Richard Bennett
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About antique maps & printsFraming and Mounting Tips for Antique Maps and Prints
- 4 min read
Richard Bennett
The purpose of printing has always been to make multiple exact copies of a given image, map or text. Different methods of printing have been developed over time to achieve this. The main techniques used to print antique maps and prints are as follows:
Woodblock printing was the dominant method for printing maps and prints during the period 1450-1550. Copperplate printing was increasingly used to print maps from the middle of the 15th century. Steel engraving – which being a harder metal was more durable and allowed for greater image detail – started to become the dominant method for printing maps and finer prints from about 1825. Lithography was invented in 1796, but was not commonly used until about 1820, and was not mechanised until 1860, after which it became more widely adopted as a printing method. The most commonly used printing method today is offset printing, which was invented in 1875; it became the dominant printing method during the first decade of the 20th century. By around 1910 the earlier printing methods which had hitherto been used to make maps and prints had effectively died out.
Richard Bennett
Posted In
About antique maps & printsRichard Bennett
Posted In
About antique maps & prints