jtk
Member
yes i know ... but i disagree that it is a simple process that anyone can do.
no, it is it is anything but a simple, quick process.
sure i agree lots on a page that's kind of a common sense .. its not like today where someone can cut and paste 20 things on a page, flatten the image, save it as a 16x20 canvas, invert it, and make separation negatives in like 45 seconds ...
From my perspective it is indeed a "simple" multi-step process (no worse than E3) but certainly not "quick." I'd guess very precise "cut and paste" was handled conveniently by the process camera operators that were employed by newspapers in most cities..who had to do precise location of images for every edition. But I'm in speculative territory here (time does fly). Certainly those newspaper guys were crucial for the photo-silkscreen artists that sprang from most college art programs..a 1971 portrait subject used the Santa Rosa Press Democrat (California) process camera people to produce the very large ("double truck") negatives she needed to make her multi-color screens.
You're right that it's "not like today" ...and unfortunately photo silkscreen has almost vanished from art-school curricula, tho very sophisticated and demanding, and very slow alternatives live on. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamarind_Institute