Dictionary Definition
etching
Noun
1 an impression made from an etched plate
2 an etched plate made with the use of acid
3 making engraved or etched plates and printing
designs from them [syn: engraving]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /ˈetʃ.ɪŋ/, /"etS.IN/
- Rhymes: -ɛtʃɪŋ
Noun
- present participle of etch
Extensive Definition
- For other uses of etch or etching, see Etching (disambiguation), for the history of the method, see old master prints.
Origin
Etching by goldsmiths and other metal-workers in order to decorate metal items such as guns, armour, cups and plates has been known in Europe since the Middle Ages at least, and may go back to antiquity. The elaborate decoration of armour, in Germany anyway, was an art probably imported from Italy around the end of the 15th century—little earlier than the birth of etching as a printmaking technique. The process as applied to printmaking is believed to have been invented by Daniel Hopfer (circa 1470-1536) of Augsburg, Germany. Hopfer was a craftsman who decorated armour in this way, and applied the method to printmaking, using iron plates (many of which still exist). Apart from his prints, there are two proven examples of his work on armour: a shield from 1536 now in the Real Armeria of Madrid and a sword in the Germanisches Nationalmuseum of Nuremberg. An Augsburg horse armour in the German Historical Museum, Berlin, dating to between 1512 and 1515, is decorated with motifs from Hopfer's etchings and woodcuts, but this is no evidence that Hopfer himself worked on it, as his decorative prints were largely produced as patterns for other craftsmen in various media. The switch to copper plates was probably made in Italy, and thereafter etching soon came to challenge engraving as the most popular medium for artists in printmaking. Its great advantage was that, unlike engraving which requires special skill in metalworking, etching is relatively easy to learn for an artist trained in drawing.Callot's innovations: échoppe, hard ground, stopping-out
Jacques Callot (1592-1635) from Nancy in Lorraine (now part of France) made important technical advances in etching technique. He developed the échoppe, a type of etching-needle with a slanting oval section at the end, which enabled etchers to create a swelling line, as engravers were able to do. He also seems to have been responsible for an improved, harder, recipe for the etching ground, using lute-makers' varnish rather than a wax-based formula. This enabled lines to be more deeply bitten, prolonging the life of the plate in printing, and also greatly reducing the risk of "foul-biting", where acid gets through the ground to the plate where it is not intended to, producing spots or blotches on the image. Previously the risk of foul-biting had always been at the back of an etcher's mind, preventing him from investing too much time on a single plate that risked being ruined in the biting process. Now etchers could do the highly detailed work that was previously the monopoly of engravers, and Callot made full use of the new possibilities.He also made more extensive and sophisticated use
of multiple "stoppings-out" than previous etchers had done. This is
the technique of letting the acid bite lightly over the whole
plate, then stopping-out those parts of the work which the artist
wishes to keep light in tone by covering them with ground before
bathing the plate in acid again. He achieved unprecedented subtlety
in effects of distance and light and shade by careful control of
this process. Most of his prints were relatively small—up to about
six inches or 15 cm on their longest dimension, but packed with
detail.
One of his followers, the Parisian Abraham
Bosse, spread Callot's innovations all over Europe with the
first published manual of etching, which was translated into
Italian, Dutch, German and English.
The 17th century was the great age of etching,
with Rembrandt,
Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione and many other masters. In the
18th Piranesi, Tiepolo and
Daniel
Chodowiecki were the best of a smaller number of fine etchers.
In the 19th and early-20th century the Etching
revival produced a host of lesser artists, but no really major
figures. Etching is still widely practiced today.
Variants: aquatint, soft-ground and relief etching
- Aquatint uses acid-resistant resin to achieve tonal effects.
- Soft-ground etching uses a special softer ground. The artist places a piece of paper (or cloth etc in modern uses) over the ground and draws on it. The print resembles a drawing.
- Relief etching. Invented by William Blake in about 1788; from 1880-1950 a photo-mechanical ("line-block") variant was the dominant form of commercial printing for images. A similar process to etching, but printed as a relief print, so it is the "white" background areas which are exposed to the acid, and the areas to print "black" which are covered with ground. Blake's exact technique remains controversial. He used the technique to print texts and images together.
Modern technique in detail
A waxy acid-resist, known as a ground, is applied to a metal plate, most often copper or zinc but steel plate is another medium with different qualities. There are two common types of ground, hard ground and soft ground. Hard ground can be applied in two ways. Solid hard ground comes in a hard waxy block. To apply hard ground of this variety, the plate to be etched is placed upon a hot-plate (set at 70 degrees C), a kind of metal worktop that is heated up. The plate heats up and the ground is applied by hand, melting onto the plate as it is applied. The ground is spread over the plate as evenly as possible using a roller. Once applied the etching plate is removed from the hot-plate and allowed to cool which hardens the ground.After the ground has hardened the artist "smokes"
the plate, classically with 3 beeswax tapers, applying the flame to
the plate to darken the ground and make it easier to see what parts
of the plate are exposed. Smoking not only darkens the plate but
adds a small amount of wax. Afterwards the artist uses a sharp tool
to scratch into the ground, exposing the metal.
The second way to apply hard ground is by liquid
hard ground. This comes in a can and is applied with a brush upon
the plate to be etched. Exposed to air the hard ground will harden.
Some printmakers use bitumen as hard ground, although often bitumen
is used to protect steel plates from rust and copper plates from
aging.
Soft ground also comes in liquid form and is
allowed to dry but it does not dry hard like hard ground and is
impressionable. After the soft ground has dried the printmaker may
apply materials such as leaves, objects, hand prints and so on
which will penetrate the soft ground and expose the plate
underneath.
The ground can also be applied in a fine mist,
using powdered rosin or spraypaint. This process is called
aquatint, and allows for the creation of tones, shadows, and solid
areas of color.
The design is then drawn (in reverse) with an
etching-needle or échoppe. An "echoppe" point can be made from an
ordinary tempered steel etching needle, by grinding the point back
on a carborundum stone, at a 45–60 degree angle. The "echoppe"
works on the same principle that makes a fountain pen's line more
attractive than a biro's: The slight swelling variation caused by
the natural movement of the hand "warms up" the line, and although
hardly noticeable in any individual line, has a very attractive
overall effect on the finished plate. It can be drawn with in the
same way as an ordinary needle
The plate is then completely submerged in an acid
that eats away at the exposed metal. Ferric chloride may be used
for etching copper or zinc plates, whereas nitric acid may be used
for etching zinc or steel plates. Typical solutions are 2 parts
FeCl3 to 2 parts water and 1 part nitric to 3 parts water. The
strength of the acid determines the speed of the etching process.
The etching process is known as biting (see also spit-biting
below). The waxy resist prevents the acid from biting the parts of the
plate which have been covered. The longer the plate remains in the
acid the deeper the "bites" become.
During the etching process the printmaker uses a
bird feather or similar item to wave away bubbles and detritus
produced by the dissolving process, from the surface of the plate,
or the plate may be periodically lifted from the acid bath. If a
bubble is allowed to remain on the plate then it will stop the acid
biting into the plate where the bubble touches it. Zinc produces
more bubbles much more rapidly than copper and steel and some
artists use this to produce interesting round bubble-like circles
within their prints for a Milky Way effect. The detritus is powdery
dissolved metal that fills the etched grooves and can also block
the acid from biting evenly into the exposed plate surfaces.
Another way to remove detritus from a plate is to place the plate
to be etched face down within the acid upon plasticine balls or
marbles, although the drawback of this technique is the exposure to
bubbles and the inability to remove them readily.
For aquatinting a printmaker will often use a
test strip of metal about a centimetre to three centimetres wide.
The strip will be dipped into the acid for a specific number of
minutes or seconds. The metal strip will then be removed and the
acid washed off with water. Part of the strip will be covered in
ground and then the strip is redipped into the acid and the process
repeated. The ground will then be removed from the strip and the
strip inked up and printed. This will show the printmaker the
different degrees or depths of the etch, and therefore the strength
of the ink color, based upon how long the plate is left in the
acid.
The plate is removed from the acid and washed
over with water to remove the acid. The ground is removed with a
solvent such as turpentine. Turpentine is
often removed from the plate using methylated spirits since
turpentine is greasy and can affect the application of ink and the
printing of the plate.
Spit-biting is a process whereby the printmaker
will apply acid to a plate with a brush in certain areas of the
plate. The plate may be aquatinted for this purpose or exposed
directly to the acid. The process is known as "spit"-biting due to
the use of saliva once used as a medium to dilute the acid,
although gum arabic or water are now commonly used.
A piece of matte board, a plastic "card", or a
wad of cloth is often used to push the ink into the incised lines.
The surface is wiped clean with a piece of stiff fabric known as
tarlatan and then
either wiped with newsprint
paper; some printmakers prefer to use the blade part of their
hand or palm at the base of their thumb. The wiping leaves ink in
the incisions. You may also use a folded piece of organza silk to
do the final wipe. If copper or zinc plates are used plate surface
is left very clean and therefore white in the print. If steel plate
is used then the plate's natural tooth gives the print a grey
background similar to the effects of aquatinting. As a result steel
plates do not need aquatinting as gradual exposure of the plate via
successive dips into acid will produce the same result.
A damp piece of paper is placed over the plate
and it is run through the press.
Non-toxic etching
Growing concerns about the health effects of acids and solvents led to the development of less toxic etching methods in the late 20th century. An early innovation was the use of floor wax as a hard ground for coating the plate. Others, such as printmakers Mark Zaffron and Keith Howard, developed systems using acrylic polymers as a ground and ferric chloride for etching. The polymers are removed with sodium carbonate (washing soda) solution, rather than solvents. When used for etching, ferric chloride does not produce a corrosive gas, as acids do, thus eliminating another danger of traditional etching.The traditional aquatint, which uses either
powdered rosin or enamel spray paint, is replaced with an airbrush
application of the acrylic polymer hard ground. Again, no solvents
are needed beyond the soda ash solution, though a ventilation hood
is needed due to acrylic particulates from the air brush
spray.
The traditional soft ground, requiring solvents
for removal from the plate, is replaced with water-based relief
printing ink. The ink receives impressions like traditional soft
ground, resists the ferric chloride etchant, yet can be cleaned up
with warm water and either soda ash solution or ammonia. Etching is
a form of art which is taught in many ways.
Photo-etching
Light sensitive polymer plates allow for
photorealistic etchings. A photo-sensitive coating is applied to
the plate by either the plate supplier or the artist. Light is
projected onto the plate as a negative image to expose it.
Photopolymer plates are either washed in hot water or under other
chemicals according to the plate manufacturers' instructions. Areas
of the photo-etch image may be stopped-out before etching to
exclude them from the final image on the plate, or removed or
lightened by scraping and burnishing once the plate has been
etched. Once the photo-etching process is complete, the plate can
be worked further as a normal intaglio plate, using drypoint,
further etching, engraving, etc. The final result is an intaglio
plate which is printed like any other.
Types of metal plates
Copper was always the traditional metal, and is still preferred, for etching, as it bites evenly, holds texture well, and does not distort the colour of the ink when wiped. Zinc is cheaper than copper, so preferable for beginners, but it does not bite as cleanly as copper, and it alters some colours of ink. Steel is growing in popularity as an etching substrate. Prices of copper and zinc have steered steel to an acceptable alternative. Line quality of steel is less fine than copper but finer than zinc. Steel has a natural and rich aquatint. Steel is virtually impossible to reclaim though the price and availability make it still more cost effective.Industrial uses
Etching is also used in the manufacturing of printed circuit boards and semiconductor devices (see Etching (microfabrication) ), on glass, and in the preparation of metallic specimens for microscopic observation.Controlling the acid's effects
Hard grounds
thumb|left|320px|Young Girl in cafe with street-view, etching by [[Lesser Ury 1861-1931]] There are many ways for the printmaker to control the acid's effects. Most typically, the surface of the plate is covered in a hard, waxy 'ground' that resists acid. The printmaker then scratches through the ground with a sharp point, exposing lines of metal that are attacked by the acidAquatint
Aquatint is a
variation in which particulate resin is evenly distributed on the
plate, then heated to form a screen ground of uniform but less than
perfect density. After etching any exposed surface will result in a
roughened (i.e. darkened) surface. Areas that are to be light in
the final print are protected by varnishing between acid baths.
Successive turns of varnishing and placing the plate in acid create
areas of tone difficult or impossible to achieve by drawing though
a wax ground.
Printing
Printing the plate is done by covering the
surface with ink, then
rubbing the ink off the surface with tarlatan cloth or newsprint,
leaving ink in the roughened areas and lines. Damp paper is placed
on the plate, and both are run through a printing
press; the pressure forces the paper into contact with the ink,
transferring the image (c.f., chine-collé).
Unfortunately, the pressure also subtly degrades the image in the
plate, smoothing the roughened areas and closing the lines; a
copper plate is good for,
at most, a few hundred printings of a strongly etched imaged before
the degradation is considered too great by the artist. At that
point, the artist can manually restore the plate by re-etching it,
essentially putting ground back on and retracing their lines;
alternately, plates can be electro-plated before
printing with a harder metal to preserve the surface. Zinc is also used,
because as a softer metal, etching times are shorter; however, that
softness also leads to faster degradation of the image in the
press.
See also
For the history of the method, see old
master prints.
Faults
Faux-bite or "over-biting" is common in etching,
and is the effect of minuscule amounts of acid leaking through the
ground to create minor pitting and burning on the surface. This
incidental roughening may be removed by smoothing and polishing the
surface, but artists often leave faux-bite, or deliberately court
it by handling the plate roughly, because it is viewed as a
desirable mark of the process.
"Etchings" cliché
The phrase "Want to come up and see my etchings?" is a romantic cliché in which a man entices a woman to come back to his place with an offer to look at something artistic. This traces back to 1937 when popular radio violinist David Rubinoff was alleged to have invited a woman to his apartment for seduction, under the pretext of showing her some newly acquired etchings. This was referenced in a James Thurber cartoon where a man tells a woman in a building lobby: "You wait here- I'll bring the etchings down".External links
etching in Bosnian: Bakrorez
etching in Bulgarian: Офорт
etching in Catalan: Aiguafort
etching in Czech: Lept
etching in German: Radierung
etching in Estonian: Ofort
etching in Spanish: Aguafuerte
etching in French: Eau-forte
etching in Western Frisian: Ets
etching in Korean: 에칭
etching in Croatian: Bakropis
etching in Indonesian: Etsa
etching in Italian: Acquaforte
etching in Latvian: Oforts
etching in Lithuanian: Ofortas
etching in Hungarian: Rézkarc
etching in Dutch: Ets
etching in Japanese: エッチング
etching in Norwegian: Etsning
etching in Polish: Akwaforta
etching in Portuguese: Água-forte
etching in Russian: Офорт
etching in Slovak: Lept
etching in Serbo-Croatian: Bakropis
etching in Finnish: Etsaus
etching in Swedish: Etsning (konst)
etching in Ukrainian: Травлення
(металообробка)
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abstract art, aquatint, art, art form, artist, arts and crafts, arts of
design, autolithograph, block, block print, burr, calligraphy, cave art,
ceramics, cerography, chalcography, chiseling, chromolithograph, color
print, copperplate,
copperplate print, crayon engraving, cribbling, cross-hatching,
cut, decoration, demitint, design, designing, drypoint, engravement, engraving, etch, fine arts, folk art,
gem-engraving, glass-cutting, glyptic, graphic arts, graphotype, graving, half tint, hatching, impress, impression, imprint, incision, inscript, inscription, intaglio, line, lining, linoleum-block print,
lithograph, marking, metal cut, mezzotint, negative, photoengraving, photography, plastic art,
plate engraving, primitive art, print, pyrogravure, relief method,
rubber-block print, score,
scoring, scratch, scratching, sculpture, slash, slashing, steel engraving,
stipple, stippling, the arts, tint, tooling, type-cutting, vignette, wood engraving,
woodblock, woodburning, woodcut, woodprint, xylograph, zincography