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Color printing
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===Europe=== [[File:The Public Promenade MET DT4549.jpg|thumb|[[Philibert-Louis Debucourt]], ''The Public Promenade'', 1792. Printed in color from various plates, using etching, engraving, and aquatint. One of the leading achievements of the French 18th-century color-print.]] Most early methods of color printing involved several prints, one for each color, although there were various ways of printing two colors together if they were separate. Liturgical and many other kinds of books required rubrics, normally printed in red; these were long done by a separate print run with a red forme for each page. Other methods were used for single-leaf [[Old master print|prints]]. The [[chiaroscuro woodcut]] was a European method developed in the early 16th century, where to a normal woodcut block with a linear image (the "line block"), one or more colored "tone blocks" printed in different colors would be added. This was the method developed in Germany; in Italy only tone blocks were often used, to create an effect more like a wash drawing. [[Jacob Christoph Le Blon]] developed a method using three [[Intaglio (printmaking)|intaglio]] plates, usually in [[mezzotint]]; these were overprinted to achieve a wide range of colors. In the 19th century a number of different methods of color printing, using woodcut (technically [[Chromoxylography]]) and other methods, were developed in Europe, which for the first time achieved widespread commercial success, so that by the later decades the average home might contain many examples, both hanging as prints and as book illustrations. [[George Baxter (printer)|George Baxter]] patented in 1835 a method using an intaglio line plate (or occasionally a [[lithograph]]), printed in black or a dark color, and then overprinted with up to twenty different colors from woodblocks. [[Edmund Evans]] used relief and wood throughout, with up to eleven different colors, and latterly specialized in illustrations for children's books, using fewer blocks but overprinting non-solid areas of color to achieve blended colors. English Artists such as [[Randolph Caldecott]], [[Walter Crane]] and [[Kate Greenaway]] were influenced by the Japanese prints now available and [[Japonisme|fashionable]] in Europe to create a suitable style, with flat areas of color. [[Chromolithography]] was another process, which by the end of the 19th century had become dominant, although this used multiple prints with a stone for each color. Mechanical color separation, initially using photographs of the image taken with three different color filters, reduced the number of prints needed to three. [[Zincography]], with [[zinc]] plates, later replaced lithographic stones, and remained the most common method of color printing until the 1930s. {{multiple image |footer=Chromolithograph showing the three color technique. 1893, L. Prang & Co. |width=125 |align=center |image1=First lithographic print in the primary triad of colors Red by Boston Public Library.jpg |alt1=red |image4=First lithographic print in the primary triad of colors (redyellow) by Boston Public Library.jpg |alt4=redyellow |image2=First lithographic print in the primary triad of colors (yellow) by Boston Public Library.jpg |alt2=yellow |image3=First lithographic print in the primary triad of colors Blue by Boston Public Library.jpg |alt3=blue |image5=First lithographic print in the primary triad of colors by Boston Public Library.jpg |alt5=final image }}
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