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  2. Screen printing is a printing technique where a mesh is used to transfer ink (or dye) onto a substrate, except in areas made impermeable to the ink by a blocking stencil.

  3. Key Takeaways. The history of screen printing started over a thousand years ago in ancient China during the Song Dynasty. Craftsmen used silk stencils to print intricate designs onto fabrics. By the late 1900’s, screen printing had reached Europe.

  4. Screen printing, also known as screen process and serigraphy, is used to print almost any surface imaginable, from T-shirts and other textiles to posters to signs to tablecloths to shower curtains to leather goods....

  5. Screenprinting is a process where ink is forced through a mesh screen onto a surface. Making certain areas of the screen impervious to printing ink creates a stencil, which blocks the printing ink from passing through the screen. The ink that passes through forms the printed image.

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  6. Nov 2, 2013 · A new book, History of Screen Printing – How an Art Evolved Into an Industry, tells the tale. Written by Swiss author Guido Lengwiler and available this fall in English from ST Books, it has what is considered to be the first photograph of a screen printing operation, taken in 1913.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PrintingPrinting - Wikipedia

    Screen printing for a variety of applications ranging from T-shirts to floor tiles, and on uneven surfaces; Intaglio, used mainly for high value documents such as currencies. Thermal printing, popular in the 1990s for fax printing. Used today for printing labels such as airline baggage tags and individual price labels in supermarket deli counters.

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