The three types of print Other images known as prints Manual prints and process prints Monochrome prints and colour prints Woodcuts Wood engravings Metal relief prints Modern relief methods Engravings Etchings Drypoints Line engravings Steel engravings Crayon manner and stipple engravings Soft ground etchings Mezzotints Aquatints Other total methods in intaglio
Lithographs Transfer lithographs - Chiaroscuro woodcuts Colour woodcuts Tinted wood engravings and colour wood engravings Relief colour from metal blocks Modern relief methods in colour Colour mezzotints, aquatints, stipple engravings Tinted lithographs Colour lithographs Baxter prints Nelson prints New methods in colour Categories of process print Line blocks Relief halftones Nature prints Photogalvanographs Line photogravures Tone photogravures Gravures (machine-printed) Collotypes Photolithographs Relief Intaglio Planographic Screenprints Monotypes and clichés-verre Images with printed text Words below the image: what they say Words below the image: how they look The plate mark How the ink lies Varieties of line Varieties of tone Varieties of face Differences The pleasure of oddities Is the image printed? Original or reproduction? Embossing Lift ground States Ruling machines, multiple tint tools, medal engraving Prepared, manufactured and mechanical tints
Colour print or coloured print
Colour from one or more impressions?
How many printed colours?
Process, mechanical: stereotyping
Process, chemical: electrotyping
A print vocabulary: a guide to consistent usage
The Sherlock Holmes approach