In the beginning, before the printing press, printmaking
was not considered an art form, rather a medium of communication.
It was not till the 18th century that art prints began
to be considered originals and not till the 19th that
artists began to produce limited editions and to sign
their prints along with the technical information necessary
to authenticate the work.
European printmaking began with textile printing as
early as the sixth century, while printing on paper had
to wait a bit longer for the arrival of paper technology
from the Far East. The first paper produced in Europe
was in Játiva in Spain in 1151. The first woodcuts
printed on paper were playing cards produced in Germany
at the beginning of the 15th century. It was only slightly
before this that the first royal seals and stamps appeared
in the England of Henry VI.
There is a suggestion that the first printing press was
an adapted grape press. Whatever its provenance the early
printing presses were solid wooden machines that were
an essential part of the printing revolution together
with ink, paper and type.
While large printing firms progressed to steam driven
presses and large format printing, the jobbing printer
was also able to improve upon his output with a treadle
or even motorised platten press of a smaller scale.
In the latter half of the twentieth century lithography
using photographic reproduction replaced "hot metal"
type and allowed pages to be more easily laid out with
photographs and illustrations.
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