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History of Lithographic Printing

With lithographic printing, a smooth stone or metal plate is processed with hydrophobic materials to accept ink. Hydrophilic regions reject the ink and become a background. The concept has been around since the 1700s, but many kinds of lithographic printing methods exist and are used for many different modern-day applications. While chemicals and water are used for some, other kinds use composite materials and are integrated with computerized systems.
  1. History

    • Lithography was discovered in 1798 by Alois Senefelder in Germany, using stone and gum Arabic/water solution, while a steam press was invented in 1850 and offset printing became popular starting in the 1950s.

    Significance

    • Lithographic printing has been advanced by modern-day machinery for production of books and newspapers, while current systems can expose printing plates directly from digital input from computers.

    Types

    • While early lithography used limestone, oil and water, most texts are printed using offset lithography, but for very small printing, microlithography and nanolithography are used for manufacturing semiconductors.

    Significance

    • Used for reproducing text, symbols and images, Lithographic printing nowadays has been integrated into high-production machinery to make anything from paper to printed circuits, but has also become popular as an artistic medium.

    Potential

    • The principle of lithographic printing has been expanded with stereolithography, in which 3D parts are "printed" layer by layer with a resin and laser to form a prototype, a process over time which could become more commonplace.

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