Part 4 (1/2)

”It is not knowledge itself which is power, but the ability to use and apply knowledge.”

=A Progressive Process.=--Photo process engraving is a method of graphic reproduction which comes into direct contact with art in its most popular phases.

It is a distinctly progressive process which possesses immense advantages and represents an effective and by no means inartistic aspect of the graphic arts. The lavish, and in many instances extravagant, employment of process engraving for purposes of pictorial ill.u.s.tration is a substantial proof of its popularity and ill.u.s.trative value. It may not always reach a high standard of artistic realisation, but it is almost invariably realistic and attractive in its varied forms of representation.

The idea of pictorial ill.u.s.tration, whether as the translation of an artistic conception or an actual representation of current events, has ever been a fascinating one; and its evolution, from a photo-mechanical standpoint, has been one unbroken record of remarkable progress.

To enter upon a detailed exposition of any of the many photo-mechanical processes is somewhat beyond the purpose of this short treatise, and to attempt anything but a full and comprehensive description on such lines would be both unwise and valueless. Let it suffice, then, to indicate their more salient points, their ill.u.s.trative and artistic value, and the manner in which they may be most successfully applied.

=Commercial and Artistic Features.=--The commercial advantages of photo-engraving may be summed up in a very few words:--

1. The plates can be produced quickly and economically.

2. The impressions can be made at a high rate of speed, and in some of the processes without perceptible deterioration.

3. The prints will be more or less facsimiles of the original.

From an artistic point of view, photo-engraving possesses equally important features. It translates the artist's work with extraordinary facility and accuracy, retaining a satisfactory proportion of its expressive feeling, and reproducing subtleties of drawing and texture which it would be difficult, if not quite impossible, to obtain by any other process. Of the many photo-mechanical engraving processes, all of which are more or less a.s.sociated with pictorial ill.u.s.tration, three at least merit further consideration.

[Ill.u.s.tration: Fig. 5.--Cross Section of Cyanide Furnace.

The ”Line Process.”]

(_a_) =The ”Line” Process.=--The ”line” process is applicable only to the reproduction of line drawings or prints, in which the design is represented in simple black and white, with only such gradations of tone as may be suggested by lines or dots. For the reproduction of pen-and-ink drawings, it has found considerable favour with ill.u.s.trators, and many even of the more conservative artists are compelled to appreciate its merits and acknowledge its value. An interesting account of the compulsory acceptance of process engraving by the famous ill.u.s.trator ”Du Maurier” is suggestive of at least one valuable peculiarity of this method of reproduction. Owing to failing sight, Du Maurier found it increasingly difficult to introduce into his drawings on the wood block that amount of detail which he considered necessary for the adequate expression of his ideas. Eventually he was compelled to make pen-and-ink drawings on a much larger scale than was his wont, and to have them reproduced as photo-line-blocks, the reduction being made as required.

(_b_) =Half Tone.=--”Half tone” process engraving, as distinguished from the ”line” process, is the reproduction of a design or copy which has in its composition gradations of tone in the form of flat tints. Wash drawings and photographs present characteristic examples of such copies.

[Ill.u.s.tration: Fig. 6.--Process Engraving.

_Block by the Arc Engraving Co. Ltd., London._]

The true relative value of these medium or half tones can only be retained in the half tone engraving by breaking up the picture into most minute sections, and thereby producing a grain or series of dots of varying size and contiguity according to the requirements of the drawing. This grain or ”screen” effect is produced by the interposition of a network of finely ruled lines in the form of a screen between the lens and the sensitive plate when photographing. The optical principle involved is beyond the sphere of this work, but the effect produced is a matter of vital importance, and requires careful consideration.

The coa.r.s.er the ruling of a screen, consistent of course with the cla.s.s of work for which it is required, the more vigorous and consequently more effective the reproduction will appear. The variety of tones will be greater, and the textures will appear richer. Small prints are naturally subjected to a close inspection; the screen effect, therefore, should be less obtrusive than in larger ones. It may also be useful to know that a finely ruled screen will reproduce the minute details of a copy.

=Artistic Restoration.=--It is somewhat doubtful if the half tone engraving, pure and simple, would ever have any real artistic value for pictorial ill.u.s.tration but for some method of restoring those qualities which are so considerably reduced when copying a picture through the line screen. The pure half tone consists of a grain of varying gradations over the whole design. There are, therefore, no pure whites even in the highest lights. The use of the roulette and graver for accentuating light and shade is therefore not only permissible but decidedly advantageous, for the monotony of a mechanical grain is thereby relieved, and the print produced will be an effective and accurate translation of the artistic sketch.

”A true half tone will be best obtained by not relying entirely on the mechanical means, but a.s.sisting them with some hand work, either in the shape of re-etching or engraving, or both.”

The application of hand engraving to photo-mechanical work has been chiefly due to American process workers, who applied the technique of the wood engraver's art to the amplification of their half tone blocks.

=Tri-chromatography.=--The ”Three Colour Process” is more or less an application of half tone engraving to chromo-typography. The colours, each in their relative value, are produced by purely photo-mechanical methods--the colours of the original copy being dissected by means of specially prepared colour screens. Half tone blocks are made from each of the three negatives, and superimposed in accurate register in the subsequent printing, when, of course, the primary colours, red, blue, and yellow, are used.

The process possesses brilliant and effective ill.u.s.trative power, offers ample scope for the ingenuity and manipulative skill of artist, engraver, and printer, and promises well-nigh unlimited possibilities as a medium of pictorial expression.

(_c_) =Photogravure.=--Photogravure may be very briefly described. It is a photo-mechanical process, in which rich, soft tones of surpa.s.sing delicacy and undeniably artistic effect are striking peculiarities.

Unlike ”line” and ”half tone” engraving, it is an intaglio process, in which the printer as well as the etcher must possess a profound artistic perception.

[Ill.u.s.tration: Reproduction by R. J. EVERETT & SONS' ”INK-PHOTO” Process.

Plate ENGRAVING FOR ILl.u.s.tRATION