Stylish pop art prints to mark the anniversary of the first printed halftone photograph.
Using dots of varying sizes to make up the printed image, halftone revolutionised the use of photographs in publications. Its retro simplicity, replaced in the 90s by the use of digital printing in newspapers & magazines, has inspired Art & Hue’s signature style.
Invented by printers & publishers William Leggo & George-Édouard Desbarats, the World’s first ever printed halftone image appeared on the launch issue of the weekly magazine Canadian Illustrated News. The pair went on to publish the first halftone image in a daily newspaper, the New York Daily Graphic, in 1880.
To celebrate the momentous anniversary, Art & Hue presents Newspapers, a new collection of stylish pop art featuring people reading newspapers, the tactile traditional print media which, whilst facing competition from digital outlets, is still beloved by many.
Presented in tones of Blush (a soft pale pink in a nod to some salmon-coloured newspapers) and Copper (more autumnal terracotta than bright orange, in recognition of historic “copperplate” printing), the collection is available in three sizes & 11 colour options.
Exclusively by Art & Hue, the Newspapers collection of pop art is printed to order on 310gsm museum-quality archival card, made from 100% cotton, with fine-art pigment inks for longevity.
This year also marks 380 since the publication of Gazzetta di Mantova, the oldest newspaper in the world still published under the same name, which was launched in 1644.
Celebrate 155 years of halftone with Art & Hue’s Newspapers pop art.
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