Resources

Glossary

This glossary is from the California Society of Printmakers’ Centennial Book.

À la Poupée
French: with the doll
An intaglio method in which cotton dabbers or felt pads are used to hand-apply several different colors to a single plate. The technique allows the artist to use multiple colors with one run of the plate through the press. Also known as the oneplate method.

Acrylic Monotype
An image painted on a plate with acrylic paint and a gel medium base, or formulated to be slow drying, then transferred to paper with (often hand) pressure. See also Monotype.

Aquapasto
With watercolor and gouache or water-soluble crayon for a monotype.

Aquatint
An intaglio process in which rosin powder is evenly sifted over and etched into a copper plate using a stop-out varnish in various places to protect the plate during successive acid baths. The technique creates an even tooth (texture) on the surface of the plate that catches the ink, allowing the artist to produce a controlled range of tonal areas in the image from dark to light. Often combined with other intaglio methods such as etching and drypoint.

Aquatint Etching
An image created exclusively by the aquatint technique. See previous entry.

Archival Pigment Print
See Digital Print.

Artist’s ProofA/P
See Proof.

Baren/Japanese Baren
A round, hand-held pad used to burnish or apply pressure to the back of relief prints. Traditionally made with an ategawa (circular stiff backing piece), a shin (coiled pad of twisted fiber), and a barengawa (cover) made from a takenokawa (bamboo sheath) that is tightly twisted and tied around the back. Modern barens can be made with plastics, ball bearings, and other materials.

Bleed Print
A printed image that extends to the edges of the sheet. To achieve a bleed print, the printer must print a larger image than the paper, after which the printed deckle is preserved or the paper is cut to size.

Blind Embossment 
See Embossment.

Block, Block Print 
See Relief Print.

Bon à Tirer
French: good to print
The print a master printer uses as an exemplar for printing an edition. Also known as BAT.

Burin
An engraving tool with different-shaped tips, used for both wood and metal plates. Also known as a graver.

Caran d’Ache
A commercial brand of water-soluble pencils, crayons, pastels, and other drawing tools.

Chiaroscuro Woodcut
Italian: light-dark
A multi-block technique used to achieve gradual shifts in tone from light to dark; traditionally, a black key block that describes the complete image using thin black lines is printed over the tonal block(s). The technique originated in Germany around 1500. Italian chiaroscuro prints from that period used only tonal blocks, allowing the fi nished piece to resemble a wash drawing. In the modern era, the look of a chiaroscuro woodcut can be achieved with a reductive technique using one block. See also Reduction Print.

Chine Collé
French: glued lightweight Asian paper
An image printed on thin pieces of (often colored) delicate paper designed to embellish part of a larger print, or which underlies an entire print. The dampened tissue is placed on the inked plate, lightly treated with paste on its back, and adhered to the heavier sheet with one pass through the press.

Chromoxylography
A late 19th and early 20th century color printing technique using wood engraving and woodcut plates. The process, often used for color book illustration, employs separate blocks for printing primary colors that are layered or combined to create other colors. The blocks are often intricately carved to resemble hatching. When printed on top of each other, the hatched areas suggest a wide range of tints and colors. See also Wood engravingXylography.

Clay Monotype
A monotype technique made with a leather-hard, flat, clay plate and painted with kaolin (white clay) into which some form of pure pigment has been added. The print is made by placing dampened paper or another support on the clay, then rolling the back of the paper/support with a brayer or roller. Pigment from the clay substrate is lifted and embedded into the surface of the paper, resulting in a unique archival print. See also Monotype.

CNC
A Computer Numeric Control device used in manufacturing and printmaking in which a digital fi le is sent to a computercontrolled cutting device such as a CNC router, laser cutter, or water jet used for the production of matrices for lithography, intaglio, and relief printmaking, or other non-art-related items. The list of CNC devices is growing, as contemporary printmakers use embroidery machines, engraving machines, pencil plotters, vinyl cutters, and cutting plotters (among others) to create matrices and prints. See also Laser-Cut Woodcut.

Collagraph
A blending of “collage” and “graphic” to describe a print made from a plate with low-relief collage elements glued to its surface. Any thin, sturdy material such as cardboard, metal, linoleum, or plastic can serve as the plate; materials such as paper, cloth, or other found textures are adhered to it or may be built up on it with glues or acrylic medium. The plate can be inked and printed with intaglio or relief methods. Sometimes spelled collograph. See also Photocollagraphy.

Copper Plate
A flat plate made of polished copper used by artists for etching, engraving, and other intaglio printing techniques. Zinc is an alternative metal plate used for the same purposes.

Deckle Edge/Deckle
The irregular or rough edge naturally formed on handmade papers. Artificial deckles can also be found on machine-made papers.

Digital Print
Any print that is created from a digital file. Fine artists who use digital printing methods employing high-quality archival paper and lightfast pigment inks often call their works archival pigment prints. Artist-printmakers and commercial printers use the same materials and technology for different purposes. The artist-printmaker uses the computer and digital imaging software to create original images printed with the inks and paper described above. The same or similar digital printing systems are also used for commercial purposes, in some cases to make high-quality gicl.e reproductions of art created in other media. Giclée reproductions may also be called digital prints.

Drypoint
An intaglio technique in which lines are drawn or scratched directly into a metal plate with a sharp tool. The metal that is raised around the scratched incisions (the burr) is left on the plate, allowing the burr to catch and hold the applied ink. Variation in the depth of the mark determines how dark the line appears. Drypoint is recognizable by its soft, dark, velvety lines. Repeated printing wears the burr down and weakens the darker lines in the print.

Edition
The printed impressions made from a plate or plates signed and numbered by the artist. The numbered edition excludes various impressions or proofs made for other reasons, such as artist’s or trial proofs. See also Proof.

Embossment
An image or part of a design that is raised above the print surface, or seen as if in relief. The effect is produced by pressing soft or dampened paper into depressed areas of a plate so the paper holds the shape of the depression. If no ink is used in the process, the print is referred to as a blind embossment.

Engraving
An intaglio or relief technique of incising an image or design with gravers into a metal plate or the end grain of a block of wood. An engraved line may be thin at its beginning, swell at its center, and thin out again as the tool delicately enters, reaches greater depth, and leaves the metal or wood surface. Both metal and wood engravings are known for their sharp, precise lines, and for the skill and patience the technique requires. See also Wood Engraving.

Etching
An intaglio technique in which a metal plate is coated with an acid-resistant material or “ground.” The image is made by removing parts of the ground with varied tools to expose parts of the plate. The acid corrodes the exposed surfaces, creating depressed lines and textures that are later inked and printed. See also Hard Ground EtchingIntaglio.

Foil Monoprint Relief
An impression of an object or shape made from aluminum foil, modifi ed by the artist, then relief inked and run through a press. The print incorporates textures caused by the pressed foil. A unique method developed by Roy Ragle. Aluminum foil monoprint methods may also be used in combination with collagraph techniques.

Gampi
A thin Japanese paper made from natural bark, often used for chine collé.

Ghost
The second, lighter print made from the residual ink left on a monotype plate. See also Monotype.

Giclée
A digital print made with an inkjet printer using lightfast pigment inks on archival paper or canvas. The term is used to define high-quality printed reproductions of paintings, drawings, and prints. So named after the French gicleur, nozzle, or jet as in propelling spurts of ink. Contrast with digital printabove.

Graver
See Burin

Ground
An acid-resistant material such as wax or asphaltum thinly applied to an etching plate. A drawing is made through the ground with an etching needle, exposing the metal plate. When the plate is dipped in a strong acid, the drawing is bitten or etched into the metal. See also Hard Ground EtchingSoft Ground EtchingSpit BiteWhite Ground Etching.

Gyotaku
A traditional Japanese fish printing or fish rubbing process. Soft paper is laid on top of the painted fish and printed.

Hanga/Moku Hanga
The Japanese phrase for woodblock printing (moku = wood, hanga = print). Often associated with the Japanese Ukiyo-e style (art of the floating world) that flourished in the Edo period, between the 1650s and 1850s. Early Japanese methods required a black key block that defined the design and served as a guide for the placement of all the colors. Separate blocks were carved for each color. For printing, the blocks were first coated with a thin layer of rice paste to delay drying of the colors. Printers used water-based colors delicately applied to the carved blocks with soft, wide brushes. Japanese Ukiyo-e woodcuts typically used traditional washi papers made with bark fibers. To transfer the image, pressure was applied to the back of the print by hand using a baren, a small disk covered with dried bamboo leaf. Prints were usually commissioned by a publisher and produced by an artist/designer in collaboration with skilled carvers and printers.

Hard Ground Etching
A hard-drying, acid-resistant wax, asphaltum, and rosin coating (ground) thinly applied to a metal plate. The image is drawn or scratched through the ground with a sharp needle, exposing the plate for etching. The finished print may be called either an etching or a hard ground etching. See also Etching.

Image Transfer
A photocopied, magazine, laser, or inkjet image transferred to paper using a variety of methods, including solvents, heat, gel medium, or commercial colorless blender pens. The image to be transferred is usually placed facedown on a sheet of paper (or other surface) and the solvent material generously applied to the back and rubbed. See also Wintergreen Transfer.

Inkjet Printer
An electric digital printer, desktop or larger, that uses jets or droplets of ink (as opposed to a laser printer, which uses electrostatic laser scanning) to print a digital fi le, either text or image. May use water-soluble dyes or archival pigmented inks. See also Giclée.

Intaglio
Any printing process in which lines or textures below the surface of the plate create the image. Techniques such as etching, aquatint, drypoint, mezzotint, and engraving are used to incise or corrode the plate. Once the image is completed, ink is applied to the (often) heated plate, filling incised lines and roughened areas. The surface is wiped dampened paper from the depressed parts of the plate.

Laser Print
An image produced by a computer printer that uses electrostatic laser scanning technology (as opposed to jets of ink) to lay down the ink.

Laser-Cut Woodcut
A design cut by a laser, or high-powered light beam, in the surface of a wood block, which is then inked and printed in the traditional manner. The image begins with a scan or other digital file. The plate or block is produced by a laser-cutting computer system that can cut designs in wood and other materials. The laser cutter is one of a number of different CNC devices used in printmaking. See also CNC.

Latex Lift Ground
An image drawn or painted directly on a metal plate with liquid latex and covered with an acrylic ground. When the acrylic is dry, the latex is rubbed off. The areas where the image was drawn are exposed so the plate can be etched.

Lift GroundSee Latex Lift GroundSugar Lift.

Linocut/Linoleum Cut/Linoleum Block Print
A relief process in which an image is carved into the surface of a sheet of linoleum using the same knives and gouges used for woodcut. Linoleum has a smooth, soft surface that is more easily cut than wood. The Russian Constructivists used linoleum to make prints around 1913. It was also utilized by several German Expressionists. Linoleum may be mounted on a block of wood for greater stability in handling. The finished print is described either as a linocut or as a linoleum block print.

Linoleum Engraving
The term sometimes used as an alternative to linoleum cut or linocut to mean a print taken from a linoleum matrix. See previous entry.

Litho Crayon
A grease-based drawing crayon used primarily on litho stones, sometimes also used as a resist on other matrices.

Photoetching
An intaglio technique for transferring photographic, drawn, or digital images from a transparent fi lm positive to a plate made light-sensitive with a photo emulsion. A variety of photo emulsions exist, some of which must be purchased separately from the matrix and applied by the artist, others of which have been pre-applied. Photoetching achieves the appearance of continuous tones by using a varied-size dot pattern or halftone screen in the etched plate. See also Solarplate.

Litho Stone
A porous, flat limestone, usually from Bavaria, used for making lithographs. The stone is receptive to drawing with greasebased crayons and liquids (tusche). See also Lithograph.

Lithograph
A flat or planographic printing technique traditionally executed on Bavarian limestone, now also made with metal (usually ball-grain aluminum or zinc) and polyester (pronto) plates. A drawing is made on the stone with grease-based pencils, crayons, or fluids (tusche) and chemically fixed to the surface. When the stone is dampened with a sponge and water, and then inked, the ink is attracted to the drawing but not to the dampened non-drawn areas of the stone. The printed image presents the drawing in reverse.

Matrix
The surface, plate, or screen on or from which an image is created for transfer to paper or other material. Typical matrices are wood, linoleum, metal, plexiglass, cardboard, and stone. Currently, matrices may also include rubber, vinyl, or even found objects.

Mezzotint
An intaglio technique in which the entire plate is evenly roughened with a rocker or roulette tool. If printed at this stage, the plate surface will capture a uniform layer of (usually black) ink and produce a solid, deep (again, usually) black tone on paper. The image is made by scraping, burnishing, or smoothing out the texture in the plate surface to create variable grays and whites.

Moku Hanga
See Hanga.

Monoprint
A variation of monotype in which an image is painted on a printable surface along with an inked repeatable matrix, such as an etched plate or linocut. The technique allows for a series of prints in which part of the image is always repeated and part is hand worked and not repeatable.

Monotype
A unique print pulled from a painting made on a glass, plexiglass, or metal plate. The artist can make a completely realized painting in a single layer on the plate or use a “multiple-drop” technique, which consists of printing layers of different colors on top of each other. Residue left on the plate from the printed image is known as a “ghost” and can be printed or repainted into another, similar image. See Acrylic MonotypeGhostSubtractive Monotype.

Photocollagraphy
A technique that uses a light-sensitive gelatin solution or emulsion on a plate to establish an image. Prior to adding trademarked use as Plexiglas™, but now commonly used in the more generic form.

Photogravure
An intaglio process in which a photographic image is transferred to a copper plate with the help of a light-sensitive, gelatin-coated tissue without the interjection of a dot-matrix or random-pattern stochastic screen. The tissue is exposed to a fi lm positive. The plate is fi nely aquatinted and then etched, resulting in a high-quality intaglio print that can reproduce the detail and continuous tones of a photograph. Variable depths of the etch are the key to the process’s unique tonal range. The French term photogravure broadly refers to any photobased etching technique, while héliogravure is the French and German equivalent to the American term photogravure.

Photopolymer Etching
An image made from a photopolymer plate coated with a light-sensitive emulsion, hardened with ultraviolet light, and developed (etched) with ordinary tap water. See also PhotoetchingSolarplate.

Photo-Silkscreen
A screenprint method in which a positive photo image is transferred to the screen using a light-sensitive emulsion.

Plate
In printmaking, a fl at sheet of metal—usually rectangular or square but sometimes shaped and generally of copper, steel, or zinc—used as a matrix for a print, most often for an intaglio print but at times for a lithograph. Plate is sometimes used as a generic term for matrix. See also Matrix.

Plate Mark
The depression or embossment made on paper by the edge of an intaglio plate during printing. The plate mark denotes the print’s image size as opposed to the paper size.

Plexiglass
A light, transparent, weather-resistant thermoplastic sheet frequently used as a matrix for monotypes, monoprints, and drypoints. 

Pochoir
An early 20th-century stencil technique originally used in France for book illustration. Stencils for each color in the design are laid on the surface of the paper. Colors are handapplied by brush through the open stencil. Updated stencil methods include applying colors through the stencil with a brayer on either the paper or the plate; or laying a stencil on a rolled-up plate and printing the color through the stencil.

Polymer GravureSee Photoetching.

Pressure Printing
An experimental letterpress technique similar to collagraphy in which a low-relief collage is glued onto a sheet of paper and then placed beneath the paper to be inked on the press. Similar to a rubbing. The term was coined by Barbara Tetenbaum and is also called stratography.

Proof
A signed impression made from a plate outside the edition for various purposes. Artists’s proofs (A/P or épreuve d’artiste), made for or by the artist, are identical to the edition; trial proofs (T/P) are test or working impressions; state proofs a scratch or mark over the image to demonstrate that the printed edition is complete.

Reduction Print/Elimination Print/Suicide Print
A multi-color relief process using one block, either wood or linoleum, for all of the colors. The block is gradually cut away after each color is printed, layering colors one on top of another in remaining areas of the design until the desired image is achieved.

Reemay Polyester
An acid-free, fabric-like sheet made of polyester often used for conservation. Its properties include an ability to retain its shape when wet, and it is available in different thicknesses. Also used for clay monotype techniques.

Relief Print
A printmaking process in which the image is made by inking and printing the raised or uncut surface of a block or plate (woodcut, linocut, or similar). May also refer to intaglio, cardboard plates, and collagraphs that can also be relief inked and printed.

Remarque ProofFrench: a remark, or note
A remarque is a small, drawn or incised sketch or mark made in the margin of a plate or stone, often near the lower margin. Originally inscribed in pencil, it was intended to help the artist identify different states as the plate was being worked. The remarque is eliminated from the margin before the edition is pulled. A remarque proofis the proof made before the remarque is removed.

Rotogravure
An intaglio printing method in which letters and images are transferred from an engrave copper plate to a rotary drum or cylinder. Widely used to print images and captions in newspaper Sunday magazine sections, especially in the 1930s–1960s.

Salt Etch/Metal Salt Etching
A salt or ferric chloride solution that is used to etch metal plates in place of nitric acid.

Scorper
A wood-engraving tool.

Screenprint/Serigraph/Silkscreen
An image made with stencils or other block-out materials applied to a taut mesh fabric or screen affixed to a frame. Ink is forced through the open parts of the mesh screen with a squeegee onto a sheet of paper below it.

SerigraphySee Screenprint.

SilkscreenSee Screenprint.

Soap GroundSee White Ground Etching.

Soft Ground Etching
A pliable, waxy, acid-resistant coating applied to an etching plate. When anything is pressed into the soft surface, the ground is removed, exposing the plate for later etching. A piece of paper placed on the coated plate and drawn on lifts the ground onto the back of the paper wherever pressure is applied. When printed, the image can look like a crayon or pencil drawing. Other materials also can be pressed into the ground and removed to replicate their textures.

Solarplate
A steel plate pre-coated with a light-sensitive polymer emulsion used for creating either relief or intaglio images. Images may be transferred from positive or negative transparent fi lms or by working directly on the plate. Originally developed for printmakers by New York master printmaker Dan Welden in 1970–71. See also Photoetching.

Spit Bite
Painting the plate with a brush, Q-tip, or other implement dipped in acid usually modified with water, saliva, or other solutions.

Spit Bite Aquatint
An image made by acid modified with water, saliva, or other solutions brushed directly onto the aquatinted plate to alter tones.

Spray Can Aquatint
An image made by an acrylic solution or enamels in a spray can or airbrush as a substitute for rosin-based aquatint. Same as hair spray aquatint.

Steel Facing
A thin layer of iron electroplated onto a copper plate that has been etched (or worked with drypoint or aquatint). Steel facing extends the longevity of the plate, allowing a greater run of prints.

Subtractive Monotype/Reductive Monotype
A glass, metal or plexiglass plate is rolled with ink. The image is created by removing the ink or creating textures in the ink with such tools as Q-tips, cotton swabs, rags, sticks, or brushes. See also Monotype.

Sugar Lift/Lift Ground
An image painted on the plate with a water-soluble sugar solution and covered with an acid-resistant ground. When placed in warm water, the sugar solution dissolves and lifts the ground away, exposing the plate. The open areas of the plate are then etched. The process preserves the artist’s original brushwork.

Trace Monotype
A print made by tracing or making a drawing on the back of a piece of paper placed on an inked plate. The pressure of the pencil, pen, or other instrument transfers the ink from the plate to the paper. Sometimes known as transfer print, transfer drawing, or trace drawing.

Transfer Lithograph
An image drawn on paper with lithographic drawing tools and transferred to a lithographic stone with pressure. The stone is processed and printed as usual. Transfer papers may be uncoated or treated with a water-soluble coating such as gum arabic. When dampened, coated paper will release the full drawing more readily to the stone. The method was first used in the 19th century.

Tusche
A black, greasy lithographic drawing material that is also used as a resist for etching and silkscreen. Comes in a liquid, stick, or paste form, the latter of which can be diluted with water, turpentine, or petroleum solvent.

UV-Cured Acrylic Printer
A flatbed digital printer that uses UV (ultraviolet) lamps to cure (dry) special acrylic-based inks instantaneously. printed by hand to achieve more variable tonal qualities. Defining features of a woodcut include the visible grain of the wood in the print, and the incisions and textures created by the artist’s cutting tools.

Variable Edition
Notation in the documentation of an edition as “V.E.” or “E.V.” (Edition Varies) after the edition number. Used if there is hand coloring in a print, or if prints have varying characteristics within an edition. See also Edition.

Viscosity Printing
An intaglio and planar printing process in which different viscosities (oily and soft versus less oily and stiffer) resist each other so that multiple colors can be printed at the same time. S. W. Hayter is renowned for inventing viscosity printing, using different levels of deeply bitten etching plates. California artist Joseph Zirker later applied the principle of viscosity printing to single-level (monotype) plates.

Washi
Handmade Japanese papers typically used for printing relief prints. Washi are made from natural barks such as mulberry and gampi. See also Gampi.

White Ground Etching/Soap Ground
An acid-resistant, soapy ground often made with white pigment, linseed oil, and Ivory Snow detergent or other soap. The mixture can be manipulated on the plate to produce both thick and thin consistencies, the latter being less stable in the acid. The instability is a virtue if it is carefully watched. White ground etching can result in gradated tonal values in the print. Variations of white ground etching date from the 17th century onward.

Wintergreen Transfer
A photocopied image transferred with the use of wintergreen oil, a pungent, plant-based oil. The photocopy is placed facedown on the print, and the oil is gently wiped on its back with cotton balls until it is translucent. Pressure applied to the back of the dampened photocopy loosens the toner and deposits the image onto another surface. See also Image Transfer.

Wood Engraving
A relief technique similar to woodcut, made from the polished end grain of a block of hardwood such as maple or boxwood. The design is cut with gravers instead of the chisels and gouges used in woodcut production. The printed image is characterized by precision cutting and very fine detail. Both a black line and white line look can be achieved with this technique. See also Xylography.

Woodcut/Woodblock
WA relief process in which an image is carved from the surface of a long-grain plank of wood or plywood. The white (negative) areas of the design are removed from the wood with different-shaped knives and gouges, and the uncut surface is then inked. The block may be press-printed or printed by hand to achieve more variable tonal qualities. Defining features of a woodcut include the visible grain of the wood in the print, and the incisions and textures created by the artist’s cutting tools.

Xylography
A term most often used to describe wood engraving, or printing from, or in the manner of, a woodblock. No longer typically used in English in reference to contemporary prints, the term is still employed in other languages, such as Spanish xilografía. See also Wood Engraving.

Alan Steel & Supply Company
Discount source for copper, zinc, aluminum plates. No minimum purchase. 505 East Bayshore Road. Redwood City, CA 94063. (650) 369-2526. Mon-Fri: 8am–4:30pm. Sat-Sun: Closed.

Awagami Paper
Japanese Washi papers.

Alco Metal & Iron Company
Discount source for copper, zinc, aluminum plates. $30 minimum purchase. 1091 Doolittle Drive.  San Leandro, CA 94577. (510) 562-1107. Mon-Fri: 7 am – 4:30 pm. Sat: 8 am – 12 pm.

KNG Visual Solutions 
An SF Bay Area screenmaking and screenprinting specialist. Custom built aluminum frames, screen re-stretching, imaging and printing from small to x-large formats. 1776 Wright Ave Richmond CA 94804. (510) 778-1783 www.kng.net

Dick Blick
Dick Blick sells art supplies, including printmaking supplies and presses locally and online. [CSP members receive 10% discount every day.]

GoldUp USA
Gold-Up USA Inc in Newark CA offers pre-stretched screens within a variety of mesh counts, as well as screen printing supplies such as fabric mesh, squeegee, emulsion, and more. Same day screen pick-up available.

Hamilton Wood Type and Print Museum
Located in Wisconsin, at Hamilton you can visit the world’s largest collection of type. Tour the type making equipment, take part in a class or event. Print from the museum’s vast collection. View our gallery’s current exhibit. Learn about typography and the rich history of American printing. 

Ink In Tubes

Letterpress Things
A unique store in Chicopee, Massachusetts for supplies, type, tools, equipment and information for the table-top letterpress printer.

Midwest Sign & Screen Printing Supply
East Bay source for pre-stretched screen frames, substrates and inks. 21054 Alexander Court. Hayward, CA. 94545-1234. PHONE: (510)732-5800 FAX: (510) 732-7624. Mon-Fri: 8 am -5 pm.

Skyline Type Foundry

Tasciaarts
Tokyo-based tool and materials supplier for worldwide artists, specializing in Japanese Woodblock Printing (Mokuhanga | 木版画) and crafts. Tasciaarts aims to connect tool makers and made-in-Japan materials to the world. 

Utrecht Art Supplies
Utrecht sells art supplies, including printmaking supplies and presses locally and online.

In California
Printmakers’ Workshop at Arts Benicia
Arts Benicia Printmaking Studio facilities offer four presses. Artists can work independently or with the help of instructor Ronna Leon. Artists sign up for six sessions which they complete flexibly during a ten week period. Studio time is 9 to 1 on Mondays and/or Saturdays. A variety of printmaking techniques are offered, including non-toxic zinc etching, monotype, woodcut,  mokulito, collagraphs, pronto plates, and mixed media.

Compound Studios
Beautiful interdisciplinary art facilities, print Shop & studios. Offering 24/7 member-access to our facilities & equipment in Emeryville, CA. Private studios and facilities in: printmaking, letterpress, etching, screen printing, laser cutting, 3D printing, wood shop, ceramic lab, sew lab, riso lab, lounge, kitchen, parking, and huge common space. The Print Shop specializes in letterpress printing and boasts a large collection of movable wood type.

Crown Point Press
Crown Point is a print publisher and gallery in San Francisco which features etchings and Asian woodcut original prints by contemporary artists such as Wayne Thiebaud Sol LeWitt, Richard Diebenkorn, Ed Ruscha, John Cage. They also offer summer workshops to interested printmakers.

East County Print Shop
Our production abilities range from single one-off’s to complete limited editions that can number in the hundreds. A range of printing techniques are available and generally include screenprint, etching, woodcut and linoleum relief, and archival pigment (inkjet) prints. With over 15 years of experience in the production of fine art prints and multiples, we help artists create their artwork in printed form.

Graphic Arts Workshop 
The Graphic Arts Workshop is a printmaking cooperative in San Francisco, founded in 1952 by faculty from the California Labor College. Today, the cooperative has approximately 40 members working in traditional fine art printmaking techniques. Members have 24/7 access to the studio space. GAW also offers printmaking classes.

Hot Off the Press
A small membership organization for experienced printmakers working in intaglio or relief printmaking.  Our facilities include about 700 square feet of space, with 24/7 access, storage, lots of working surfaces, a Sturges etching press and most of the equipment you will need.  The studio is located in rural Sebastopol (Sonoma County, CA), in a beautiful redwood grove, a peaceful environment for your creative process.

Kala Art Institute
The Kala Art Institute is a multicultural printmaking workshop in Berkeley, California. It features gallery space, offers workshops, professional printing work space, and a residency program.

Max’s Garage Press
Our studio has resources for lithography, intaglio, woodcut, screen printing, bindery, Risograph, laser cutting and more.Our studio has resources for lithography, intaglio, woodcut, screen printing, bindery, risograph, laser cutting and more. Studio members gain access to all of the resources we offer in our community space, and can use them within your skill set (Previous experience is needed before use). On-site monitors. Monthly memberships. Closed in Dec for East Bay Print Sale. Berkeley CA.

Mission Gráfica Printmaking Studio
Mission Gráfica is a publicly funded printmaking studio and offers affordable access to rentable studio space and printmaking classes. Located at the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts in San Francisco, it has facilities for woodcut, intaglio, mono-print and screen printing on paper and textiles.  Mission Grafica has been open for over 40 years and houses one of the largest historical collections of prints and posters in California. CSP member Marsha Shaw is the studio manager.

Moonlight Press
Moonlight Press is a printmaking-based project space founded by Master Printers Nichol Markowitz and Courtney Sennish. Dedicated to craftsmanship and technique, uniting contemporary ideas and experimental applications. Offering a variety of publishing, project-based, and contract printmaking services specializing in copper plate etching, photogravure, woodblock, archival collage, and traditional Japanese scroll mounting techniques. Private and group workshops, studio time with master printer, and contract printing & platemaking. Oakland, CA.

Myrtle Press
Co-founded by CSP member Dixie Laws, Myrtle Press is a Sacramento printmaking studio with facilities for intaglio, relief, and screen printing. Myrtle Press offers workshops in a variety of printmaking techniques, as well as monthly memberships and hourly rates for studio use.

Nova Community Arts
Nova Community Arts is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to providing a space for artistic exploration and education in Los Angeles. Nova is committed to offering arts education, access to materials and equipment, and a platform of creative expression for the community, including students, professionals, and amateurs alike. We are dedicated to serving underfunded populations in LA, and providing inclusive spaces for the LGBTQ+ community and POC.

Pacific Art League
Since 1921 we have been dedicated to the great tradition of promoting art, training emerging artists and enriching lives in the San Francisco Peninsula.

Palo Alto Art Center
The Palo Alto Art Center is your place to see and make art, activate your creativity, and expand your community. Created by the community, for the community in 1971, the Palo Alto Art Center provides an accessible and welcoming place to engage with art. We engage approximately 150,000 people every year through a diverse range of programs.

Printmakers at the Tannery
The Printmakers at the Tannery’s (PATT) mission is to provide studio resources for Santa Cruz County printmakers so they may create art and follow their interests in an unstructured yet collaborative way. PATT also aims to encourage the creation and appreciation of original hand-pulled prints and the art of printmaking, through exhibitions, demonstrations, and talks.

The San Francisco Center for the Book
The San Francisco Center for the Book is a center of inspiration for the book arts world, featuring the art & craft of letterpress printing, bookbinding, and artists bookmaking.

TESLA: The Electric Smoothie Lab Apothecary & Printshop
A hub of creativity and empowerment for all — from youth to elders, novices to experienced printers, artists, groups, and anyone who’s curious about screen printing. We provide a space to collaborate and print apparel, posters, and more. Offering half-day rate studio rental, open studio hours and workshops. We keep our doors open late on Tuesday nights. Reserve your spot to join us and access the printing studio. Related services also available such as transparency printing, burning screens, ink purchase, and printing. Oakland, CA.

Visual Philosophy Studio
Visual Philosophy Studio in San Jose has a fully loaded print shop with Screen printing, Etching, Monotype, Woodcut and Solar plate etching equipment. Computer lab with a laser cutter, circuit and 3d printer. Daily, weekly and monthly memberships available!

Self Help Graphics & Art’s Professional Printmaking Studio
Launched in the 1970’s by Sister Karen Boccalero to provide community members of Boyle Heights and East Los Angeles with access to a studio, tools, and training for youth interested in learning the printmaking process.

Sonoma Community Center
The Community Center’s Printmaking department offers public workshops and classes, in addition to hosting weekly monitored open studio access for experienced artists who wish to work on independent projects. We have a beautiful well-lit studio with a variety of machinery to explore many methods of printmaking including, monoprinting, intaglio, and relief printing.

In the United States
Constellation Studios
Lincoln Nebraska. Constellation Studios attracts and retains artists through short-term residencies, retreats, workshops and gallery exhibitions. Offerings include assisted sessions, invited artist residencies for collaboration or independent work, and yearly, monthly, daily studio access as Artist Associates.

Crow’s Shadow Institute for the Arts
Pendleton, Oregon. Crow’s Shadow Institute of the Arts provides a creative conduit for educational, social, and economic opportunities for Native Americans through artistic development.

Donkey Mill Art Center
The center is located near the artist community of Holualoa along the Mamalahoa Kona Heritage Corridor on the Big Island of Hawaii.

Flatbed Center For Contemporary Printmaking
Austin, Texas. Flatbed operates a professional collaborative printmaking studio, Flatbed Press, and a separate open community studio, known as Community Press, where it mentors, educates, explores and seeks to expand the role of traditional and innovative printmaking. Flatbed’s gallery houses the archived inventory of prints available for purchase and represents and exhibits artists working with printmaking media and their related works.

Highpoint Center for Printmaking
Minneapolis, Minnesota. Highpoint is a non-profit organization dedicated to advancing the art of printmaking. Its goals are to provide educational programs, community access, and collaborative publishing opportunities to engage the community and increase the appreciation and understanding of the printmaking arts.

Hui Noeau
State of the art studios staffed by artist technicians in printmaking, photography (Maui’s only public darkroom), painting and drawing, digital media, fiber arts, ceramics and jewelry, provide a vital resource for both artist practitioners and students.

Lower East Side Print Shop
The Lower East Side Print Shop at West 37th Street in New York City offers hourly, daily, weekly, and monthly studio rental. The studio includes facilities for intaglio, relief, monoprint, waterbased silkscreen techniques, photo and digital processes. 

Minnesota Center for the Book
MCBA engages a continuum of creators, learners, and admirers through high-quality programs that celebrate a diversity of artistic perspectives and voices. We advance the book arts field by inviting innovation, caring for traditions, educating new enthusiasts, inspiring creative expression, honoring artistic excellence, and empowering broad public access to this dynamic art form. From the traditional crafts of papermaking, letterpress printing, and bookbinding to new methods of art-making and communication, MCBA supports the limitless creative development of book arts.

Remarque Print Workshop
Albuquerque, New Mexico. Remarque’s mission is to provide a safe, non-toxic facility for printmakers, to provide education opportunities, and to support and promote local and international artists.

Women’s Studio Workshop
Rosendale, New York. Women’s Studio Workshop maintains facilities for etching, letterpress, papermaking, book arts, silkscreen, 3D work, ceramics, and photography. Our studios are housed in an historic building, located in the foothills of the Hudson Valley’s Shawangunk Mountains. The studios are extensively equipped and well-maintained. Artists can take workshops, rent the studios, or schedule private instruction.

Zea Mays Printmaking
Florence (Northampton), Massachusetts. Zea Mays Printmaking offers workshops in green printmaking processes, artist residencies, and yearly studio membership. Zea Mays is dedicated to the practice and dissemination of safe, health conscious printmaking. Studio facilities include intaglio, relief, serigraphy, photopolymer, monotype, collagraph and mixed media printmaking.

Outside of the United States
Art Studio Fuji
Art Studio Fuji offers courses in screenprinting, batik, and jewelry in Florence, Italy during the academic year, in June, and in July.

Monotype in Mazatlan
Glen Rogers, long-standing CSP artist member, offers monotype workshops at her Mazatlan studio.

Skopelos Foundation for the Arts
The Skopelos Foundation for the Arts in Greece offers residencies, university programs and workshops for ceramists, painters, printmakers, screen-printers and sculptors from May through October. 

The Scuola Internazionale di Grafica di Venezia
The Scuola Internazionale di Grafica di Venezia is an international institution located in the heart of historic Venice. Since its foundation in 1969, the Scuola has welcomed artists and students worldwide. It has also established affiliations and engaged in collaborative projects with international universities, museums, guilds and biennales.

To add resources to the these lists, please contact: website@caprintmakers.org, to have your addition included in our next website update.

Artist Resources:
How to photograph your art by Saatchi Art
iPhone photography
Prepare your image file for upload
How to videos from the deYoung Museum

Educational Resources
Anti-Racist Print and Printmaking Resources: an incomplete list of print and printmaking resources for fighting racism and supporting justice and equality by Ksenia Nouril

Print Events
Hamilton Woodtype Wayzgoose, Wisconsin
Los Angeles Printers Fair
New York Satellite Print Fair
Printmakers Against Racism
Print Day in May
San Jose Wayzgoose and Printers’ Fair
Tacoma Wayzgoose Washington
Wayzgoose International Printing Museum, Carson, California
Wayzgoose Kitsap, Bremerton, Washington

Print Organizations
American Print Alliance
Association of Print Scholars
Atlanta Printmakers Studio (Georgia)
Black Women of Print
Bluegrass Printmakers (Kentucky)
The Boston Printmakers (Massachusetts)
The Center for Contemporary Printmaking (Conneticut)
Edinburg Printmakers (Edinburg, Scotland)
Fresno Printmakers’ Guild (California)
The Ink Shop Print Center (New York)
International Print Center New York (New York)
Just Seeds (International)
Los Angeles Printmaking Society (California)
Mid American Print Council
Print Club of Rochester (New York)
The Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers (London)
San Jose Printers Guild (California)
Seattle Print Arts (Washington)
Southern Graphics Council International

Print Podcasts
Flat Files
Hot Off The Press
Pine Copper Lime
The Printcast
Print Run
Studio Noize!

Print Publications
Art in Print
The California Printmaker, CSP’s own annual journal of print arts
Journal of the Print World
Mid American Print Council Journal
Pressing Matters
Print Quarterly
Printeresting Archive, The Printeresting Archive features more than 2,000 posts from seven years of blogging by countless authors.
Printmaking Today

To add printmaking related resources to the these lists, please contact: website@caprintmakers.org, to have your addition included in our next website update.