Framed Botanical Prints
20th Century North American Organic Modern Prints
Wood, Paper
Antique 18th Century and Earlier French Prints
Paper
Antique 18th Century and Earlier French Prints
Early 2000s American Prints
Giltwood, Paper
20th Century Tribal Prints
Glass, Wood, Paper
Antique Mid-18th Century German Prints
Mirror, Wood, Giltwood, Paper
20th Century Italian Prints
Antique Late 19th Century Unknown Prints
Glass, Wood, Paper
Late 20th Century British Mid-Century Modern Prints
Paper
Early 20th Century Showa Prints
Paper
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Prints
Mirror, Wood, Paper
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Prints
Mirror, Wood, Paper
20th Century American Bohemian Prints
Wood, Paper
2010s British Georgian Prints
Glass, Wood, Paper
21st Century and Contemporary French Country Prints
Gold Leaf
Late 20th Century Prints
Paper
Late 20th Century Prints
Paper
Late 20th Century British Mid-Century Modern Prints
Paper
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Prints
Mirror, Wood, Paper
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Prints
Mirror, Wood, Paper
Antique 1650s German Prints
Paper, Giltwood, Glass
20th Century Italian Prints
Paper
20th Century Italian Other Prints
Paper
20th Century Italian Prints
20th Century Italian Prints
Paper
Antique 18th Century French Neoclassical Prints
Giltwood, Paper
20th Century Italian Prints
Paper
Antique Late 18th Century German Prints
Textile, Linen, Glass, Wood
Antique 19th Century German Prints
Paper
Antique 19th Century Country Prints
Glass, Wood, Paper
Antique Mid-18th Century German Other Prints
Velvet, Giltwood, Paper
20th Century American Victorian Prints
Wood, Paper, Plexiglass
20th Century German Baroque Prints
Paper
Early 20th Century American Prints
Paper
Antique 1850s German Prints
Glass, Wood
21st Century and Contemporary American Prints
Paper
Antique 1860s Prints
Paper
Early 20th Century American Prints
Paper
Late 20th Century American Prints
Paper
Late 20th Century American Prints
Paper
Antique Mid-19th Century Belgian Victorian Prints
Paper
Late 20th Century American Prints
Paper
Late 20th Century American Prints
Paper
Late 20th Century American Prints
Paper
Antique 1860s Prints
Paper
Late 20th Century American Prints
Paper
Antique Mid-19th Century Dutch Prints
Glass, Giltwood, Paper
Antique Early 19th Century Victorian Prints
Paper
Early 20th Century Prints
Paper
Antique 1860s Prints
Paper
Antique 1860s Prints
Paper
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Prints
Paper, Wood
Antique Late 19th Century French Belle Époque Prints
Faux Bamboo
Antique 1820s Prints
Paper
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Prints
Paper
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Prints
Paper
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Prints
Paper
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Prints
Paper
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Prints
Paper
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Prints
Paper
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Framed Botanical Prints For Sale on 1stDibs
How Much are Framed Botanical Prints?
Finding the Right Prints for You
Prints are works of art produced in multiple editions. Though several copies of a specific artwork can exist, collectors consider antique and vintage prints originals when they have been manually created by the artist or are “impressions” that are part of the artist’s intent for the work.
Modern artists use a range of printmaking techniques to produce different types of prints such as relief, intaglio and planographic. Relief prints are created by cutting away a printing surface to leave only a design. Ink or paint is applied to the raised parts of the surface, and it is used to stamp or press the design onto paper or another surface. Relief prints include woodcuts, linocuts and engravings.
Intaglio prints are the opposite of relief prints in that they are incised into the printing surface. The artist cuts the design into a block, plate or other material and then coats it with ink before wiping off the surface and transferring the design to paper through tremendous pressure. Intaglio prints have plate marks showing the impression of the original block or plate as it was pressed onto the paper.
Artists create planographic prints by drawing a design on a stone or metal plate using a grease crayon. The plate is washed with water, then ink is spread over the plate and it adheres to the grease markings. The image is then stamped on paper to make prints.
All of these printmaking methods have an intricate process, although each can usually transfer only one color of ink. Artists use separate plates or blocks for multiple colors, and together these create one finished work of art.
Find prints ranging from the 18th- and 19th-century bird illustrations by J.C. Sepp to mid-century modern prints, as well as numerous other antique and vintage prints at 1stDibs. Browse the collection today and read about how to arrange wall art in your space.
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