- points. Very few
master engravers exist today who rely
solely on "feel" and
muscle memory to
sharpen tools.
These master engravers typically worked for many...
-
Jollain (also
spelled Jolin and Iollain) was the name of a
family of
French engravers and
engraving publishers who
lived and
worked in the 17th and 18th centuries...
- The
United Society of
Engravers was a
trade union representing engravers, prin****lly in the
cotton industry, but also in the
paper printing industry,...
- The
Society of
Engravers was
founded in
London in 1802 to
promote British printmaking,
largely because engravers were not
allowed (unless they were also...
- 1820s onwards,
engravers used the
method to
reproduce freehand line drawings. This was, in many ways an
unnatural application,
since engravers had to cut...
-
pines and spruces. They are
known commonly as
engraver beetles, ips
engraver beetles, and pine
engravers.
Beetles of this
genus are
cylindrical in shape...
-
engravers he emplo****, made
marked technical developments in the
field of engraving.
Instead of his
finished paintings,
Rubens provided his
engravers...
-
French engravers.
Geoffroy Tory (1480–1533),
humanist and
engraver Jean
Rabel (1545–1603),
painter and
engraver Jean
Duvet (c. 1485–c. 1570),
engraver Jean...
-
engravers busy.
Apart from
light ornament,
portraits and landscapes,
often hunting scenes were the most po****r subjects, and by 1850 "most
engravers...
- London. His book,
Biographical and
Critical Dictionary of
Painters and
Engravers,
first published in 1813–1816, was a
standard reference work (revised...