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  2. Digital ceramic printing on glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_ceramic_printing...

    Digital ceramic printing on glass has expanded the options for printing on glass. UV and silk screen printing have limitations that digital printing overcomes. Digitally printed glass can be applied both to the interior and exterior surfaces, the most simple to complex graphic illustrations can be printed in the CMYK color model. [5]

  3. Fracture (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fracture_(company)

    Customers upload photos through the company's website [12] and get back those photos printed on a pane of shatter resistant glass. [ 13 ] [ 14 ] The process takes less than an hour, and the photos can be as small as 5 by 5 in (127 by 127 mm) or as big as 21.6 by 28.8 in (549 by 732 mm).

  4. Vitreography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitreography

    Vitreography is a fine art printmaking technique that uses a 3 ⁄ 8-inch-thick (9.5 mm) float glass matrix instead of the traditional matrices of metal, wood or stone. A print created using the technique is called a vitreograph.

  5. Cliché verre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cliché_verre

    One of the earliest surviving cliché verre prints, made by Henry Fox Talbot c. 1839, but drawn by another. [8]The process was first invented by the English pioneer photographer Henry Fox Talbot "in the autumn of 1834, being then at Geneva" as he later wrote, when he was also developing the photogram, a contact negative process for capturing images of flat objects such as leaves. [9]

  6. Orotone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orotone

    Being printed on glass, orotone images are extremely fragile and often require specialized frames in order to prevent breakage. Other types of prints can be made with the same negative used to make an orotone. Consequently, silver gelatin prints and platinotypes (platinum and palladium prints) are also made by those who produce orotone prints ...

  7. Photographic plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photographic_plate

    Glass plate photographic material largely faded from the consumer market in the early years of the 20th century, as more convenient and less fragile films were increasingly adopted. However, photographic plates were reportedly still being used by one photography business in London until the 1970s, [ 2 ] and by one in Bradford called the Belle ...

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