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What is a Limited Edition
Giclée ?
The Giclée print
is to older forms of fine art reproduction as modern
color photographs are to early tintypes. In other
words-- Giclée is way better and creates the closest
replica of an original piece of two-dimensional art that
is possible with any technology today. The next best
thing to owning the original artwork, Giclée comes at a
much lower relative price. It is also widely accepted by
the world's museums, galleries and artists because of
its gratifying quality.
Not every digital print
is a Giclée. A good Giclée is recognizable by the high
quality of its reproduction, the result of special high
resolution printers that use inks and other print media
that meet unusually strict standards. The Giclée process
renders a pleasingly smooth, true, and consistent image
of the original painting or photograph. This makes for a
quality fine art reproduction with a much longer life
than has been possible with previous print-making
methods.
Given the relatively recent advent of
the Giclée (circa 1991) some history is in order. The
term, " Giclée " (pronounced Zhee-Clay) was coined in
1991 by Jack Duganne, a printmaker at Nash printing.
Duganne coined the term to describe the action of the
ink jets that gave Giclée its quality, versatility and
tone. Prior to that time, the method we now know as
Giclee had been used primarily to produce high quality
proofs from high quality digital prints which were then
used to make plates for traditional printing. Duganne
recognized that the ink jet method he was using for
these proofs was a superior way to make fine art
reproductions. He took the feminine noun version of the
term, " Giclée," from a French word, "gicler," which
means to squirt, spurt or spray. Viola, la Giclee!
Since that time, lithography which had been the
primary method of reproducing fine art prints has become
a distant second place choice. While it still has its
adherents, serigraphy, or screen printing, has fallen
behind both Giclée and lithography for fine art
reproduction. Lithography relied on
a basic set of 4 colors to print the color spectrum. The
lithographic colors were cyan (blue), magenta, yellow
and black. Yes, it's true that a palette of three
primary colors, a blue, a red and a yellow, can mix to
yield a useful color wheel of secondary, etc. colors.
However, the ability of lithography to duplicate the
wide and subtle range of colors of many art works was
limited by this palette, as well as by the method by
which the colors were applied. By
contrast, modern Giclée printers use a much larger range
of colors to produce a far brighter and more accurate
color palette. Using archival inks and papers, the
Giclée process has further increased the longevity of
the artworks over any of the earlier methods. Further,
the spurting, squirting action of the ink jets (as many
as 4 million droplets per second) produces superior
color saturation and more subtle tonal qualities than
can be obtained with the other leading methods. Since
Giclées are created from a high resolution, digitized
image, the "master" image and its colors can be
carefully and expertly fine tuned. Just as digital
photography and computer-assisted photographic
processing have revolutionized the field of photography,
the digitized images on which the Giclée method depends
have changed the whole complexion of fine art
reproduction. While most Giclee
prints are applied to high-quality, heavy weight museum
grade and fine art "archival" papers, the work can be
accurately reproduced on artist canvas or a variety of
other surfaces. Some artists embellish their Giclees,
enhancing their beauty and value with the application of
gold accents, for example. Of course, the main value
enhancement is the artist's signature. You can also
request a signed Certificate of Authenticity for your
Giclée.
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