Dictionary Definition
gravure
Noun
1 a printing process that uses an etched or
engraved plate; the plate is smeared with ink and wiped clean, then
the ink left in the recesses makes the print [syn: intaglio
printing, intaglio]
2 a printing plate used in the process of
gravure
3 an intaglio print produced by gravure [syn:
photogravure,
heliogravure]
4 intaglio printing
User Contributed Dictionary
French
Extensive Definition
- Gravure may also refer to Gravure idol.
In the 1930s–1960s, newspapers
published relatively few photographs and instead many newspapers
published separate rotogravure sections in their Sunday editions.
These sections were devoted to photographs and identifying
captions, not news stories. Irving
Berlin's song Easter
Parade specifically refers to these sections in the lines "the
photographers will snap us, And you'll find that you're in the
rotogravure."
In 1932 a George
Gallup "Survey of Reader Interest in Various Sections of Sunday
Newspapers to Determine the Relative Value of Rotogravure as an
Advertising Medium" found that these special rotogravures were the
most widely read sections of the paper and that advertisements
there were three times more likely to be seen by readers than in
any other section.
The rotogravure process is still used for
commercial printing of magazines, postcards, and corrugated
(cardboard) product packaging.
In the latter quarter of the 19th century, the
method of image photo transfer onto carbon tissue covered with
light-sensitive gelatin was discovered and was the beginning of
rotogravure.
Three methods of photoengraving have been used
for engraving of gravure cylinders, where the cell open size or the
depth of cells can be uniform or variable: Gravure cylinders
nowadays are typically engraved digitally by a diamond tipped or
laser etching machine. On the gravure cylinder, the engraved image
is composed of small recessed cells (or 'dots') that act as tiny
wells. Their depth and size control the amount of ink that gets
transferred to the substrate (paper or other material, such as
plastic or foil) via a process of pressure, osmosis, and
electrostatic pull. (A patented process called "Electrostatic
Assist" is sometimes used to enhance ink transfer.)
A rotogravure printing press has one printing
unit for each color,
typically CMYK or cyan, magenta, yellow and key (printing
terminology for black). The number of units vary depending on what
colors are required to produce the final image. There are five
basic components in each color unit: an engraved cylinder (whose
circumference can change according to the layout of the job), an
ink fountain, a doctor blade, an impression roller, and a dryer.
While the press is in operation, the engraved cylinder is partially
immersed in the ink fountain, filling the recessed cells. As the
cylinder rotates, it draws ink out of the fountain with it. Acting
as a squeegee, the
doctor blade scrapes the cylinder before it makes contact with the
paper, removing ink from the non-printing (non-recessed) areas.
Next, the paper gets sandwiched between the impression roller and
the gravure cylinder. This is where the ink gets transferred from
the recessed cells to the paper. The purpose of the impression
roller is to apply force, pressing the paper onto the gravure
cylinder, ensuring even and maximum coverage of the ink. Then the
paper goes through a dryer because it must be completely dry before
going through the next color unit and absorbing another coat of
ink.
Because gravure is capable of transferring more
ink to the paper than other printing processes, gravure is noted
for its remarkable density range (light to shadow) and hence is a
process of choice for fine art and photography reproduction, though
not typically as clean an image as that of sheet fed
litho or web offset litho. Gravure is widely used for long-run
magazine printing in excess of 1 million copies. Gravure's major
quality shortcoming is that all images, including type and
"solids," are actually printed as dots, and the screen pattern of
these dots is readily visible to the naked eye. Examples of gravure
work in the United States are typically long-run magazines, mail
order catalogs, consumer packaging, and Sunday newspaper ad
inserts.
Other application area of gravure printing is in
the flexible packaging sector. A wide range of substrates such as
Polyethylene, Polypropylene, Polyester, BOPP etc.. can be printed
in the gravure press.
See also
gravure in German: Tiefdruckverfahren
gravure in Spanish: Huecograbado
gravure in Norwegian: Fotogravyr
gravure in French: Héliogravure
gravure in Japanese: グラビア印刷
gravure in Polish: Rotograwiura
gravure in Finnish: Syväpaino
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
albertype, book printing,
chromotypography,
chromotypy, chromoxylography,
collotype, color
printing, electronography,
electrostatic printing, graphic arts, halftone engraving, history
of printing, job printing, letterpress, letterpress
photoengraving, line engraving, lithography, lithogravure, lithophotogravure,
mimeograph, offset, offset lithography,
onset, palaeotypography,
photo-offset, photochemical process, photoengraving,
photogelatin process, photographic reproduction, photography, photolithography,
phototypography,
phototypy, photozincography,
planographic printing, planography, printing, printmaking, publication, publishing, relief printing,
rotary photogravure, rotogravure, sheetwork, stencil, three-color printing,
two-color printing, typography, typolithography,
wood-block printing, xerography, xeroprinting, xylotypography, zincography