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 ▼do u think December  zemiaideamy 10/3/15(月) 13:11

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 ■題名 : do u think December
 ■名前 : zemiaideamy <listentou12@gmail.com>
 ■日付 : 10/3/15(月) 13:11
 ■Web : http://www.betterracking.net
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   Screen printing first appeared in a recognizable form in China during  the Song Dynasty (960ィC1279 AD). Japan and other Asian countries adopted this method of printing and  advanced the craft using it in conjunction with block printing and hand  applied paints.
Screen printing was largely introduced to Western Europe from Asia  sometime in the late 1700s, but did not gain large acceptance or use in  Europe until silk mesh was more available for trade from the east and a  profitable outlet for the medium discovered.
Screen printing was first patented in England by Samuel Simon in  1907. It was originally used as a popular method to print expensive wall  paper, printed on linen, silk, and other fine fabrics. Western screen  printers developed reclusive, defensive and exclusionary business  policies intended to keep secret their workshops' knowledge and  techniques.
Early in the 1910s, several printers experimenting with  photo-reactive chemicals used the well-known actinic  light activated cross linking or hardening traits of potassium,  sodium or ammonium Chromate and dichromate chemicals  with glues and gelatin compounds. Roy Beck, Charles Peter and  Edward Owens studied and experimented with chromic acid salt sensitized  emulsions for photo-reactive stencils. This trio of developers would  prove to revolutionize the commercial screen printing industry by  introducing photo-imaged stencils to the industry, though the acceptance  of this method would take many years. Commercial screen printing now  uses sensitizers far safer and less toxic than bichromates. Currently  there are large selections of pre-sensitized and "user mixed" sensitized  emulsion chemicals for creating photo-reactive stencils.
Joseph Ulano founded the industry chemical supplier Ulano and in 1928  created a method of applying a lacquer soluble stencil material to a  removable base. This stencil material was cut into shapes, the print  areas removed and the remaining material adhered to mesh to create a  sharp edged screen stencil.
Originally a profitable industrial technology, screen printing was  eventually adopted by artists as an expressive and conveniently  repeatable medium for duplication well before the 1900s. It is currently  popular both in fine arts and in commercial printing, where it is  commonly used to print images on Posters, T-shirts, hats, CDs, DVDs,  ceramics, glass, polyethylene, polypropylene, paper, metals, and wood.
A group of artists who later formed the National Serigraphic Society  coined the word Serigraphy in the 1930s to differentiate the artistic  application of screen printing from the industrial use of the process."Serigraphy" is a combination word from the Latin word "Seri" (silk)  and the Greek word "graphein" (to write or draw).
The Printer's National Environmental Assistance Center says  "Screenprinting is arguably the most versatile of all printing  processes."Since rudimentary screenprinting materials are so affordable and  readily available, it has been used frequently in underground settings and subcultures,  and the non-professional look of such DIY  culture screenprints have become a significant cultural aesthetic  seen on movie posters, record album covers, flyers, shirts, commercial  fonts in advertising, in artwork and elsewhere.
History 1960s to  present
Credit is generally given to the artist Andy  Warhol for popularizing screen printing identified as serigraphy,  in the United States. Warhol is particularly identified with his 1962  depiction of actress Marilyn Monroe screen printed in garish colours.
American entrepreneur, artist and inventor Michael Vasilantone would  develop and patent a rotary multicolour garment screen printing machine in 1960. The  original rotary machine was manufactured to print logos and team  information on bowling garments but soon directed to the new fad of  printing on t-shirts. The Vasilantone patent was soon licensed by  multiple manufacturers, the resulting production and boom in printed  t-shirts made the rotary garment screen printing machine the most  popular device for screen printing in the industry. Screen printing on  garments currently accounts for over half of the screen printing  activity in the United States.
Graphic screenprinting is widely used today to create many mass or  large batch produced graphics, such as posters or display stands. Full  colour prints can be created by printing in CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow and black  ('key')). Screenprinting is often preferred over other processes such as dye sublimation or inkjet printing because of its low  cost and ability to print on many types of media.
Screen printing lends itself well to printing on canvas. Andy  Warhol, Rob Ryan, Blexbolex, Arthur Okamura, Robert Rauschenberg, Harry Gottlieb, and many other artists have used screen  printing as an expression of creativity and artistic vision.
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━    通常モードに戻る  ┃  INDEX  ┃  ≪前へ  │  次へ≫    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━                                 Page 136182