Your videos are so incredible. You balance wit with knowledge, keeping the lectures fun and engaging. I am not a student anymore, but love listening to these when I live my daily life. You are a great teacher. Thank you
Thank you for your videos. I just have small correcture, maybe it was just a result of it being a side topic, but litography is not at all similar to etching. it does not depend on the principle of creating some kind of gooves into the stone. Lithography, serigraphy and monotype are printing techniques of the "plane". Etching, mezzoting, aquatint, dry point are techniques of the "deep".(it means you need to create some kind of grooves in the material and later put ink inside of those grooves). Linocut, woodcut are techniques of the "high plane".(ink does not go inside of the grooves but stays up on the plane). Lithography is actually very alchemistic in its process and it revolves around the principlne of water oil resistance, but the image is directly drawn on the surface of the stone using a litogpraphic pencil and other materials.
Whoops, I think I meant to say engraving instead of lithograph (as in engraving is similar to etching in that they are both intaglio processes). My mistake; thanks for pointing that out!
Your videos are so incredible. You balance wit with knowledge, keeping the lectures fun and engaging. I am not a student anymore, but love listening to these when I live my daily life. You are a great teacher. Thank you
Thank you Joshua, that's so nice of you!
Thank you for these videos! I'm currently studying for the AP exam and they have been so helpful!
Excellent vid. Thank you.
Is there another part of this?
you're literally so smart wow
Thank you for your videos. I just have small correcture, maybe it was just a result of it being a side topic, but litography is not at all similar to etching. it does not depend on the principle of creating some kind of gooves into the stone. Lithography, serigraphy and monotype are printing techniques of the "plane". Etching, mezzoting, aquatint, dry point are techniques of the "deep".(it means you need to create some kind of grooves in the material and later put ink inside of those grooves). Linocut, woodcut are techniques of the "high plane".(ink does not go inside of the grooves but stays up on the plane). Lithography is actually very alchemistic in its process and it revolves around the principlne of water oil resistance, but the image is directly drawn on the surface of the stone using a litogpraphic pencil and other materials.
Whoops, I think I meant to say engraving instead of lithograph (as in engraving is similar to etching in that they are both intaglio processes). My mistake; thanks for pointing that out!
@@FleetsAPArtHistory i understand. Sorry for being so nit-picky ;)
thank you sooo much... it was just a great explanation ....