Advertisement

Advertisement

contact printing

noun

  1. the process of making contact prints.



Discover More

Word History and Origins

Origin of contact printing1

First recorded in 1875–80
Discover More

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

A parallel technology invented by the English scientist Henry Fox Talbot, which used salted paper to produce a negative and then, through contact printing, a positive image, took root quickly, as well, yielding thin but crisp photographs that didn’t have the distracting reflective background of the daguerreotype method.

Read more on Washington Post

Using contact printing and pages ripped from magazines, Heinecken satirized the hypersexuality of models drinking from soda bottles or holding jewelry in their teeth.

It was, however, generally employed by foreign photographers, and is now largely in use by English photographers, especially for the development of bromide paper, either for contact printing or enlargements.

Read more on Project Gutenberg

Principally used for Enlargements and Contact printing.

Read more on Project Gutenberg

A much easier method, applicable to glass originals, is that of photographic reproduction by contact printing.

Read more on Project Gutenberg

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


contact printercontact process