Key facts about relief printing
Relief printing is a printsA process where a design is made on a surface and then copied or printed onto another surface. technique that allows a design to be repeated multiple times.
This technique sees a design created on a surface - known as a printing plate - which is then rolled or painted with ink and printed onto paper or fabric.
The design on the printing plate can be cut away, or added on top, but it has to be raised. The areas that are raised will pick up the ink, meaning any designs drawn on a flat printing plate won't work.
The print will be a mirror image of what you see on your printing plate, so if there is writing in the design it will need to first be written the wrong way around.
Relief printing techniques include woodcut, lino cut, letterpress and rubber and metal stamping.
Make a relief print
Printmaking can require lots of equipment and space, but you can make relief prints with simple things found at home too.
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Did you know?
Relief printing is the earliest printing process.
It started in China around 255BC.
More than 2000 years ago in Egypt, woodblock printing was being used to print patterns onto fabric.
The advantage of printmaking is that lots of copies of the same picture can be printed from the printing plate.
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