Saturday, December 11, 2010

What is a Giclée Print?

Giclée Prints

Giclée, pronounced "zhee-clay" or /dʒiːˈkleɪ, is the process of making fine art prints using digital ink-jet printing.  The term was coined in 1991 to represent any inkjet-based digital print used as fine art. The intent of that name was to distinguish commonly known industrial “Iris proofs” from the type of fine art prints artists were producing on those same types of printers. The name was originally applied to fine art prints created on Iris printers in a process invented in the early 1990s but has since come to mean any high quality ink-jet print and is often used in galleries and print shops to denote such prints.

Origins

The earliest prints to be called "Giclée" were created in the late 1980s on the Iris Graphics models 3024 and 3047 continuous inkjet printers (the company was later taken over by Scitex, now owned by Hewlett Packard). Iris printers were originally developed to produce prepress proofs from digital files for jobs where color matching was critical. Much experimentation was done to adapt the Iris printer to the production of color-faithful, aesthetically pleasing reproductions of artwork. Early Iris prints tended to show color degradation after only a few years. The use of newer inksets has greatly extended the longevity and light fastness of  prints.

Current usage

Beside its association with Iris prints, in the past few years, the word “giclée,” as a fine art term, has come to be associated with prints using fade-resistant, archival inks (pigment based, as well as newer solvent based inks), archival substrates, and the inkjet printers that use them. These printers use  multiple cartridges for variations of each color to increase the apparent resolution and color gamut and allow smoother gradient transitions. A wide variety of substrates are available including various textures and finishes such as matte photo paper, watercolor paper, or cotton canvas.

Artists generally use giclée inkjet printing to make reproductions of their original two-dimensional artwork or photographs. Per print, professionally-produced inkjet prints are much more expensive than offset lithography process traditionally used for such reproductions (a large-format inkjet print can cost more than $50, not including scanning and color correction, versus $5 for a four-color offset litho print of the same image in a run of 1000). However, since the artist does not have to pay for the marketing and storage of large four-color offset print runs, and since he or she can print and sell each print individually in accordance with demand, inkjet printing can be an economical alternative. Inkjet printing has the added advantage of allowing artists total control of the production of their images, including the colors and the surfaces on which they are printed.

Based in part on information from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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