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Mezzotint
A mezzotint
is made by repeatedly pressing a curved, serrated mezzotint rocker over
the surface of a copper plate until it has received many thousands of
tiny little indentations from this tool. This procedure is extremely time
consuming, but plates made this way yield rich, velvety blacks that can
be obtained in no other way. After the entire surface of the plate has
been roughened, scrapers and burnishers are employed to achieve tones
of grey and white. Mezzotints do not produce large editions because the
plates were out quickly
Few contemporary
artists have the time to rock a plate with a mezzatint rocker long enough
to produce the velvety black impression so characteristic of the best
work. Mezzotint is an engraving method, with the rocker digging into the
surface of the plate, each time raising a tiny burr next to each pit left
by the sharp points of the serrated edge. Rocking a plate can take hours,
because it must be rocked completely in one direction, then at right angles
to the first direction, then in the diagonal directions, and finally in
dircctions between the diagonals. See the diagram of rocking angles. At
least eight rockings are necessary over the complete surface of the plate.
Needless to say, the plate should be copper, because zinc will yield so
many fewer impressions; and we assume that after all the work of rocking
you will want an adequate edition.
When
the plate is rocked to completion it will print as a solid black. The
design is placed into the rough surface of the mezzotint by scraping and
burnishing. Special knife scrapers and fine burnishers are available that
make very delicate work possible. The rich quality of the blacks should
be exploited, though, and it would be silly to. scrape large areas of
a mezzotint.
To do
particularly small details it will be necessary to work in dark lines
and toncs with the point of a needle or a roulette wheel. Very small rockers
made for detail work are helpful in reworking areas that have been overscrapcd.
Roulettes are made in various sizes and in a number of patterns and textures.
The irregular roulette is good for matching the texture of the rocked
plate. In England a rocking apparatus is used to guide the rocker as it
moves across the plate making the lines parallel and easily controlled.
A deeply
bitten aguatint will approximate but not equal the dense rich black of
the mezzotint, and several artists have exploited this shortcut to good
effect. During printing, the ink should be oilier than usual, and the
plate hand-wiped. Use no paper wipe except for the highlights. Take as
few proofs as possible during the working of the image. If a large edition
is wanted, the copper may be steel-faced.
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