Fresson Print

£1,500.00

Precession X - 2003 - Fresson Print on pure rag archival fine art paper 51.5 cm x 41.5 cm - Edition 1/1

The Fresson Print Process - Commonly referred to as direct carbon printing, Fresson is an extremely unique and rare printing process. Invented by Theodore-Henri Fresson in 1899 in France. Today it is only available from the tiny Atelier Fresson on the outskirts of Paris. Here Fresson’s direct descendants produce a limited number of prints with the exact process a closely guarded secret. Each print takes around six hours meaning very few are produced and the Fressons can only work with a select number of photographers. The images are extremely stable, consisting of only gelatin and oil pigments on pure rag paper. The Fresson print is considered to be the most archival of any colour procedure in use today.

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Precession X - 2003 - Fresson Print on pure rag archival fine art paper 51.5 cm x 41.5 cm - Edition 1/1

The Fresson Print Process - Commonly referred to as direct carbon printing, Fresson is an extremely unique and rare printing process. Invented by Theodore-Henri Fresson in 1899 in France. Today it is only available from the tiny Atelier Fresson on the outskirts of Paris. Here Fresson’s direct descendants produce a limited number of prints with the exact process a closely guarded secret. Each print takes around six hours meaning very few are produced and the Fressons can only work with a select number of photographers. The images are extremely stable, consisting of only gelatin and oil pigments on pure rag paper. The Fresson print is considered to be the most archival of any colour procedure in use today.

Precession X - 2003 - Fresson Print on pure rag archival fine art paper 51.5 cm x 41.5 cm - Edition 1/1

The Fresson Print Process - Commonly referred to as direct carbon printing, Fresson is an extremely unique and rare printing process. Invented by Theodore-Henri Fresson in 1899 in France. Today it is only available from the tiny Atelier Fresson on the outskirts of Paris. Here Fresson’s direct descendants produce a limited number of prints with the exact process a closely guarded secret. Each print takes around six hours meaning very few are produced and the Fressons can only work with a select number of photographers. The images are extremely stable, consisting of only gelatin and oil pigments on pure rag paper. The Fresson print is considered to be the most archival of any colour procedure in use today.