Thursday 22 January 2015

Buying Of Giclee Prints For Sale

By Karyn Shields


Thanks to the progress of technology, there is a type of printing process available today that results in no visible dot screen pattern. No mechanical devices or screens are used. If one finds giclee prints for sale, they are produced in this way with all the hues and tonalities found in the original artwork. The term is taken from the French language and means nozzle as a noun and to squirt or spray as a verb.

This printing process involves the ink being sprayed onto the substrate and although most people are familiar with the desktop inkjet printer, the ones used for this process are much bigger. A scanner is used to make a digital copy of the artwork. This can then be made larger or smaller and printed out onto an appropriate substrate.

The inks used are pigment rather than dye based and this means that they are far more fade resistant. If water color paper is used for the original, this is usually used for the print too and excellent results are achieved as the ink saturates the paper, creating a copy that resembles the original so closely it is quite difficult to tell the difference. A canvas print is, however, more durable than paper and has the added advantage of not creasing when rolled for mailing.

An increasing number of artists are familiarizing themselves with digital art. This may consist of reproducing their original works but others are also experimenting with entirely digitally produced artworks which are then printed or images which are a combination of both. With the advent of so many digital types of art, it is extremely important for a buyer to know exactly what he or she is buying.

Artists will often go the route of producing limited editions. This helps to reassure buyers that they are still purchasing something of value that a limited number of buyers will be able to purchase. Artists are happy to make their work available to more collectors and the buyers are happy to pay a little more if they know that production of a print is limited.

There are a number of methods used by artists to make such copies more valuable to the buyer. They will sign them, number them and even add a certain number of brushstrokes to each copy. The more they personalize the copies, the more collectors are willing to pay.

Artists know that if they are casual or dishonest with regard to how many copies are printed, this affects their reputation and people will not buy their work. Buyers have to feel confident that what is being purchased is worth the expense. As a limited edition copy costs more, the buyer needs to know that the market will not suddenly be flooded with hundreds of copies.

A copy will never be an original but many of the best ones come really close. Thanks to this printing process and the close creative control that it allows the artist over the end product, the vivid colors are pleasing to look at and will not fade. Limited edition copies, particularly those that are personalized, add value to any collection. Copies of artworks are finding their way into the hands of people who would not have been able to afford them in any other way.




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