I would like to offer this as a feature on Traditional Printmaking with a view to bringing about an awareness of this lesser known, maybe somewhat neglected art form,
(lesser known here at DA) and to let others know that traditional printmaking is alive here at deviantART.
Firstly I feel there is a need to clarify the difference between the terms "print" and Traditional Printmaking as used here at DA and possibly at other art sites around the web as well.
Prints = Any artwork or photograph that has been uploaded at a high enough resolution to be purchased in some form be it on a flat 2 dimensional surface or on a surface such as a mug or t-shirt. These are photomechanical reproductions of original artworks.
Traditional Printmaking = Artwork that has been created by transferring an impression from one object onto another two-dimensional surface. For example, as from wood with the creation of a woodblock print, from metal in the creation of an etching or from the many other inkable surfaces that can be used as a matrix for a traditional print. These are original artworks.
Printmaking is one of the oldest and most basic of art forms. Palaeontologists have found the oldest known "prints" when they discovered dinosaur foot impressions in earth that was once wet clay.
From the time of the ancient Chinese and from Dürer artists have used and developed methods of reproducing images on paper. These fine art print techniques have developed and continued to evolved over time.
Forensic scientists use the most basic of printmaking tools to help solve crimes when they take and look at human fingerprints during the course of their investigations.
One of the first pieces of art a child can do is a handprint. Left to their own devices to find their materials, their end product might not be terribly desired by mom and might result in some cleaning house, but it is creative non-the less. Finger painting comes to mind here as well. I will let you imagine all the other permutations of these early artistic endeavors.
Traditional printmaking techniques fall into four categories.
- RELIEF Woodcut, Linocut and some Collographs
- INTAGLIO Etching, Drypoint, Mezzotint, Aquatint
- SERIGRAPHY Silkscreen
- PLANOGRAPHIC Lithography
There is also
Monotype Any print or mixture of print techniques that produces a one off print. Some collographs may fit here as well. This
[link] is also useful to help understand what traditional printmaking is.
Here at DA there are listed under Traditional Printmaking the following print types that we can classify our submissions into.
Collagraph
Dry Needle? Drypoint is the correct term for this.
Etching
Lino
Lithograph
Monotype
Silk Screen
Woodblock
If your having trouble finding these categories then try in the first instance looking under Text & Typography. For some reason someone seems to think Traditional Printmaking belongs there maybe they equate the word "print" with text as in printing = writing. But anyway this is where you will find Traditional Printmaking here at DA.
To follow are some examples of the great creative work that has been and is being uploaded to this area at DA. I have tried to provide, with them some basic explanation of what each print type involves.
Collagraph is a print taken from a collage of materials that have been clued or adhered to a supporting surface. They can be simple or very rich in texture.
Some might also classify prints done with a mixture of print types as a collagraph. These mixture prints could sometimes be classified as monotype as well possibly.
Drypoint (not dryneedle as listed) Both this and etching could come under a broader heading of intaglio printmaking. Intaglio prints all have the image to be printed below the surface of the plate. With drypoint the lines and tones are hand-scratched into the surface of the plate with the lines and burr holding the ink. In most cases the traditional surface to do this on is metal. Zinc and copper are two of the most common metals used with a more readily available option being Perspex.
Engraving and
mezzotint could also be included in this category possibly as they both are dry techniques. Engraving is crisper and cleaner than drypoint. Mezzotint involves the whole surface of the plate having a fine even texture added to it. The artist then scrapes and burnishes the surface to make varying degrees of smooth surfaces that will result in lighter shades when printed.

Some mezzotint examples.
Etching Another print type that should be under the broader heading of intaglio printmaking. Acid and acid resistant grounds are used to create the image on the plate for this printmaking method.
Lino These are relief prints done from a plate that has had the image cut or gouged into it and then the raised surface is inked with the cut image being the white or lighter areas of the print. Potato prints done as a child work in the same manner, as do woodblock prints and stamps.
Lithograph this print form is based on the concept that grease and water dont mix. The image is developed with materials that have an affinity to grease. Special litho pencils, crayons, wax crayons and liquid tusche are among some of the things that can be used to create the greasy image on the surface. The stone or metal with the image on it is then sponged down and inked. The ink sticks to the greasy image and is repelled by the wet areas with no image on them. The print is then taken.
Monotype mono meaning one so these types of prints are one off prints. Traditionally they can be subtractive (reductive) the surface is completely inked and ink is wiped away and then printed, or additive (direct) where the image is painted or applied directly to the surface and then printed. However any print or combination of print techniques that produces only one print impression can come into this category.
Silk Screen This uses stencils of one form or another with a screen where the ink is forced through the stencil to reveal the image on the printed surface. Stencils can be cut or created with emulsions.
Woodblock As with lino prints these are created with lines being cut or gouged out of the surface. These marks form the white or light areas when the plate is inked on the raised surface and then printed. Reduction prints are a process where by several layers are printed on top of each other with more cutting into the surface occurring between registrations.
There are a few places that one can go here on DA to find and view good traditional prints. There are a couple of groups that cater to this art form.

&
One of the newest traditional art gallery directors has a wonderful collection of traditional prints.

If you want to see just his prints then follow this
[link] Stigmatatto would also be the best person to recommend any traditional prints for a daily deviation as well.
Thank you for your time in reading this and I hope it has been of interest.
Devious Comments
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St. Francis said,
“A man who uses his hands is a laborer. One who uses his hands and mind is a craftsman. He who uses his hands, and his mind, and his heart is an artist.”
--
Life shrinks or expands according to one's courage - Anaïs Nin
You become the company you keep, so keep great company - Gopala Ayer Sundaramoorthy
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Dictionary of Printmaking terms: [link]
Types of Print: [link]
That statement made a stain on an otherwise wonderful article. There's no need to make such far-fetched claims, printmaking is quite honorable enough without them. A dinosaur's footprint has f-all to do with art or printmaking, unless you also maintain that a cretacean emptying his bowels was the first painter. Please. It was such a good article until that jarred your credbility.
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Designer, illustrator, comic author, martial artist, globetrotter, tutorial queen...
Tutorial collection: [link]
It is an example of how the very same process occurs in nature, and how it always has, the most basic type of print, and I think it helps people make that connection, that printmaking is a more complicated form of hand prints or thumb prints or those rubber stamps you get as a kid, so that they don't think of it as something detached and mechanical.
A lot of people can't stand that apparent detachment from the final product, but it's really the element of chance that makes printmaking so exciting.
It really couldn't be more relevant.
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Dictionary of Printmaking terms: [link]
Types of Print: [link]
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joey never met a bicycle he didn't want to ride
Of course they have, they are not prints nor in any way related. There is no transfer, there is only impression, and they're not the same thing. Footprints in now-petrified mud are, if anything, related to molding and sculpture, which is why the example is poorly chosen. If there are any true "print" phenomena occuring spontaneously in nature, they don't actually survive. The transfer you speak of did not come into existence until someone consciously smudged mud on his hand and pressed it against a surface to create an impression. That's impressive enough and would have been a much less misleading illustration/unhappy juxtaposition of statements.
"They said something about [the dinosaurs] who made them"
Huh??
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Designer, illustrator, comic author, martial artist, globetrotter, tutorial queen...
Tutorial collection: [link]
Prints are impressions, that is what they are, this is a print, it's not an art print and no one claimed it was. It is a foot print. It is a type of print.
If there are any true "print" phenomena occuring spontaneously in nature, they don't actually survive.
( there are two Rs in occurring )
Foot-prints hand-prints paw-prints.
why do you think they call them prints?
I wouldn't usually encourage people to use dictionary.com as a reference but it will do here: [link]
A print is a print, it's irrelevant whether it's intentional or not. This example as I already said is related to the reality of printmaking, how it is done, and how primal a way of making a mark it is.
Again as I said before people often tend to think of print as something complicated and intimidating, and often there is a misunderstanding about the artists level of connection with the finished product because people get it confused with commercial printing or even photo-exposure in screen printing and photo-etching where you can have as much or as little do to with the image itself as you want.
This shows printmaking is possible in very basic and immediate ways, and all that makes something a print is the fact that it is a print.
The example goes towards the definition of the word print and there must have been a call for it because you yourself are confused into thinking there is more to it than that.
You actually seem to think that foot-prints aren't prints!
Huh??
You can tell obvious things from a footprint, like the size and weight of something and whether it had hairs on the souls of it's feet.
But you can also tell things like whether it walked like a cat ("four wheel drive" Or like a rabbit "Two wheel drive". Whether this particular animal was injured, limping, if you have examples of mature bones you'll know how old the animal was and the footprint will help you tell how much body mass surrounded the bones.
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Dictionary of Printmaking terms: [link]
Types of Print: [link]
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Eat your heart out, Wolfmother.
-Colin Meloy, after performing "The Táin"
~da-youth-crew - RIP
No, I said it is not a print because there is no transfer. I said it is not art because it is not conscious. Do read what is written.
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Designer, illustrator, comic author, martial artist, globetrotter, tutorial queen...
Tutorial collection: [link]
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