhile checking out their website for the low-down.
Do not just jump for the first
option you’re given! Ask questions and discuss your needs.
Here then is a brief
introduction to the three processes I mentioned.
1) Digital Offset - opens up a
host of opportunities for Artists.
In the past, many would be
artists have, I’m sure been put off publishing their work to a
wider audience by the cost of printing. Most conventional print
companies are simply not interested unless the quantities run
into the thousands. That means more money for them and higher
cost to you the Artist. But don’t despair – there’s a very
inexpensive alternative…
Using modern Digital Techniques
(NOT colour copying – proper printing) its possible to have
10, 20, 100 or just ONE print reproduced from your original
artwork – cost effectively too.
Quality is indistinguishable
from lithographic printing, as the actual printing part of the
process is pretty conventional. The clever, time and cost-saving
bit is getting the image to the press without messing about with
film and plates.
Another significant advantage
for the quality conscious (and who isn’t?) is that Digital
Offset proofs are produced on the machine that prints the final
product. So you get 100% accurate colour matching.
2) Offset
Lithography – what most people know as "conventional"
printing.
The ideal method
if you know a print/card etc will sell well, as although you will
need to order larger quantities, (usually an absolute minimum of
250) with 500-850 being the norm, this means the unit cost of your
picture will be low. BUT you do have to sell them all to get the
full benefit of that low cost. If you end up with 500 left under
the bed it doesn’t count as a good deal!
Generally, colour
proofs are produced using a different process to the actual
printing, if you’re a stickler for colour matching consider
visiting the printer to pass on press.
Always choose a
printer that’s used to working with artists and understands the
importance of colour matching. Also check that lightfast/colourfast
inks are used and Neutral Ph paper (also called Acid Free) both
these precautions help stop fading.
Colour seen on a
computer screen are never a true reflection of what is printed,
because the screen is lit from behind, refracting light, while you
look at a print using reflected light.
Be aware that
printing presses are not surgical instruments - they are huge
automated machines. That means you almost certainly won’t get
the exact quantity of prints you order. Standard variation is +/-
10%, so make sure you stipulate an absolute minimum number if it’s
a numbered limited edition you’re after.
3) Giclee –
Perfect for short-runs, larger formats and canvasses.
Giclee prints are
widely regarded as the highest quality reproduction currently
available., There is no minimum quantity, proofing is done
"on-press" so you get perfect colour matching –
whatever the proof looks like – the prints will match spot-on.
-
Very
high-quality reproduction
-
Superb colour
matching
-
Look and feel of
original artwork
-
Perfectly
reproduces subtle tones and graduations
-
Light fast –
won’t fade or discolour
-
On-demand
service – order only what you sell
-
No waste,
-
Greatly reduced
‘up-front’ costs.
The process also
produces wonderful canvasses which once stretched, varnished and
framed are a very faithful reproduction and hard to tell from an
original oil painting.
Other Products…
As well as
reproducing your artwork as prints, perhaps to be signed and
numbered as a limited edition, you could con also consider the
following options:
How to Save Money...
-
Whilst with
Giclee and Digital Offset there is no minimum order, the more
you have, the more the cost per copy is spread out. On the
other hand, don’t order more than you really need
Scanning costs
Scanning costs are
one-off charges, you will only have to pay them once, then the
digital images are yours to reproduce from, to use on the
Internet, send as e-mail etc.
-
If you send a
transparency or photograph, you supplier will have to scan it
for digital reproduction. This also applies to original
artwork that is flexible enough to be scanned.
-
If you send your
images on disc, there are no costs additional to the standard
set-up charge.
-
If you have a
non-flexible original, perhaps a painting that is already
framed, GOOD fine art Printers can arrange photography for
you.
-
Scanning costs
are dependant on the size of the original and the size you
require it printed. There are also discounts for scanning
multiple images, so it’s best to contact your printer with
your specific requirements.
-
Some suppliers
will automatically archive any image they receive or scan on
your behalf. That means the digital image is available to you
at any time in the future. Check that this is the case.
-
If you would
like to burn a CD with your images in digital format, good
suppliers will make a nominal charge of no more than ?20.00
to cover their costs. This can be returned with your printed
job
If at all possible,
try to have the original artwork available for comparison and
accuracy of colour matching.
So that’s a brief
overview on the options open to you. I’ve not mentioned
screen-printing – because it’s a more specialised and very
expensive process not really suited to straight reproduction of
existing painted or drawn images.
(Oh. And for the
original printmakers out there, I apologise for referring to
Limited Edition Prints, when they should be rightly called
Reproductions. A true print is, I know, something very different
and original, but the term has fallen into general use to describe
anything that involves putting ink onto paper. So while I don’t
really support it – people generally understand a short print
run reproducing faithfully the original artwork by the term
"Limited Edition Print".)
This article was
kindly produced for The Art Industri Group by Craig Whitney
at Gemini
Digital Colour
If you would like to
ask Craig any questions regarding printing or the processes
involved, please contact him on:
Telephone: 01656
652447
Mobile: 07831 230625
Email: craig@geminidigitalcolour.co.uk
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